Mind
Body Spirit
(continued)
"We
had packed for three days; I was down there for two months,"
says Ann.
But
while rhabdomyosarcoma is a rare disease, it's no stranger to pediatric
oncologists like Jonathan Ducore, chief of pediatric hematology/oncology
at UC Davis Medical Center.
"Most
pediatric malignancies are fairly aggressive," says Ducore.
"What happens in those first few years usually determines what
will happen in the long term. In Joe's case, we didn't feel it appropriate
to do more surgery right away. We put him on a fairly complex, intensive
regimen of chemotherapy and radiation treatment."
Pediatric
oncologists at the UC Davis Medical Center cooperate with more than
125 other pediatric cancer programs as a member of the Intergroup
Rhabdomyosarcoma Study Group and the Pediatric Oncology Group, one
of two cooperative National Cancer Institute-funded groups devoted
to children's cancer. At any given time some 50 studies of promising
new treatments for a variety of cancers are available to children
and adolescent cancer patients. The Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma
Study Group had a clinical trial that seemed ideal for Joe: an intensive
combination of chemotherapy and radiation treatments to shrink the
tumors, combined with more chemotherapy and follow-up care.
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