Tag: Cancer

  • Cancer treatment for patients in rural southern Colorado is minutes, not hours, away

    Cancer treatment for patients in rural southern Colorado is minutes, not hours, away

    Cancer treatment for patients in rural southern Colorado is minutes, not hours, away
    Richard Columbo is grateful that he only has to push a couple of miles to receive chemotherapy. UCHealth and Mt. San Rafael Clinic in Trinidad have teamed up to deliver treatment nearer to residence for patients in southern Colorado who need to have chemotherapy. Pictures: UCHealth.

    The way Richard Columbo describes his journey with esophageal most cancers borrows from a popular tune by the Beatles.

    “It’s been a extensive and winding road,’’ claims Columbo, an artist who life in Trinidad, Colorado, with his spouse, Debi Hoyle.

    In the months since he discovered in May possibly 2020 that he had esophageal most cancers, Columbo has had a whirlwind of doctor’s appointments in Arizona, the place he lived aspect of the 12 months, and Colorado. Fortuitously, the street to his chemotherapy therapies is now only about 1.5 miles.

    Access to cancer procedure in rural southern Colorado

    In the springtime, UCHealth Memorial Medical center Central and Mt. San Rafael Hospital in Trinidad teamed up to give chemotherapy treatment method in Trinidad, removing a 129-mile, a person-way drive to Colorado Springs. UCHealth prepares chemotherapy in Colorado Springs, couriers the medicine to Trinidad, exactly where nurses at Mt. San Rafael infuse the treatment.

    When Columbo comes at the Trinidad clinic, a staff members member opens the doorway for him and announces: “Here’s our VIP.’’

    Dr. Robert Hoyer provides rural medicine in Colorado.
    Dr. Robert Hoyer

    Columbo appreciates the 5-star treatment. He’s expended a life time teaching artwork – drawing, painting and sculpting – to youngsters and university learners since he believes it’s critical to produce the creative mind. When he lived in California, Columbo worked with the Children’s Museum of San Diego to present a system titled: Option Components in Artwork. He taught kids how to turn recyclables into eye-catching art parts.

    Columbo is happy of his get the job done, and he recognizes when individuals are excellent at that craft, even if it unfolds in a clinical environment.

    “Our people today at this hospital have been incredible, so caring,’’ Columbo states.

    The collaboration between the two hospitals started in the springtime. Dr. Robert Hoyer, an oncologist at UCHealth’s Most cancers Middle in Colorado Springs, goes to Trinidad two times a thirty day period and sees individuals from Trinidad, Walsenburg, the San Luis Valley and Raton, N.M. Hoyer also visits Lamar five occasions a thirty day period, caring for sufferers from the Arkansas Valley and western Kansas. The outreach, which contains quite a few specialties in Lamar, is part of UCHealth’s exertion to improve accessibility to health care for sufferers in rural Colorado.

    “It’s the ideal issue for individuals,’’ Hoyer explained. “I really consider it is a exclusive detail.’’

    Most cancers treatment shut to house lessens the burden of travel

    Hoyer claimed that people coming from Trinidad to Colorado Springs for care could commit two to 3 hours driving one way, for a take a look at that could final 30 minutes.

    A lifelong artist, Richard Columbo shows some of his work. Columbo has esophageal cancer and does not have to drive two hours to Colorado Springs for chemotherapy treatments.
    A lifelong artist, Richard Columbo demonstrates some of his work. Columbo has esophageal cancer and does not have to push two hrs to Colorado Springs for chemotherapy treatment options.

    “The time and cost genuinely add up quickly, and if a affected individual is not feeling properly right after a take a look at, to be in a vehicle for 2-3 several hours on the way home, from a quality-of-daily life standpoint, it can make a ton of perception to carry the clinic and the medicine to them,’’ Hoyer said.

    Some regimens for chemotherapy can very last from two to 6 hours, and some of the regimens are Working day 1, Day 2 and Working day 3. You can see how this can rapidly include up,’’ Hoyer explained.

    In his travels to Trinidad and Lamar, Hoyer has witnessed the problems for individuals in rural communities to obtain care.

    “There is a enormous require throughout the state of Colorado and carrying out these outreach clinics has really opened my eyes to the scenario of rural drugs in our nation and our condition,’’ he explained. “There are pretty several most important treatment physicians in communities, so it is a really great matter for clients to have that access and to strengthen that obtain.

    “When people can get the the vast majority of their treatment close to household it can help to increase high-quality of lifetime for the patient and for their families as effectively. They never have to consider extra time off do the job, they have extra time with loved ones, and less driving.’’

    Most cancers prognosis when you live in a rural space

    Columbo’s most cancers journey commenced with bouts of consuming problems. He’d swallow food stuff, but it would arrive appropriate back again up. Imaging showed he experienced a tumor at the junction of his esophagus and stomach. He has sought treatment method in Colorado and Arizona, and has integrated acupuncture, Chinese teas, and other substitute medications into his treatment. More than time, he’s shed about 50 pounds.

    He has done five of seven classes of chemotherapy at the Trinidad medical center to stem the Phase IV cancer, which has unfold to his liver.

    As Richard Columbo says, his journey with cancer has been "a long and winding road.’’ He is seated with his wife, Debi Hoyle.
    As Richard Columbo says, his journey with most cancers has been “a extended and winding street.’’ He is seated with his wife, Debi Hoyle.

    “It normally takes me down,’’ he suggests of chemotherapy cure.

    Hoyle is grateful for the care her spouse gets at their community medical center.

    “They put him in a mattress they give him ease and comfort. They look at him like a hawk, no matter whether it is a transfusion or chemo, they’re viewing him regularly,’’ Hoyle claimed.

    Joe Vigil, a nurse at Mt. San Rafael who takes care of people, explained it is been a gift to present the remedies in Trinidad.

    “It’s been actually great for the sufferers to be equipped to receive chemotherapy and immunotherapy, and to get to know them on a own foundation. We get to know their spouse and children and their tales, and they get to know ours,’’ Vigil claimed.

    The infusion middle is in a newly transformed element of the medical center.

    A photo of Bruce Livingston
    Bruce Livingston. Image: UCHealth

    For Bruce Livingston, a resident of Trinidad, getting chemotherapy at San Rafael Healthcare facility, is a gift of benefit. Livingston has pancreatic most cancers and gets chemotherapy 2 times a week.

    “Are you kidding me? It is key. I go from my home to San Rafael Hospital, it probably normally takes me 7 minutes,’’ Livingston stated.  “And they have anything ready, it’s been requested from the doctors. They truly hold an eye on my platelet rely. It’s got to be above 100 ahead of they’ll do infusion.’’

    Not obtaining to make the long travel to Colorado Springs makes his everyday living simpler.

    “Chemo hits kind of difficult,’’ he explained.

    Developing group in rural counties

    Casey Peat, a nurse supervisor in the infusion unit at UCHealth Memorial Hospital Central, explained the collaboration amongst Mt. San Rafael and UCHealth has helped to develop group.

    “This is bringing a service to that community that wasn’t there prior to,’’ Peat stated. “Patients really do not have to drive so considerably away to get providers, and the nurses at San Rafael have the aid of excellence. We are obtainable to them. If it is a new medication, or they require some aid or have questions, they can access out to us for that assist.

