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#9068 08-22-2007 02:09 PM
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 2,676
JAM Offline
Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts)
Offline
Patient Advocate (old timer, 2000 posts)

Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 2,676
Boy, Gail, do I envy you. Gorillas are one of my favorite animals. Have a blast!! Amy in the Ozarks


CGtoJohn:SCC Flr of Mouth.Dx 3\05. Surg.4\05.T3NOMO.IMRTx30. Recur Dx 1\06.Surg 2\06. Chemo: 4 Cycles of Carbo\Taxol:on Erbitux for 7 mo. Lost our battle 2-23-07- But not the will to fight this disease

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#9069 10-30-2007 09:38 PM
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 23
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Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 23
My husband has just completed the HPV vaccine trial at Johns Hopkins. He has not had any side effects. He was part of the last cohort. Gail we found out about this study by your post here, and I want to thank you for your dedication. We presented testing for HPV to the oncologist and he was happy to have the test done for this. I encourage any new members to become active in your treatment and treatment options, many physicians will listen to your input, some will not but it is worth giving it a shot.


NANCY
#9070 10-31-2007 02:07 AM
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 624
"Above & Beyond" Member (500+ posts)
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"Above & Beyond" Member (500+ posts)

Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 624
Hi all --

I certainly hope that the vaccine will prove to work -- there have been some articles this summer on the potential of vaccine-mediated treatment for virally-induced cancers and all state that this may be the treatment of the future. Certainly the cell-culture study by Rampias which found that, once the HP viral genes were deactivated, the cancerous cells died quickly, is promising. We know this is undoubtedly years away. Still, as Haddad wrote after the 2007 ASCO meetings (in his summary of HPV and head/neck cancer presentations):

"Research in this area is still preliminary, and previous experience has proven this field to be quite challenging. Nevertheless, newer technologies might make this possible, and the approach described by Rampias and colleagues[12] is promising. If targeting [of viral genes]proves feasible, these findings will have represented a major breakthrough. The ability to treat these cancers without chemotherapy and radiation, but instead with gene therapy and antiviral therapy, is certainly appealing, but we expect that it will be a long time before we see this work come to fruition. In the meantime, our focus should be on fuller utilization of the HPV vaccine and public education measures.

Conclusion
HPV-related head and neck cancer represents a new entity that is now well defined. The practicing oncologist needs to be aware of these new findings, and HPV testing, with PCR or FISH, should now be performed routinely. For now, results will have significant prognostic though not therapeutic implications. Still, changes come rapidly in this field, and we expect that different treatments will be available to these patients in the near future."

Gail


CG to husband Barry, dx. 7/21/05, age 66, SCC rgt. tonsil, BOT, 2 nodes (stg. IV), HPV+, tonsillectomy, 7x carboplatin, 35x tomoTherapy IMRT w/ Ethyol @ Johns Hopkins, thru treatment 9/28/05, HPV vaccine trial 12/06-present. Looking good!
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