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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1983-03-30, Page 35This is the office of the Huron County Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society. ft is locatat 20 Isaac Street in Clinton and ®canned by secretary Marg Allan. The phone iwn' : r is 48Z-7832. Photo by !Iowa Aiti n) uestions and answers 0 from page 14 human cells grown in tissue culture may also be infected with a virus and then the cells can be shown to be transformed to a type that pathologists have identified as being characteristic of human tumours. In addition, it is possible to isolate viruses from cultures of human tumour cells and show that such viruses can produce tumours when in- jected into experimental animals. However, in most cases the final conclusive evidence that any virus can cause cancer in man is still missing. There is also a con- siderable body of evidence to suggest that all of us have the potential to produce tumour viruses by a system which lies dormant until ac- tivated by some as yet unknown outside mechanism. 6. Is cancer caused by the en- vironment? Several outstanding scien- tists have examined statistics from all over the world and come to the con- clusion that approximately per cent of all cancer is preventable. This has led other scientists to suggest that the 80 per cent of cancer that is preventable is due to factors contained in the en- vironment. The search for such evidence is carried out by epidemiologists who use statistics to study the distribution of disease and the reasons for that distribu- tion, and by experimen- talists who study some of the many compounds we en- counter in daily life and try to find out if any of them will give rise to cancer in laboratory animals. These tests take a long time and are so expensive to conduct that every evaluation might cost a million dollars. Since there are millions of com- pounds, and mixtures of compounds, in our environ- ment it is not possible to study more than a few in detail. The Health Protec- tion Branch of Health and Welfare ( Canada) permits only a limited number f chemicals to be used in food or in cosmetics and etch of these must be carefully screened to verify that in standard laboratory tests they do not give rise to tumours in experimental animals. Although this pro- vides reassurance as far as the quality of our food is con - l' cerned, a lot of research is ing conducted to devise simpler and cheaper methods of determining whether contaminants of our environment represent a major carcinogenic hazard. 7. Are new methods of detec- tion being developed"? In a study carried out at the University of Alberta it was reported that per cent of all cases of carcinoma of the pancreas had progressed to an advanced stage by the time they were detected. Since the efficacy of treat- ment is often correlated with the degree of advancement of the disease it becomes im- portant to diagnose cancer at the earliest possible stage. Some years ago a blood test known as CEA test was devised in Montreal as a potential means of early detection of colo -rectal cancer. Although the final analysis of the results in- dicated that the test was not as specific as had originally been hoped for, the study markedly stimulated the search for methods of detec- ting early cancer by im- munological reactions of the bio . le . Another example of this type of study is the work presently being conducted at McMaster University in which attempts are being made to detect antibodies to a virus in women with car- cinoma of the cervix, the underlying assumption be- ing that this type of cancer may be caused by a virus and that antibodies to this virus are present in the blood of such patients. 8. What facture areas of research look promising? Information processing is now so quick that scientific advances do not long stay associated with only one field e.g. today's results in virology may rapidly in- fluence tomorrow's ex- periments in irrununology while advances made in the study of cancer may have even more impact on the ef- fects of other diseases on mankind. However, there are areas of cancer research that may well be growth points in the next few years. These include: Ra osensitizers The basic philosophy underlying the use of radia- tion to treat cancer is that tumour cells are growing more rapidly than normal cells and that rapidly grow- ing cells are more easily destroyed by radiation than normal cells. The sensitivity of tumour cells to radiation is influenced by other factors such as the presence or absence of oxygen and many cells within the mass of a tumour have a poor supply of oxygen. They are therefore less sensitive to radiation. However, several com- pounds have now been syn- thesized which can restore this sensitivity, even in the continued absence of a good supply of oxygen, and these compounds are known as radiosensitizers. Much of the laboratory work is now com- plete and studies are being conducted to determine whether the administration of these compounds to pa- tients makes treatment of tumours by