    “We are also satisfied to make the trip there to be there in particular person. General, we’re aiding people today and we’re supporting in developing nursing, what they can do. It’s a terrific partnership that we have with them,’’ she said.

    For sufferers like Columbo, it would make the long and winding street a tiny additional pleasant.

  • ASCO endorses “integrative oncology” quackery for cancer pain

    ASCO endorses “integrative oncology” quackery for cancer pain

    Before the pandemic, a frequent topic of this blog was the documentation of how rank quackery was being “integrated” into medicine to produce an unholy fusion dubbed “integrative medicine” or “integrative health” by its advocates. Rebranded from its previous name, “complementary and alternative medicine”—with the pithy acronym CAM, which was tossed aside because CAM adherents didn’t want the nostrums that they added to science-based medicine to be described as “alternative”—”integrative medicine” falsely promised patients the “best of both worlds,” the assumption being that there was a “best” of unscientific medicine based largely on religious prescientific understandings of how the body works and what causes disease to “integrate” into science-based medicine. Then the pandemic hit, and blogging about COVID-19 seemed to push nearly every other topic aside (for me, at least). However, just because we haven’t been paying as much attention as we used to do to the infiltration of what we used to like to call quackademic medicine into medical academia and then into community medical centers doesn’t mean that it didn’t continue during the pandemic, and not just in the form of claiming that various forms of alternative medicine could be used to treat or prevent COVID-19.

    I was reminded of the continued creep of pseudoscience into medicine during the pandemic last week, which led me to write about a published four year follow-up of a negative study of acupuncture for debilitating joint pain caused by aromatase inhibitors (AIs), a class of drugs frequently used to treat breast cancer, that was spun as positive. Expecting that I’d come back to a COVID-19-related topic this week, I never expected that I’d be reminded yet again of how much quackery is infiltrating oncology and, worse, how much that quackery is being endorsed and promoted by the largest oncology professional society, but I was. That reminder came in the form of a news story from Healio, “Guideline provides recommendations for integrative approaches to manage cancer pain“, and the guidelines that it was referencing recommending some forms of “integrative medicine” to manage cancer pain. The guidelines were a joint project involving the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and the Society for Integrative Oncology (SIO). Somehow I missed their original online publication back in September, which is why I’m grateful that the Healio publication popped up in my feed over the weekend.

    The spin in the Healio story was clear:

    The study — the first meta-analysis to examine natural, nonpharmacologic approaches to treat cancer pain — resulted in development of guidelines published in Journal of Clinical Oncology.

    Healio spoke with researcher Jun Mao, MD, chief of the integrative medicine service at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, about the importance of the study and the implications of the findings.

    Dr. Mao summarizes the key findings of the study thusly:

    • Recommend acupuncture for joint pain due to AI therapy.
    • Recommend acupuncture for general pain management in cancer patients.
    • Recommend massage therapy for palliative care of patients with pain due to advanced cancer. (I’ll note right here that, of the recommendations, this one is the least objectionable because, even if massage is generally a placebo, it is relaxing and feels good, something that I would never object to promoting in patients with advanced cancer.)

    There are actually several more recommendations in the guidelines, which is why I find it rather interesting that Dr. Mao chose to focus on these three (two, actually, if you count recommending acupuncture for pain due to cancer or cancer treatment to be one recommendation). In particular, you’d think that he would have been interested in highlighting more plausible “integrative” treatments, such as herbal medicines, which, depending on the specific herbs, might actually contain pharmacologically active components, in particular given that the paper itself states that the panel constructing the guidelines had sought to answer two questions:

    1. What mind-body therapies are recommended for managing pain experienced by adult and pediatric patients diagnosed with cancer?
    2. What natural products are recommended for managing pain experienced by adult and pediatric patients diagnosed with cancer?

    It interested me how little verbiage was devoted to the second question compared to the first.

    Also, there are two things you need to know before I dig in. First, Dr. Mao is a past president of SIO. Second, the Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) has been thought to be one of the best oncology journals out there. Certainly, it’s one of the most read and influential, with an impact factor of 50.717, placing it among the top 1{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of academic journals. This is an astoundingly high IF for a specialty journal. By comparison, for example, the New England Journal of Medicine, a generalist medical journal, has an IF of 176.079; Nature, 69.504; and Science, 63.714. I do realize the problems with impact factors as measurements of a journal’s reach and influence, but by any standard, JCO is in at least the top 20 journals in the world, and it is widely read by pretty much every oncologist, as well as radiation oncologists and surgical oncologists (like me). So promoting “integrative oncology” in JCO is a big deal, with ASCO clearly putting its considerable weight behind these guidelines. It’s an indication that, depressingly, ASCO has gone all-in with integrative medicine quackery.

    “Integrating” magical quackery with medicine

    When it comes to “integrative medicine” or “integrative oncology,” framing is everything, as has been discussed more times than I can remember on this very blog. So it’s useful to see how Mao et al. frame the questions to be answered and the existing evidence base that led them to undertake this review. After correctly emphasizing that pain is a common problem in cancer patients and can be due to cancer, cancer treatments (surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy), or a combination of the two, Mao et al write:

    As pain in patients and survivors of cancer is complex with different etiologies (eg, tumor burden, treatment-related, and non–cancer-related) and varying presentations (eg, neuropathic and musculoskeletal) and duration (eg, acute and chronic), pain management requires an interdisciplinary approach and should include both pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments, where appropriate.

    Of course, no one—and I do mean no one—would disagree with such a general and unobjectionable representation of pain management, even those of us here at SBM, who have long lamented the infiltration of quackery into medicine. The question, of course, is what is defined as “nonpharmacological treatments.” As I’ve discussed many times, evidence-based “nonpharmacological treatments” for pain are not the same thing as CAM or “integrative medicine,” no matter how much advocates try to conflate the two in order to persuade you that their nostrums are science- and evidence-based. Again, this is a common framing by integrative medicine advocates, which leads to the predictable follow-up:

    An estimated 40{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of patients with cancer use integrative medicine on an annual basis. The key guiding principle of integrative medicine is to use these interventions along with conventional pain management approaches (eg, medications, radiation, injections, and physical therapies) and it is not intended to replace conventional interventions.

    Patients often seek integrative medicine because they perceive that conventional medical treatment is not completely meeting their needs, fear side effects from pharmacotherapies, prefer a holistic approach, or because it has been recommended by their family or health care providers. A growing number of well-conducted randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have found that interventions such as acupuncture or massage can alleviate pain in patients and survivors of cancer.

    It’s a very common framing by “integrative medicine” advocates: First, present the unmet medical need in an unobjectionable manner that can’t really be argued against very strongly, if at all—in this case, better pain management in cancer patients. Next, frame “integrative medicine” as “nonpharmacological treatment” for that unmet need. Then appeal to the popularity of “integrative medicine”—40{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} use it!—while citing studies that define it as broadly as possible in order to come up with such large percentages. Finally, hype data that purportedly shows that theatrical placebos like acupuncture “work” in order to justify your study, which you know will be “positive” in at least some way.

