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Radiation can zap cancer that has spread: study (Reuters)

Aug 13, 2008
Story Timeline:  151 days

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor 14 minutes ago WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Precisely targeted radiation therapy can eradicate tumors that have spread to other parts of the body, offering more months or years of life to patients who have no other options, U.S. researchers reported on Wednesday. They said new radiation techniques can attack metastases -- tumors that have spread -- one by one. Experiments in 29 patients showed the radiation stopped all the tumors in six, or 21 percent, of the patients, for anywhere between 10 months and more than two years. "This was proof of principle in patients who had failed the standard therapies and had few, if any, remaining options," said Dr. Ralph Weichselbaum of the University of Chicago Medical Center, who led the study. But the results were inconsistent -- in another six... [read full story]                    

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