Beyond
conventional treatments
(continued)
Even
expert practitioners of radiation therapy, surgery and chemotherapy
- traditional approaches that have been the foundation of treatment
for decades - acknowledge that medical science has a ways to go
in the war against cancer. All too often, advances merely add days,
weeks or months of life. The most promising discoveries lie in the
development of entirely new ways of killing cancer, an area of research
known as developmental therapeutics.
In
the United States and around the world, scientists are investigating
innovative approaches to treating the more than 100 malignant diseases
known as cancer. New treatments come to the UC Davis Cancer Center
due to two grants from the National Cancer Institute to investigate
novel pharmacological agents and other therapies. These grants are
typically awarded to about half a dozen institutions representing
the top academic medical centers and research facilities in the
United States.
"This
means we're among the first in the nation to test new anti-cancer
agents," says Gandara, who is a principal investigator for
the Southwest Oncology Group and chair of the group's Lung Cancer
Committee.
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