    So how were these guidelines arrived at? In brief, they were developed using a methodology that is often used to develop expert consensus guidelines, specifically an “Expert Panel was convened to develop clinical practice guideline recommendations on the basis of a systematic review of the health literature,” which was done thusly:

    This SR-based guideline product was developed by an international multidisciplinary Expert Panel, which included a patient representative and a health research methodologist (Appendix Table A2, online only). The Expert Panel met via video conferences and corresponded through e-mail. Based upon the consideration of the evidence, the authors were asked to contribute to the development of the guideline, provide critical review, and finalize the guideline recommendations. The guideline recommendations were sent for an open comment period of two weeks allowing the public to review and comment on the recommendations after submitting a confidentiality agreement. These comments were taken into consideration while finalizing the recommendations. Members of the Expert Panel were responsible for reviewing and approving the penultimate version of the guideline, which was then submitted to the Journal of Clinical Oncology (JCO) for editorial review and consideration for publication. All SIO-ASCO guidelines are ultimately reviewed and approved by the Expert Panel, the SIO Clinical Practice Guidelines Committee, and the ASCO Evidence Based Medicine Committee before publication. All funding for the administration of the project was provided by SIO.

    Of note, the members of this panel and the authors of these guidelines are all believers. Indeed, a number of names on the author list are familiar. Some are past presidents of SIO, such as Heather Greenlee, who is a—cringe—naturopath and an author on the study of acupuncture for AI-induced joint pain that I discussed. She’s also been associated with a number of efforts by SIO over the years to “integrate” quackery with oncology, in particular the care of breast cancer patients, although she has been instrumental in promoting “integrating” magic into oncology for all cancer patients as well. Claudia Witt also came to mind. She is Director of the Institute for Complementary and Integrative Medicine at the University of Zurich. Worse, she’s a believer in homeopathy, as Mark Crislip noted way back in 2010. Dr. Witt has argued that CAM is cost effective without actually showing that it’s effective and was lead author on a desperate attempt to define just what the heck “integrative oncology” is. Then there’s Ting Bao, immediate past president of SIO and believer in acupuncture.

    Personally, whenever I look at guidelines, I like to look at the very strongest recommendation that the guideline panel comes up with, examine the evidence used for it, and then judge whether the recommendation is justified. For this set of guidelines, there’s clearly one recommendation that is first and strongest, that acupuncture should be offered to patients experiencing AI-associated joint pain:

    Recommendation 1.1.
    Acupuncture should be offered to patients experiencing AI-related joint pain in breast cancer (Type: Evidence based, benefits outweigh harms; Evidence quality: Intermediate; Strength of recommendation: Moderate).

    Literature review.
    Four SRs and five RCTs were conducted in the area of acupuncture and AI-related joint and muscle pain.19,27-30,44-47 The most definitive evidence is from a phase III sham-controlled RCT conducted among 226 patients with moderate to severe AI-related joint pain.19 After 6 weeks, true acupuncture reduced pain significantly more than sham acupuncture and standard of care (waitlist control; 2.05, 1.07, and 0.99 points, respectively, on a 0-10 point NRS). After 6 weeks, there were more responders who had a clinically meaningful change in pain (a two-point reduction on a 0-10 scale) 253 in the true acupuncture group compared with the sham and waitlist control groups (58{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}, 33{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}, and 31{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} respectively).

    I wrote about the study in reference 19 in 2018, when it was first published. While it did include a waitlist, no intervention (at least initially) control group, which was good, it was not a double-blinded study. Despite the contortions that the authors went through to justify no blinding of the acupuncturists (specifically, the authors claimed that sham needles didn’t work and fooled no one, a claim not supported by other studies that did successfully use sham needles), the results of the study, given the very small effect size reported in the true acupuncture group, were actually most consistent with no clinically significant effect from acupuncture on AI-associated joint pain. Also, as I pointed out, the follow-up study published this month to examine long-term effects and treatment durability was no more positive, given how over time the differences between the true acupuncture and sham acupuncture groups fluctuated from nearly zero to still tiny and between statistically significant and mostly not statistically significant. In this, it was consistent with previous studies of acupuncture use to treat AI-associated arthralgias that we’ve written about going back to at least 2014 in that it was entirely consistent with placebo effects but spun as evidence that acupuncture is very effective against AI-associated joint pain.

    I also find it rather interesting that for this, the very strongest recommendation made in this review, the best that even believers could say about the strength of the evidence was that the evidence quality was intermediate and the strength of recommendation was moderate. Let’s just say that it goes downhill rapidly from there. For example, the guidelines recommend yoga for AI-related joint pain, but the recommendation strength is weak, but based on evidence quality characterized as low. Yoga is also recommended for people experiencing pain after treatment for breast or head and neck cancers, again with low quality evidence and a weak recommendation.

    In fact, rather than going through each recommendation in turn, I think I’ll just reproduce this chart from the paper, which is rather interesting in and of itself, for reasons that I’ll list after you have a chance to look at the chart without my commentary:

    SIO CAM recommendations

    SIO-ASCO recommendations for “integrative” medicine interventions for pain related to cancer and cancer treatments.

    I’ll admit that I stole a bit of the thunder here by mentioning earlier that the very strongest recommendation is “intermediate” strength and the very strongest evidence cited is “moderate,” with the disclaimer that “benefits outweigh harms.” In any event, notice how little green there is (“intermediate quality of evidence, moderate strength of recommendation”) compared to black (“insufficient/inconclusive evidence”) plus blue (“low quality of evidence, moderate strength of recommendation”) plus red (“low quality of evidence, weak strength of recommendation”). Also note the modalities listed after first noting the literature search strategy used to search randomized controlled trials (RCTs), systemic reviews (SRs), and meta-analyses:

    The recommendations were developed by using a SR of evidence identified through online searches of PubMed (1990-2021) and Cochrane Library (1990-2021) of RCTs, SRs, and meta-analyses. Articles were selected for inclusion in the SR on the basis of the following criteria:

    • Population: Adults and pediatric patients experiencing pain during any stage of their cancer care trajectory
    • Interventions: Integrative interventions for pain management, including acupuncture, acupressure, mind-body therapies, and natural products (note: see details in the Data Supplement, online only; therapies focused on pain prevention were not included)
    • Comparisons: No intervention, waitlist, usual care (UC) or standard care, guideline-based care, active control, attention control, placebo, or sham interventions
    • Outcomes: Pain intensity, reduction, or change in symptoms reported as the primary outcome in published manuscript
    • Sample size: Minimum total sample size of 20

    Articles were excluded from the SR if they were (1) meeting abstracts not subsequently published in peer-reviewed journals; (2) editorials, commentaries, letters, news articles, case reports, and narrative reviews; or (3) published in a non-English language. The guideline recommendations were crafted, in part, using the Guidelines Into Decision Support methodology and the accompanying BRIDGE-Wiz software program.25 In addition, a guideline implementability review was conducted. On the basis of the implementability review, revisions were made to the draft to clarify recommended actions for clinical practice. Ratings for type and strength of the recommendation, and evidence quality are provided with each recommendation. The quality of the evidence for each outcome was assessed using the Cochrane Risk-of-Bias tool26 by the project methodologist in collaboration with the Expert Panel cochairs and reviewed by the full Expert Panel.