radiation any more effective. Genetics The science of genetics is primarily associated with the study of genes and the processing of the informa- tion that they contain. It is true that the genetic makeup of the egg and sperm cells of our parents determines the mixture of genes that we will possess and therefore deter- mines most of our physical attributes. But most of the cells in our bodies are not germ cells and they are call- ed somatic cells. For exam- ple, the cells of our liver are not involved in the produc- tion of our children and are therefore somatic cells but they are involved in the pro- duction of new liver cells to replace old or injured cells. If they are caused to change by a chemical carcinogen, by a virus or by radiation then the daughter cells that they produce may have lost the normal controls on growth and have acquired those characteristics which make them malignant cells. Scientists are now asking whether such changes are associated with one gene, whether transfer of this gene from cell to cell is associated with change from a normal to a malignant cell and whether it is possible to sup- press the activity of such a gene. Carcinogenesis It has been known for more than 250 years that chemicals can cause cancer in man. In recent years tremendous progress has been made in the study of how this process takes place and most cancer research o fico is in Cli The Huron County Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society's office is located at 20 Isaac Street in Clinton. The staff secretary is Mrs. Marg Allan and she is at the office Monday to Friday from 1:30-5 p.m If y vu have any enquires about coming a volunteer or about what services are available to cancer patients, etc, you can c:the office at 482-7832. Officers for the Huron County Unit this year are as follows: president -Ross McDaniel of Goderich; vice- presidents -Mel Farnsworth of Goderich and George Michie of Belgrave; treasurer -Steve Biskup of Clinton; campaign chair- man -Jim Remington of Goderich, vice -chairman - Murray Hunter of Wingharn; workers believe that car- cinogens ultimately interact with the deoxyribsenucleic acid (DNA) of the cell which is the final storehouse of the genetic information. In an expression of concern for the increasing complexity of our environment and the poten- tial carcinogenic hazard that it represents, scientists have begun to search for quick and cheap methods to detect environmental carcinogens by utilizing the knowledge that most carcinogens in- teract with DNA and cause genetic changes which result in different growth characteristics. If this ap- proach is successful, it may be possible to remove car- cinogenic chemicals from our environment and pre- vent exposure to new ones. 8. What are you doing for patient of today? Laboratory research workers are making con- tributions by developing new chemotherapeutic agents, by investigating new con- cepts such as radiosen- sitizers and by seeking more rapid and sensitive methods of diagnosis. A major con- tribution of the clinical com- munity is the development of a Canadian Clinical Tri_. '.s Program for treatment of cancer patients. One use of this type of clinical program is in the final testing of new modalities of therapy. A se- cond use is based on the assumption that there is much to be gained from more effective use of present modalities of therapy. For example, if two drugs are known to be of some benefit in the treatment of a specific type of cancer, is there any benefit to be gained from us- ing the two drugs together, alternating them on a day to day basis, alternating them on a monthly basis, simply employing one until it is no longer effective and then tur- ning to the other, or is there any advantage to be gained in using the two drugs in combination with radiation therapy? The questions ask- ed in these trials can be stated in a few simple sentences but meaningful answers will depend upon the results of studies with several hundred patients, following the prescribed course of treatment for mon- ths or years and maintaining follow-up for several years Tura to p e 16 commemoration funds -Mrs. Marg Makins of i.ayfield; education -Mrs. Barb Howson i,; Blyth; medic advisory -Dr. R.B. Thomson of Goderich; patient ser- vices -Mrs. Elaine Blau of Clinton; planning, development and LTJ t noaanaaaatiang-Mel Farnsworth of Goderich; publicity -Ross Hamilton of Wtngharn; aanastectomy visiting -Mrs. Phyllis Pith: do of R.R. 5 Goderich; and tran- s ;'ration -Russell Jervis ar: Clinton. This infformatio s is bro ght to you with the kind c,i.-oper_ do of th folio Michael S. Falconer 153 HIGH STREET, CLINTON 482-9441 READY MIXED CONCRETE Stsrength Concrete Only ®ppreved ®roiled werslaesd material asoma lsa our product. CUSTOM 420 BATHE ND. 452-3431 EX(HWY. 1 Hv E READY MIX LT JJ PYIIiMACYttt. 2! VICTORIA ST., CE1NT0N,011To P14ON 4I2-9511 L lB. ALILOV!C, 11.Ss. 'hen. ROYAL BANK GODI 1CH CLINTON ®WN MOTORS LTD 1 YOUR 111 YCHEVROLET :AIA 4 CLIFTON 482-9321 PARTS DEPT. 4*2=7t41 The First Canadian Bank f CUIIT®Pf .ink nt al 1 1tc�t�e��-I�i)1.r1