Moderator: Soñadora
Ajax wrote:I'm glad to hear the risk assessment. I didn't get that during our texts. It's a little scary but I think you'll be happy to have that damned thing out of you and get on with life.
Remember, we have a weekend sailing expedition to get on with next May. Oh- my buddy Shane really thinks highly of you and has volunteered to crew as well.
BeauV wrote:I don't know how you feel, Larry, but I would REALLY want that lump out of me. Full stop. I like our plan and have all my fingers and toes crossed that it works!
kdh wrote:BeauV wrote:I don't know how you feel, Larry, but I would REALLY want that lump out of me. Full stop. I like our plan and have all my fingers and toes crossed that it works!
The "just get it out" thinking about cancer has been evolving recently. There's evidence that basically if we look hard and often enough we'll find cancer in everyone. This is a huge issue for the idea of early screening. A lot of the breast and prostate cancers that we've "cured" would have gone away on their own. Basic probability says that cancer will kill everyone eventually unless something else kills them first.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/05/sunday-review/why-everyone-seems-to-have-cancer.html
kdh wrote:BeauV wrote:I don't know how you feel, Larry, but I would REALLY want that lump out of me. Full stop. I like our plan and have all my fingers and toes crossed that it works!
The "just get it out" thinking about cancer has been evolving recently. There's evidence that basically if we look hard and often enough we'll find cancer in everyone. This is a huge issue for the idea of early screening. A lot of the breast and prostate cancers that we've "cured" would have gone away on their own. Basic probability says that cancer will kill everyone eventually unless something else kills them first.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/05/sunday-review/why-everyone-seems-to-have-cancer.html
Tim Ford wrote:Yup, that's why I sorta wonder about the tone, or intention, of the article.
Maybe I missed the point, but the message seems to want to "normalize" cancer. Lethal mutations have a function in evolution, but in the context of human families, they are deleterious.
With regard to PC, yes the lethality of the disease has diminished significantly as new treatment options are introduced in what seems like six-month intervals, but let's not understate it's danger...it's still the 3rd leading cause of cancer death in men and it's estimated that ~ 27,000 men will die of it this year, the NYT's softer, cuddlier slant on cancer notwithstanding.
Orestes Munn wrote:Tim Ford wrote:Yup, that's why I sorta wonder about the tone, or intention, of the article.
Maybe I missed the point, but the message seems to want to "normalize" cancer. Lethal mutations have a function in evolution, but in the context of human families, they are deleterious.
With regard to PC, yes the lethality of the disease has diminished significantly as new treatment options are introduced in what seems like six-month intervals, but let's not understate it's danger...it's still the 3rd leading cause of cancer death in men and it's estimated that ~ 27,000 men will die of it this year, the NYT's softer, cuddlier slant on cancer notwithstanding.
Well, newspapers are sold on stories with contrarian takes.
Tim Ford wrote:Orestes Munn wrote:Tim Ford wrote:Yup, that's why I sorta wonder about the tone, or intention, of the article.
Maybe I missed the point, but the message seems to want to "normalize" cancer. Lethal mutations have a function in evolution, but in the context of human families, they are deleterious.
With regard to PC, yes the lethality of the disease has diminished significantly as new treatment options are introduced in what seems like six-month intervals, but let's not understate it's danger...it's still the 3rd leading cause of cancer death in men and it's estimated that ~ 27,000 men will die of it this year, the NYT's softer, cuddlier slant on cancer notwithstanding.
Well, newspapers are sold on stories with contrarian takes.
Yeah, and public opinion is sometimes influenced by newspapers (and millions of political ads paid for by the Russians
Here's my beef with this, to be perfectly honest: there seems to be a trend in health policy that is subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) proposing that early screening, detection and treatment are unnecessary. Witness the shit storm stirred up by the USPSTF in 2009, with the breast cancer screening guidelines they published.
Question: is this all about cost-cutting for federally subsidized health care programs? Because I can't figure out any other rationale for these pronouncements toward laissez-faire detection and treatment (similar case with the PC issue...delay screening until 50-something, etc)
Like the fellow with the Abysmal Throat said, "follow the money."
Orestes Munn wrote:It is true that our cells break free of the controls on division from time to time, but this only results in clinical disease some unknown fraction of the time. The immune system cleans some tumors up, others outgrow their blood supply, etc. Therefore, as detection gets better and more people get it, we have to think about who actually benefits from intervention. Prostate is the prototype slow-growing malignancy and has a low propensity for early metastasis. It is also common in men of a certain age and its biology is relatively well understood. That makes it a classic case where aggressive treatment may be worse than the disease.
This does not apply to terrifyingly aggressive tumors, such as the sarcoma in this thread or, for instance, breast cancer after it reaches some threshold size. Every doctor has seen cases of "tumor of unknown origin" presenting with brain, lung, or liver metastases. That's an undetectably small tumor seeding the bloodstream with malignant cells. In women, most turn out to be breast.
Tim Ford wrote:Orestes Munn wrote:Tim Ford wrote:Yup, that's why I sorta wonder about the tone, or intention, of the article.
Maybe I missed the point, but the message seems to want to "normalize" cancer. Lethal mutations have a function in evolution, but in the context of human families, they are deleterious.
With regard to PC, yes the lethality of the disease has diminished significantly as new treatment options are introduced in what seems like six-month intervals, but let's not understate it's danger...it's still the 3rd leading cause of cancer death in men and it's estimated that ~ 27,000 men will die of it this year, the NYT's softer, cuddlier slant on cancer notwithstanding.
Well, newspapers are sold on stories with contrarian takes.
Yeah, and public opinion is sometimes influenced by newspapers (and millions of political ads paid for by the Russians)
Here's my beef with this, to be perfectly honest: there seems to be a trend in health policy that is subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) proposing that early screening, detection and treatment are unnecessary. Witness the shit storm stirred up by the USPSTF in 2009, with the breast cancer screening guidelines they published.
Question: is this all about cost-cutting for federally subsidized health care programs? Because I can't figure out any other rationale for these pronouncements toward laissez-faire detection and treatment (similar case with the PC issue...delay screening until 50-something, etc)
Like the fellow with the Abysmal Throat said, "follow the money."
Olaf Hart wrote:...snip...
kdh wrote:Beau, my understanding is that there's a lot of confusion between a CT angiogram (CCTA), which uses an iodine-rich contrast injection and a plain old CT scan of the heart used to get a calcium score. The former involves significant radiation, that latter the same as a standard X-ray.
Heartflow uses a basic CT scan, no dye.
Olaf Hart wrote:I get that too, but the stuff that has a good evidence base is a small subset of the clinical judgements we have to make every day.
Orestes Munn wrote:Olaf Hart wrote:I get that too, but the stuff that has a good evidence base is a small subset of the clinical judgements we have to make every day.
I have the luxury of having to make very few clinical judgments, so it’s easy for me to go all academic. However, I have been so wrong, so many times, that It has made me a terrible skeptic..
BeauV wrote:kdh wrote:Beau, my understanding is that there's a lot of confusion between a CT angiogram (CCTA), which uses an iodine-rich contrast injection and a plain old CT scan of the heart used to get a calcium score. The former involves significant radiation, that latter the same as a standard X-ray.
Heartflow uses a basic CT scan, no dye.
I haven't dug into the last 18 months of Heartflow's process, but when I was working there we definitely used Iodine contrast. My objection to the comment about radiation is that it's out of date. Modern CTs have much better receivers and can operate on far less power. They also have much higher resolution and yield far better results. I've dropped an email to the Clinical head to see if I'm out of date.
I don't think we ever use calcium score as the bases of the FFRct.