    All of this is fairly standard in guideline construction. I’ll include the flow chart for the literature search and selection for a reason that you will see in a moment but hope that you’ll be able to glean a bit before I explain:

    Guidelines flow chart

    Guidelines flow chart.

    While it’s not unusual for the winnowing of articles from initial search to articles used in a systemic review or meta-analysis to be severe, given the broad search strategy I was actually rather surprised at how few articles were found initially involving relatively few modalities, which boiled down to acupuncture/acupressure, reflexology, yoga, massage, hypnosis, guided imagery, and music therapy, none of which produced evidence rising above an even generous characterization of intermediate quality or recommendations above moderate strength.

    Interestingly (to me, anyway), herbal products were pretty much a bust, which is why none of them made it into even the 13 weak-to-moderate strength recommendations based on low-to-intermediate quality evidence. For natural products, the evidence taken as a whole was either inconclusive, for example:

    There is insufficient evidence to recommend for or against the use of Xiao Zheng Zhitong paste, Jinlongshe granule, Shuangbai San paste, or Xiao-Ai-Tong decoction for general cancer pain. Four trials tested the effects of Chinese herbal preparations on treating general cancer pain, including Xiao Zheng Zhitong paste in patients with a range of different cancer types, Jinlongshe granules in patients with gastric cancer, Shuangbai San paste in patients with liver cancer, and Xiao-Ai-Ton decoction with and without morphine in patients with a range of different cancer types. Given that there was only one trial of each treatment intervention, variability in quality of the trials, there are insufficient data to make a clinical recommendation.

    Or negative, for example:

    Two RCTs tested the effects of glutamine on the incidence and severity of peripheral neuropathy. The first trial was a moderate-size (N = 86) trial comparing oral levo-glutamine compared with no intervention in patients with colorectal cancer receiving oxaliplatin. Patients who received levo-glutamine had lower incidence and severity of peripheral neuropathy symptoms; however, the trial did not control for placebo effects. The second smaller trial (N = 43) compared oral glutamate to placebo in women with ovarian cancer receiving paclitaxel. There were no differences between groups in incidence of peripheral neuropathy; patients who received glutamate reported lower pain severity. No clinical recommendations can be made on the basis of these results because of low study quality and/or small sample size.

    If I were going to predict something about this systematic review the guidelines that result from it, I would have predicted that there would be at least one herbal treatment that showed promise, given that herbal treatments always have the possibility of containing one or more pharmacologically active compounds, compared to something like acupuncture, which is nothing more than an elaborate theatrical placebo.

    Given how often we’ve discussed the biological implausibility of acupuncture, I’ll discuss reflexology instead. If acupuncture, with its “meridians” and claim that it works by altering the flow of qi (life energy) through those meridians is pure prescientific nonsense, then what can one say about reflexology, which proposes that every one of your organs “maps” to someplace on your feet? Here’s a representative chart that I pulled up just by Googling the term “reflexology”:

    Reflexology foot map

    A representative reflexology foot map. This is not how human anatomy works!

    The idea behind reflexology is that by applying pressure to these various locations on the foot you can impact the function of the organ to which that location supposedly maps. That’s not how human anatomy works, and attempts to “modernize” reflexology have utterly failed to make it less utterly ridiculous from an anatomical and physiological standpoint. Unfortunately, like the case for acupuncture, its scientific implausibility and lack of evidence haven’t stopped some states from licensing its practitioners.

    ASCO embraces nonsense

    I’ve written on a number of occasions before how ASCO has increasingly embraced the nonsensical pseudoscience behind quackery like acupuncture, reflexology, and more. I was first gobsmacked by the blatantness of its embrace eight years ago, when I attended an ASCO meeting that featured a major session on “integrative oncology” full of credulous acceptance of alternative medicine modalities. Then, a few years ago, ASCO endorsed guidelines for the use of “integrative therapies” in the treatment of breast cancer patients, thus leading to a post by me explaining just how harmful this embrace of quackery was to cancer patients. I supposed that I shouldn’t have been too surprised, given that in 2010 JCO published a very disappointing editorial about a cancer treatment that was obviously rank quackery.

    Unfortunately, ASCO and its journal JCO are not alone, as this sort of “integration” of quackery with medicine is finding its way into many journals, academic medical and cancer centers, and even NCI-designated comprehensive cancer centers. There are even, increasingly, training programs claiming to produce the next generation of “evidence-based” integrative practitioners, despite the inherent contradiction between “evidence based” and “integrative” practice.

    It’s hard for me not to see a connection between the infiltration of the Trojan horse that is “integrative medicine” into academic medical centers and the tsunami of COVID-19 misinformation that we’ve been enduring. “Integrative medicine” trains physicians to ignore prior plausibility and embrace treatments that are wildly implausible from a basic biology perspective, and we’ve now seen a disturbingly large minority of doctors do the same thing with respect to COVID-19. You might think I’m overreaching, and it’s possible that I am, but when you embrace unreality in one area of medicine, how do you prevent that unreality from metastasizing to other areas of medicine? We normally expect professional societies like ASCO to be champions of science- and evidence-based medicine. Unfortunately, we are not living in normal times, and haven’t been since before the pandemic. The pandemic just accelerated the embrace of unreality.

  • Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) may benefit children and young adults with cancer

    Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) may benefit children and young adults with cancer

    Impression: Option drugs this sort of as acupuncture, hypnosis and herbs and nutritional supplements have proved to be a relief versus aspect outcomes from conventional most cancers procedure, according to researcher Trine Stub.

    Mother and father knowledge unpredicted and traumatic gatherings when their little one is diagnosed with cancer. In addition to the very seriously unwell little one, they have other family and each day obligations, usually together with other kids to show up at to. The treatment is demanding, and several kids and young grownups will have to dwell with the effects for a extensive time.

    Childhood cancer in Norway

    Each individual year, approximately 350 kids and young older people (-19 years) are diagnosed with most cancers in Norway. This corresponds to 3500 persons in 10 several years. Cancer is between the major brings about of loss of life in small children and adolescents worldwide, particularly in substantial-income countries.

    As a end result of professional medical developments and efficient procedure, the survival fee for small children with cancer is nearly 80 for each cent. Even so, lots of survivors will have to deal with the burden of signs and symptoms throughout and soon after most cancers treatment. Parents explain some signs or symptoms derived from cancer treatment method as soreness, fatigue, decline of hunger, and psychological and cognitive difficulties.

    Understandably, mom and dad who deal with a demanding situation because of to their child’s cancer analysis want to do every thing feasible for the child. Consequently, the burden brought about by conventional cancer treatment has led mothers and fathers to find unique supportive treatment treatment options, together with complementary and choice drugs – CAM.

    What do we know about CAM and childhood most cancers?

    There is a absence of know-how pertaining to the use and effect of CAM among kids and youthful older people with cancer. In addition, there is inadequate information and facts about the remedies utilized and the reasons why.

