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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment of head and neck cancer in the elderly : European Consensus (panel 6) at the EUFOS Congress in Vienna 2007

TL;DR: In this paper, a panel addressed the issue of the treatment of elderly and old patients with head and neck cancer and concluded that the older patients should be treated similarly to the younger counterparts or should the treatment be altered based on chronologic age.
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Cisplatin-based combination chemotherapy for elderly patients with non-small-cell lung cancer

TL;DR: Elderly patients treated with mitomycin-containing regimens have higher hematologic toxicities than younger patients and cisplatin-based chemotherapy was tolerable for most elderly NSCLC patients with good performance status.
Journal ArticleDOI

Radiotherapy for geriatric head-and-neck cancer patients: what is the value of standard treatment in the elderly?

TL;DR: Radiotherapy is a feasible treatment modality for elderly HNSCC patients and a trend towards superior OS rates was observed for patients aged 65–74 years, whereas smoking and smoking-related toxicities were the strongest independent prognostic factor in the multivariate analysis for decreased OS.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toxicity and Therapeutic Response to Chemotherapy in Patients Aged 70 Years or Older with Advanced Cancer

TL;DR: Elderly cancer patients who are not suffering from medical complications, which are generally increased in aged patients (e.g., cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, or neurological diseases), can be considered candidates for full doses of chemotherapy, like their younger counterparts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Non-Hodgkin's Lymphomas in Elderly Patients

Paul E. Goss
- 01 Jun 1993 - 
TL;DR: In an effort to develop better tolerated and thus more effective combination chemotherapy for older patients, a number of prospective single arm and randomized clinical trials of novel regimens have been undertaken.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The average age at first infirmity can be raised, thereby making the morbidity curve more rectangular, and present data allow calculation of the ideal average life span, approximately 85 years.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The special considerations important to the proper evaluation of elderly patients are discussed, some current controversies in the field are highlighted, and recent progress in the management of several common clinical problems in the elderly are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Logistic regression analyses of subsamples of breast, lung, and colorectal cancer patients indicate that age is significantly inversely related to receipt of both subsequent chemotherapy and radiation therapy, controlling for stage of disease and presence of co‐morbid disease.
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

Full dose versus attenuated dose daunorubicin, cytosine arabinoside, and 6-thioguanine in the treatment of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia in the elderly.

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