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Revolutionary new cancer treatment makes patients SIX TIMES more likely to survive

A revolutionary new DNA treatment technique involves having a simple DNA test of your tumour first. This then tells doctors precisely which drugs or therapies are most suited to you – rather than relying on the standard treatment. The genetic profiling of your tumour can also tell doctors which drugs you should avoid because they either won’t help you or are likely to give you worse side effects than others might suffer. Read the article.

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Video: Justin Lorentz and Dr. Danny Vesprini, “Genetically Predisposed: Who is at Increased Risk of Developing Prostate Cancer?”

March 2016 Awareness Night Genetically Predisposed: Who is at Increased Risk of Developing Prostate Cancer? Justin Lorentz,  MSc, CGC Certified Genetic Counsellor, Male Oncology Research and Education (MORE) Lead, Dept of Radiation Oncology Sunnybrook Odette Cancer Centre   Dr. Danny Vesprini, MD, MSc, FRCPC Assistant Professor, U. of Toronto Dept of Radiation Oncology Affiliate Scientist, Biological Sciences, Sunnybrook Research Institute, Sunnybrook Odette Cancer Centre     CLICK ON THE ARROW TO START THE VIDEO The Complete Presentation 85:01 minutes

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Semen-based test for diagnosing prostate cancer could reduce unnecessary biopsies

Dr. Eleftherios Diamandis, a researcher at Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital, would like a better alternative that could reduce unnecessary biopsies. Dr. Diamandis plans to spend the next two years developing a non-invasive test that can help determine when high PSA levels warrant concern. To do this, he will zero in on genetic mutations found in the semen of men with prostate cancer and use those biomarkers to screen other men for the disease. Read the article.

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Prostate cancer researchers develop personalized genetic test to predict recurrence risk

(TORONTO, Canada – Nov. 13, 2014) – Prostate cancer researchers have developed a genetic test to identify which men are at highest risk for their prostate cancer to come back after localized treatment with surgery or radiotherapy. Read the article.

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First genetic factor in prostate cancer prognosis identified

Patients with prostate cancer and hereditary mutations in the BRCA2 gene have a worse prognosis and lower survival rates than do the rest of the patients with the disease. This is the main conclusion to come out of a study published this week in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, in which David Olmos, Head of the Prostate Cancer and Genitourinary Tumours Clinical Research Unit at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), has taken part in, along with Elena Castro, a member of the Unit, and British researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research and The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation

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