    Some products and treatment options may perhaps interact negatively with standard cancer treatment. For that reason, we – researchers at the National Exploration Centre in Complementary and Option Medication (NAFKAM) – desired to survey this use. At the same time, we needed to examine the feasible results of these remedies by performing a systematic review and meta-analyses based on details from internationally released article content.

    Acupuncture appears to be a great and risk-free treatment method alternative for regular anti-nausea and vomiting treatment in small children and adolescents with cancer.

    What did we come across?

    We involved 20 trials in a analyze that investigated the use of acupuncture, music and artwork treatment, hypnosis, as very well as herbs and dietary supplements to take care of adverse effects of cancer therapy.

    Acupuncture

    Based on details from five trials, we discovered that acupuncture was significantly more effective in treating chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting in contrast to the control teams. The participants in the command groups obtained sham acupuncture and regular anti-nausea and vomiting medicines only. Soreness because of to needling and limited acupuncture bands were reported as adverse results.

    Tunes and art remedy

    We found that tunes treatment was useful for pain related with agonizing procedures such as lumbar puncture. This is a method where by a needle is inserted involving two vertebrae to extract spinal fluid. The little ones who been given tunes remedy expert the technique as less unpleasant and frightening as opposed to young children in the manage team.

    In addition, children who obtained artwork remedy had been a lot more bodily energetic, a lot more social, less pressured, and significantly less depressed than small children in the management group. Norwegian hospitals that handle little ones and adolescents with cancer present their sufferers music and artwork therapies.

    Hypnosis

    A person analyze described that people who received hypnosis employed a lot less supplemental anti-nausea and vomiting medicine for the duration of the very first and next courses of chemotherapy. An additional research examined the outcome of hypnosis and aid groups on reducing chemo-treatment-related worry. The period of nausea was considerably shorter for individuals in the hypnosis and help teams as opposed to these in the regulate group.

    Herbs and health supplements

    Herbs and health supplements have been utilized to reduce chemotherapy-induced adverse results these kinds of as oral mucositis, nausea, vomiting, fat decline, and hepatoxicity. Several treatment plans were being helpful for many of the grievances that lowered the children’s top quality of lifetime.

    Zinc was successful for fat loss and minimized the episodes of bacterial infections. The severity of swelling in the oral mucosa was lowered working with Vitamin E and Bovine Colostrum. Glutamine lowered the use of intravenous diet. Milk Thistle minimized the degree of AST enzyme in the liver. The use of probiotics reduced episodes of fever and intravenous antibiotics, while Ginger diminished episodes of nausea and vomiting.

    What does this imply?

    Acupuncture appears to be a great and secure procedure selection for regular anti-nausea and vomiting treatment in children and adolescents with most cancers. The procedure must be supplied by certified acupuncturists who are trained in pediatric acupuncture. This getting is in accordance with formal guidelines for nausea and vomiting in older people and youngsters.

    Tunes and art therapy, as effectively as hypnosis, have a helpful effect on the quite a few grievances youngsters confront in the course of and following most cancers treatment. On the other hand, additional study is desired in advance of we can conclude with certainty.

    It is critical to bear in mind that mothers and fathers must discuss with health care providers or the dealing with physician about the use of these supportive treatment options, as some of these solutions and treatments may interact negatively with traditional cancer cure.

    References:

    • Mora DC, Kristoffersen AE, Overvåg G, Jong MC, Mentink M, Liu JP, Stub T. Complementary and substitute medication (CAM) modalities utilized to deal with adverse effects of anti-most cancers cure between little ones: A systematic critique and meta-examination of randomized regulate trials. BMC Complementary Medication and Therapies. 202222(1):1-21.
    • Stub T, Quandt SA, Kristoffersen AE, Jong MC, Arcury TA. Conversation and information requires about complementary and different medication: a qualitative research of parents of youngsters with most cancers. BMC Complementary Medication and Therapies. 202121(1):85.
    • Stub T, Kristoffersen AE, Overvåg G, Jong MC. An integrative assessment of the information and conversation wants of moms and dads of little ones with cancer regarding the use of complementary and different medicine. BMC Complementary Drugs and Therapies. 202020(1):90.

    Additional Studying:

    The ScienceNorway Researchers’ zone is composed of viewpoints, weblogs and common science items prepared by scientists and researchers from or centered in Norway. Want to lead? Ship us an e mail!

  • Uterine cancer rates rising, Black women especially at risk

    Uterine cancer rates rising, Black women especially at risk

    By Rachel Crumpler

    Light spotting. Constipation. Feeling tired. Skin losing its glow.

    Martha Jean Williams, 57 at the time, dismissed all of it as routine aging. 

    Months later, in October 2012, she went in for a regular checkup with her doctor. 

    It turned out that she should have been more worried about the spotting. She had gone through menopause at age 50. In the seven years since she experienced no bleeding at all — until March. 

    “I remember asking three different women about it because I’d already been through menopause,” Williams said. “They said, ‘Oh, no big deal. I bleed all the time.’ It wasn’t heavy or anything and it wasn’t every day, so I just ignored it.”

    When she mentioned the light spotting to her doctor, he had a different reaction — one of concern. He told her to get a biopsy. 

    The result came back: she had endometrial cancer, also known as uterine cancer.

    Martha Jean Williams is an endometrial cancer survivor. She is part of the Endometrial Cancer Action Network for African-Americans where she serves as a board member and member of the group’s research partnerships committee.  Credit: Courtesy of Martha Jean Williams

    The news was a shock. It was only the third time in her life that she’d been sick beyond a cold. This type of cancer was unfamiliar to her, even though endometrial cancer is the only major cancer type that is increasing in both frequency and mortality.

    “I had no information whatsoever, had never had a conversation about uterine cancer,” Williams said. “I don’t know that I had even heard of it before I had it. I had heard of breast cancer and ovarian cancer, but this, no.” 

    ‘Greatest cancer disparity’

    Williams, who lives in New Orleans, did not find out about the stark racial disparity in endometrial cancer outcomes — one of the largest disparities for any cancer type — until years later when she joined the Endometrial Cancer Action Network for African-Americans in 2018. ECANA is a national group of patients, doctors, survivors, community advocates and professional leaders committed to the single purpose of improving the lives of Black women affected by endometrial cancer.

    Black women die of uterine cancer at twice the rate of white women, and the reasons for the disparity remain unclear. 

    That’s an unacceptable fact for a group of researchers and clinicians at UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. That’s why they have research underway to investigate many factors such as tumor biology, access to care, and lifestyle and behavior that may play a role in survivorship.

    The goal is to acquire vital knowledge that can be used to improve endometrial cancer outcomes and close the racial disparity gap.

    “I think that endometrial cancer is probably the greatest cancer disparity in North Carolina, so it’s kind of about time that we paid attention to it now,” said Victoria Bae-Jump, director of UNC Lineberger’s Endometrial Cancer Center of Excellence and a gynecologic oncologist. “It’s on the rise both in frequency and mortality.” 

