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Researchers strive to improve cancer care for older patients

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At the 2017 American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting in Chicago, UNC Lineberger researchers led by Hyman B. Muss, MD, presented preliminary findings from several studies focused on older adults with cancer.

University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers are working to improve the care of patients 65 years and older—a group that makes up 60 percent of newly diagnosed cancers in the United States. As the overall population ages, that number is expected to grow.

At the 2017 American Society of Clinical Oncology Annual Meeting in Chicago, UNC Lineberger researchers presented preliminary findings from several studies focused on older adults with cancer. These studies ranged from efforts to assess systematically patients’ fitness for chemotherapy treatment, to investigations of interventions designed to improve patients’ function and strength.

“Cancer in the United States right now is a disease of aging, and the average age of getting cancer is 67,” said the studies’ senior author Hyman B. Muss, MD, director of the UNC Lineberger Geriatric Oncology program and the Mary Jones Hudson Distinguished Professor in Geriatric Oncology in the UNC School of Medicine. “Our goal is to improve care for older people by tailoring treatment to the disease as well as to the goals of each patient.”

Here are a few study highlights:

In the study, researchers calculated risk for side effects for 44 patients. They found physicians’ choices aligned only modestly with the scores in terms of their chemotherapy choices.  Among patients who ended up receiving standard, rather than reduced treatment, and who had a high-risk toxicity score, there was a 70 percent incidence of high-grade adverse events and hospitalizations.

“Caring for older people with cancer is challenging because there can be a wide variability in their general health, aside from the cancer,” Muss said. “You have 70 year olds who work every day and are in great shape, and you have people who are frailer. This is one example of multiple studies we have underway into ways to improve patient assessment.”

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