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Journal ArticleDOI

Aging and cancer.

B J Kennedy
- 01 Dec 1988 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 12, pp 1903-1911
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TLDR
Physicians and oncologists need to be prepared for the projected increase of cancer in older persons and a new subspecialty is evolving: geriatric oncology.
Abstract
The world's population is aging. Older age is associated with an increase in the incidence of cancer, especially cancer of the breast, lung, prostate, and colon. The management of older patients with cancer is biased by the simple fact of their chronologic age. Underscreening, understaging, less aggressive therapy, lack of participation in clinical trials, or no treatment at all reflect this bias. Although an age-related reduction in the physiologic function of many organs occurs with age, these are not contraindications to treatment with surgery, radiation therapy, or chemotherapy. Chronologic age alone should not be used as a guide for cancer management. Rather, physiologic function or existence of comorbid conditions should be major factors in determining treatment. As a result of the impending need for improved cancer management in older persons, a new subspecialty is evolving: geriatric oncology. This field stresses an important interaction between geriatricians and oncologists, development of research directed at the problems of cancer in older persons, and education at all levels with respect to cancer prevention, cancer detection, and cancer therapy. Physicians and oncologists need to be prepared for the projected increase of cancer in older persons.

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Citations
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Telomerase activity of needle-biopsied liver samples: its usefulness for diagnosis and judgment of efficacy of treatment of small hepatocellular carcinoma

TL;DR: Measurement of telomerase activity appeared useful for diagnosis of intrahepatic abnormal nodules and assessment of the efficacy of percutaneous ethanol injection therapy and may be used as an alternative diagnostic method, especially when pathohistological discrimination between atypical hyperplasia and well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma is difficult.
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Impairment of regeneration in aging: appropriateness or stochastics?

TL;DR: It seems that the quality of the cells themselves does not worsen with age as much as reliability of the organism control over cells, organs and tissues, which leads to an increase in the probability of death.
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Treatment considerations in the elderly patient with lymphoma

TL;DR: Improvements will be made as future clinical investigation focuses on the elderly with lymphoma as a special group, and certain lymphomas can be treated as effectively in the elderly as in the young.
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[Impairment of regeneration in aging: appropriateness or stochastics?].

TL;DR: In this paper, the restriction of cell proliferation is a double-edged sword, which, on the one hand, reduces the likelihood of developing cancer at an early age, but on the other hand, limits life span due to the accumulation of "damaged" cells in old age.
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Geriatric Oncology for the 21st Century: A Call for Action

TL;DR: The recently released Institute of Medicine report further emphasizes the need for the oncology community to optimize care of older patients with cancer.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Aspects of ovarian cancer as it pertains especially to elderly women (those 65 years or older) are examined according to age/stage relationships at initial diagnosis and age variations in treatment and survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

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