    Increasing cases, increasing deaths

    In North Carolina, based on preliminary 2020 data, there were 1,706 cases of uterine cancer — an incidence rate of 23.1 per 100,000. The same year, there were 408 deaths with a significant disparity in mortality, with a death rate for white women at 4.0 per 100,000 compared to a rate of 9.7 per 100,000 for all minorities.

    Hazel Nichols, an associate professor in the epidemiology department at UNC-Chapel Hill’s Gillings School of Global Public Health who researches cancer, says it’s common for people to be diagnosed and say they have never heard of endometrial cancer, also known as uterine cancer, prior to the diagnosis. Nichols said this cancer type hasn’t gotten the national and local attention it deserves.

    After all, it’s a cancer everyone with a uterus should know about. 

    Currently, endometrial cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women in the United States. But with cases on the rise, cancer of the uterus is expected to pass colorectal cancer by 2040 as the third most common cancer among women.

    Facts About Endometrial (Uterine) Cancer

    • In 2022, an estimated 65,950 new cases of uterine cancer will be diagnosed in the U.S. and 12,550 women are expected to die from it, according to the American Cancer Society.
    • Among all women, uterine cancer mortality rates have increased by 1.8 percent per year from 2010 to 2017.
    • Endometrial cancer mainly affects post-menopausal women. It’s uncommon in women under the age of 45.
    • Obesity is a strong risk factor for endometrial cancer. The cancer is twice as common in overweight women and more than three times as common in obese women.
    • Abnormal vaginal bleeding — either after menopause or between periods — is the most frequent symptom of endometrial cancer, along with pelvic pain.

    For many other cancers, researchers have been successful in seeing overall declines in incidence and mortality rates as well as in reducing the gap between Black and white patient outcomes, said Nichols. Yet she said these improvements have not occurred with endometrial cancer primarily because it’s been underfunded and understudied.

    Uterine cancer has consistently ranked at the bottom of research funding by cancer type. The National Cancer Institute reported spending an estimated $13.6 million on uterine cancer research in 2020, a drop from $18 million in 2019. The only cancer type with less NCI funding in 2020 was stomach cancer, which received $10.6 million. In comparison, breast cancer received more than half a billion dollars in research funding.

    Last November, UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center launched the Endometrial Cancer Center of Excellence to increase its focus on advancing scientific understanding of the causes, prevention and treatment of endometrial cancer. 

    “Every year we have more deaths, we have more women diagnosed, and we don’t really completely understand why,” said Bae-Jump, the center’s director who was elected co-chair of the National Cancer Institute Gynecologic Cancers Steering Committee’s Uterine Task Force in May.

    Looking for answers

    One ambitious statewide, population-based study, the Carolina Endometrial Cancer Study, seeks to find answers, and it’s casting a wide net to do so.

    Researchers are seeking to enroll about 1,800 adults ages 20-80 living in any of North Carolina’s counties at the time of their recent first diagnosis of endometrial cancer to learn why people have different outcomes and experiences. Women of all races will be enrolled, but the study has a particular target of enrolling at least 500 Black women.

    Bae-Jump, a study investigator, said this study is the largest on endometrial cancer in the South, one of the first studies to include significant numbers of Black women and the first to look at different subtypes of endometrial cancer.

    “The overarching goal is to address why are endometrial cancer outcomes worsening? And then why is that worsening particularly striking for Black women?” Bae-Jump said.

    Past studies have identified potential drivers of the racial disparity, including that Black women are more likely to be diagnosed with advanced-stage cancer, have a greater prevalence of health conditions and are less likely to undergo surgery to treat their cancer.

    Bae-Jump suspects the answer will be multi-pronged. That’s why the study is examining both biological factors and social determinants of health in its search for answers. 

    “We’re trying to bring to bear all the different disciplines of public health and medicine so that we get this fuller view of the contributors to an endometrial cancer diagnosis and survivorship,” Nichols, one of the study’s principal investigators, said.

    The first endometrial cancer patient was enrolled in the study in February 2021, Bae-Jump said, and she expects it to take four to five years to enroll the target number of study participants. Investigators identify potential study participants from the North Carolina Central Cancer Registry.

    Participants are first asked to complete a thorough survey that includes questions about family history, medical history, lifestyle, treatment and access to care. 

  • Healthy lifestyle may offset genetic risk of prostate cancer

    Healthy lifestyle may offset genetic risk of prostate cancer

    Healthy lifestyle may offset genetic risk of prostate cancer
    Despite the fact that males could not be in a position to training their possibility of prostate cancer absent, lifestyle may possibly issue in the aggressiveness of the most cancers, researchers reported. Photo by qimono/Pixabay

    Genes can put some adult males at heightened threat of prostate cancer, but a new study suggests they can undo substantially of that potential harm with a nutritious life-style.

    Researchers observed that between guys at enhanced genetic chance of prostate most cancers, those people who maintained a balanced way of living were being much much less very likely to die of the sickness over just about 3 many years.

    “Nutritious” intended they exercised consistently, refrained from smoking cigarettes, kept their excess weight down and favored fish around processed meat.

    Adult men who met these aims had a 1.6{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} life time possibility of dying from prostate cancer. That compared with a 5.3{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} probability between their counterparts with harmful behaviors, the investigators found.

    Having said that, nutritious routines did not show up to guard guys from building prostate most cancers in the initial spot, famous lead researcher Dr. Adam Kibel.

    It is really probable they as a substitute decrease the possibility of aggressive prostate cancer, in accordance to Kibel, chief of urology at Brigham and Women’s Healthcare facility, in Boston.

    Prostate cancer is extremely widespread: About a person in 8 guys will be diagnosed with the disorder in their life time, in accordance to the American Cancer Modern society (ACS). But the most cancers is typically slow-rising, and may in no way progress to the stage of threatening a man’s lifetime: Only one in every single 41 gentlemen really die of prostate cancer.

    So whilst guys may possibly not be in a position to exercise their danger of the disorder absent, way of living may well matter in the aggressiveness of the cancer.

    “A person way to glance at it is, an unhealthy way of living might throw gas on to the fireplace,” Kibel mentioned.

    The research, revealed online a short while ago in the journal European Urology, concerned more than 12,000 adult men from two extensive-functioning investigate projects. All were being wellbeing professionals who, commencing in the 1980s, done periodic questionnaires on their wellness and way of living habits. They also gave blood samples, so their genetic info could be analyzed.

    Prostate cancer has a massive genetic component, and about 200 gene variants have been connected to the hazard of producing the ailment. Kibel and his colleagues made use of that facts to assign every single participant a “polygenic threat rating” for their odds of creating prostate most cancers.

    Every single male was also presented a healthier life style rating, earning 1 level for every of 6 components: preserving their weight beneath the being overweight cutoff routinely obtaining vigorous work out, like jogging not smoking cigarettes and frequently ingesting fatty fish (like salmon) eating tomato solutions and limiting processed meats. In specific, studies have tied individuals 3 diet program behaviors to a decreased possibility of prostate cancer or demise from the ailment.

    Above 27 years, just in excess of 3,000 men made prostate most cancers, and 435 died from it. Genes produced a significant big difference: Gentlemen with genetic hazard scores in the top rated 25{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} were being about 4 times additional probable to die of the sickness, versus individuals in the base 25{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}, the investigators located.

