1. Pathfinders in oncology from the time the causal relation between tobacco use and lung cancer was established to publication of the first Cancer Staging Manual by the American Joint Committee on Cancer.
- Author
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Hajdu, Steven I.
- Subjects
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TUMOR classification , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *CARCINOEMBRYONIC antigen , *TOBACCO use , *VASCULAR endothelial growth factors , *LUNG cancer , *POSITRON emission tomography - Abstract
During the period from 1962 to 1977, several antigens, notably carcinoembryonic antigen and prostate‐specific antigen, were discovered and entered clinical use. Ultrasonography, positron emission tomography scanning, and magnetic resonance imaging were introduced, and adjuvant radiation and chemotherapy after limited surgery became routine procedures. Radioimmunoassay and immunohistochemistry techniques were standardized. The announcement in England and the United States that tobacco is a potent lung carcinogen was long delayed, important news. The US Cancer Act of 1971 made it possible to experiment with newly discovered drugs, transfer promising therapeutic agents from the laboratory to the clinic, and finance randomized clinical trials. Oncologists achieved a series of successes with combination chemotherapy in childhood cancers, adult lymphomas, and testis tumors. Clinical trials demonstrated that breast‐conserving therapy is as effective as mastectomy. The discovery of retroviruses, reverse transcriptase, and vascular endothelial growth factor was coupled with learning about oncogenes. The 2‐hit theory and the reciprocal translocation of chromosomes helped to solve some of the riddles of oncogenesis. The staging classification of cancers by the American Joint Committee on Cancer unified clinical and pathologic handling and prognostication of malignant tumors. The progress made in oncology between 1962 and 1977 came about through the dedicated work of many individuals. However, there were 9 pathfinders (3 medical oncologists, 2 surgeons, 1 medical nuclear physicist, 1 pediatrician geneticist, 1 hematologist geneticist, and 1 virologist) who, despite their diverse backgrounds, personalities, and interest, made extraordinary contributions to oncology. A concise review of the publications and achievements of individual pathfinders in oncology during the period from 1962 to 1977 is provided as a continuum of prior publications. During the historic period studied, cigarettes were named carcinogens, and it was demonstrated that limited surgery is as effective as radical procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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