    But for those identical men, life style also experienced a major effect. Individuals who trapped with at minimum 4 of the 6 healthful way of living components slice their odds of dying from prostate cancer by 45{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}, as opposed to men who adhered to couple of or none.

    Of all lifestyle habits, Kibel explained, exercising appeared most significant, adopted by sustaining a healthier pounds.

    The results do not establish that all those nutritious patterns, per se, saved some men’s lives. But Dr. William Dahut, main scientific officer at the ACS, named the results “encouraging.”

    “What is attention-grabbing is this indicates that a healthier way of living may well not reduce your hazard of creating prostate cancer, but may lower your risk of lethal prostate most cancers – which is significantly far more crucial,” said Dahut, who was not associated in the study.

    In the real environment, gentlemen would not know their polygenic chance rating, but equally medical doctors stated that could improve in the coming yrs.

    For now, males can get some perception of their genetic hazard based mostly on family history, although that is not the whole tale, Dahut stated. Possessing a father or brother with prostate most cancers much more than doubles a man’s threat of producing the disorder, according to the ACS.

    Based mostly on the most recent conclusions, Kibel mentioned he suspects that a balanced way of life would help reduce the surplus threat linked to family members heritage.

    There was no proof that way of living adjusted the chance of deadly prostate most cancers among the adult males at reduce genetic threat. That, Kibel reported, may well be since several of all those males died of the ailment – producing it really hard for any way of life measure to present an influence.

    However, there are a great deal of factors further than prostate most cancers for guys to adopt healthful behaviors, both of those physicians said.

    “Persons are normally happier when they are in fantastic actual physical shape,” Kibel famous.

    He also inspired adult males to study about their household health care record. While women of all ages normally have a excellent perception of that, Kibel stated, he has identified that male individuals typically do not know if any family have experienced prostate most cancers.

    Extra facts

    The American Most cancers Society has more on prostate cancer.

    Copyright © 2022 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

  • How the cost of cancer treatment is driving Americans into debt : Shots

    How the cost of cancer treatment is driving Americans into debt : Shots

    Jeni Rae Peters and daughter embrace at their home in Rapid City, S.D. In 2020, Peters was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. After treatment, Peters estimates that her medical bills exceeded $30,000.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Jeni Rae Peters and daughter embrace at their home in Rapid City, S.D. In 2020, Peters was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer. After treatment, Peters estimates that her medical bills exceeded $30,000.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    RAPID CITY, S.D. ― Jeni Rae Peters would make promises to herself as she lay awake nights after being diagnosed with breast cancer two years ago.

    “My kids had lost so much,” said Peters, a single mom and mental health counselor. She had just adopted two girls and was fostering four other children. “I swore I wouldn’t force them to have yet another parent.”

    Multiple surgeries, radiation, and chemotherapy controlled the cancer. But, despite having insurance, Peters was left with more than $30,000 of debt, threats from bill collectors, and more anxious nights thinking of her kids.

    “Do I pull them out of day care? Do I stop their schooling and tutoring? Do I not help them with college?” Peters asked herself. “My doctor saved my life, but my medical bills are stealing from my children’s lives.”

    Cancer kills about 600,000 people in the U.S. every year, making it a leading cause of death. Many more survive it, because of breakthroughs in medicines and therapies.

    But the high costs of modern-day care have left millions with a devastating financial burden. That’s forced patients and their families to make gut-wrenching sacrifices even as they confront a grave illness, according to a KHN-NPR investigation of America’s sprawling medical debt problem. The project shows few suffer more than those with cancer.

    About two-thirds of adults with health care debt who’ve had cancer themselves or in their family have cut spending on food, clothing, or other household basics, a poll conducted by KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation) for this project found. About 1 in 4 have declared bankruptcy or lost their home to eviction or foreclosure.

    Other research shows that patients from minority communities are more likely to experience financial hardships caused by cancer than white patients, reinforcing racial disparities that shadow the U.S. health care system.

    “It’s crippling,” said Dr. Veena Shankaran, a University of Washington oncologist who began studying the financial impact of cancer after seeing patients ruined by medical bills. “Even if someone survives the cancer, they often can’t shake the debt.”

    Shankaran found that cancer patients were 71{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} more likely than Americans without the disease to have bills in collections, face tax liens and mortgage foreclosure, or experience other financial setbacks. Analyzing bankruptcy records and cancer registries in Washington state, Shankaran and other researchers also discovered that cancer patients were 2½ times more likely to declare bankruptcy than those without the disease.

    And cancer patients who went bankrupt were more likely to die than those who did not. Oncologists have a name for this: “financial toxicity,” a term that echoes the intractable vomiting, life-threatening infections and other noxious effects of chemotherapy.

    “Sometimes,” Shankaran said, “it’s tough to think about what the system puts patients through.”

    Cancer diagnosis upends a family

    At the three-bedroom home in Rapid City that Peters shares with her children and a friend, there isn’t time most days to dwell on these worries. There are ice skating lessons and driving tests and countless meals to prepare. Teenagers drift in and out, chattering about homework and tattoos and driving.

    Despite having medical insurance, Peters had to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket. “I don’t even know anymore how much I owe,” she said. “Sometimes it feels like people just send me random bills. I don’t even know what they’re for.”

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Despite having medical insurance, Peters had to pay thousands of dollars out of pocket. “I don’t even know anymore how much I owe,” she said. “Sometimes it feels like people just send me random bills. I don’t even know what they’re for.”

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    The smallest children congregate at a small kitchen table under a wall decorated with seven old telephones. (As Peters tells it, the red one is a hotline to Santa, a green one to the Grinch, and a space shuttle-shaped phone connects to astronauts orbiting the Earth.)

    Peters, 44, presides cheerfully over the chaos, directing her children with snide asides and expressions of love. She watches proudly as one teenage daughter helps another with math in the living room. Later she dances with a 5-year-old to Queen under a disco ball in the entry hall.

    Peters, who sports tattoos and earlier this year dyed her hair purple, never planned to have a family. In her late 30s, she wanted to do more for her adopted community, so she took in foster children, many of whom come from the nearby Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. One of her daughters had been homeless.

    “Foster kids are amazing humans,” she said. “I joke I’m the most reluctant parent of the most amazing children that have ever existed. And I get to help raise these little people to be healthy and safe.”

    In spring 2020, the secure world Peters had carefully tended was shattered. As the COVID pandemic spread across the country, she was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer.

    Within weeks, she had an intravenous port inserted into her chest. Surgeons removed both her breasts, then her ovaries after tests showed she was at risk of ovarian cancer, as well.

    Cancer treatment today often entails a costly, debilitating march of procedures, infusions, and radiation sessions that can exhaust patients physically and emotionally. It was scary, Peters said. But she rallied her children. “We talked a lot about how they had all lost siblings or parents or other relatives,” she said. “All I had to do was lose my boobs.”

    Much harder, she said, were the endless and perplexing medical bills.

    There were bills from the anesthesiologists who attended her surgeries, from the hospital, and from a surgery center. For a while, the hospital stopped sending bills. Then in April, Peters got a call one morning from a bill collector saying she owed $13,000. In total, Peters estimates her medical debts now exceed $30,000.

    High costs, despite insurance

    Debts of that size Peters carried aren’t unusual. Nationwide, about 1 in 5 indebted adults who have had cancer or have a family member who’s been sick say they owe $10,000 or more, according to the KFF poll. Those dealing with cancer are also more likely than others with health care debt to owe large sums and to say they don’t expect to ever pay them off.

    This debt has been fueled in part by the advent of lifesaving therapies that also come with eye-popping price tags. The National Cancer Institute calculated the average cost of medical care and drugs tops $42,000 in the year following a cancer diagnosis. Some treatments can exceed $1 million.

    Usually, most costs are covered. But patients are increasingly on the hook for large bills because of annual deductibles and other health plan cost sharing. The average leukemia patient with private health insurance, for example, can expect to pay more than $5,100 in the year after diagnosis, according to an analysis by the consulting firm Milliman.

    Even Medicare can leave seniors with huge bills. The average blood cancer patient covered by fee-for-service Medicare can expect to pay more than $17,000 out-of-pocket in the year following diagnosis, Milliman found.

    Additionally ongoing surgeries, tests, and medications can make patients pay large out-of-pocket costs year after year. Physicians and patient advocates say this cost sharing ― originally billed as a way to encourage patients to shop for care ― is devastating. “The problem is that model doesn’t work very well with cancer,” said Dr. David Eagle, an oncologist at New York Cancer & Blood Specialists.

    Peters tries her best to support her children, including her daughter Lisha Jane Featherman. She had never planned to have a family. In her late 30s, she wanted to do more for her adopted community, so she took in foster children. Now, she has two adopted kids and four foster kids.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Peters tries her best to support her children, including her daughter Lisha Jane Featherman. She had never planned to have a family. In her late 30s, she wanted to do more for her adopted community, so she took in foster children. Now, she has two adopted kids and four foster kids.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    More broadly, the KHN-NPR investigation found that about 100 million people in the U.S. are now in debt from medical or dental bills. Poor health is among the most powerful predictors of debt, with this debt concentrated in parts of the country with the highest levels of illness.

    According to the KFF poll, 6 in 10 adults with a chronic disease such as cancer, diabetes, or heart disease or with a close family member who is sick have had some kind of health care debt in the past five years. The poll was designed to capture not just bills patients haven’t paid, but also other borrowing used to pay for health care, such as credit cards, payment plans, and loans from friends and family.

    For her part, Peters has had seven surgeries since 2020. Through it all, she had health insurance through her employers. Peters said she knew she had to keep working or would lose coverage and face even bigger bills. Like most plans, however, hers have required she pay thousands of dollars out-of-pocket.

    Within weeks of her diagnosis, the bills rolled in. Then collectors started calling. One call came as Peters was lying in the recovery room after her double mastectomy. “I was kind of delirious, and I thought it was my kids,” she said. “It was someone asking me to pay a medical bill.”

    Peters faced more bills when she switched jobs later that year and her insurance changed. The deductible and cap on her out-of-pocket costs reset.

    In 2021, the deductible and out-of-pocket limit reset again, as they do every year for most health plans. So when Peters slipped on the ice and broke her wrist ― a fracture likely made worse by chemotherapy that weakened her bones ― she was charged thousands more.

    This year has brought more surgeries and yet more bills, as her deductible and out-of-pocket limit reset again.

    “I don’t even know anymore how much I owe,” Peters said. “Sometimes it feels like people just send me random bills. I don’t even know what they’re for.”

    Making sacrifices to pay the bills

    Before getting sick, Peters was earning about $60,000 a year. It was enough to provide for her children, she said, supplemented with a stipend she receives for foster care.

    Peters took on extra work to pay some of the bills and support her family. Five days a week, she works back-to-back shifts at both a mental health crisis center and a clinic counseling teenagers.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


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    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR


    Peters took on extra work to pay some of the bills and support her family. Five days a week, she works back-to-back shifts at both a mental health crisis center and a clinic counseling teenagers.

    Dawnee LeBeau for NPR

    The family budget was always tight. Peters and her kids don’t take extravagant vacations. Peters doesn’t own her home and has next to no savings. Now, she said, they are living at the edge. “I keep praying there is a shoe fairy,” she said, joking about the demands of so many growing feet in her home.

    Peters took on extra work to pay some of the bills. Five days a week, she works back-to-back shifts at both a mental health crisis center and a clinic counseling teenagers, some of whom are suicidal. Last year, three friends on the East Coast paid off some of the debt.

    But Peters’ credit score has tumbled below 600. And the bills pile high on the microwave in her kitchen. “I’m middle-class,” she said. “Could I make payments on some of these? Yes, I suppose I could.”

    That would require trade-offs. She could drop car insurance for her teenage daughter, who just got her license. Canceling ice skating for another daughter would yield an extra $60 a month. But Peters is reluctant.

    “Do you know what it feels like to be a foster kid and get a gold medal in ice skating? Do you know what kind of citizen they could become if they know they’re special?” she said. “There seems to be a myth that you can pay for it all. You can’t.”

    Many cancer patients face difficult choices.

    About 4 in 10 with debt have taken money out of a retirement, college, or other long-term savings account, the KFF poll found; about 3 in 10 have moved in with family or friends or made another change in their living situation.

    Dr. Kashyap Patel, chief executive of Carolina Blood and Cancer Care Associates, said the South Carolina practice has found patients turning to food banks and other charities to get by. One patient was living in his car. Patel estimated that half the patients need some kind of financial aid. Even then, many end up in debt.

    The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, which typically helps blood cancer patients navigate health insurance and find food, housing, and other nonmedical assistance, is hearing from more patients simply seeking cash to pay off debt, said Nikki Yuill, who oversees the group’s call center.

    “People tell us they won’t get follow-up care because they can’t take on more debt,” Yuill said, recalling one man who refused to call an ambulance even though he couldn’t get to the hospital. “It breaks your heart.”

    Academic research has revealed widespread self-rationing by patients. For example, while nearly 1 in 5 people taking oral chemotherapy abandon treatment, about half stop when out-of-pocket costs exceed $2,000, according to a 2017 analysis.

    Robin Yabroff, an epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society, said more research must be done to understand the lasting effects of medical debt on cancer survivors and their families. “What does it mean for a family if they have to liquidate savings or drain college funds or sell their home?” Yabroff said. “We just don’t know yet.”

    As Peters put away bags of groceries in her kitchen, she conceded she doesn’t know what will happen to her family. Like many patients, she worries about how she’ll pay for tests and follow-up care if the cancer reappears.

    She is still wading through collection notices in the mail and fielding calls from debt collectors. Peters told one that she was prepared to go to court and ask the judge to decide which of her children should be cut off from after-school activities to pay off the debts.

    She asked another debt collector whether he had kids. “He told me that it had been my choice to get the surgery,” Peters recalled. “And I said, ‘Yeah, I guess I chose not to be dead.’ “

    The audio version of this story was produced by Seth Tupper at South Dakota Public Broadcasting.

    KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. It is an editorially independent operating program of KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation).