At the Clinic Hospital in Barcelona, Spain, 167 cancer patients and 380 hospital health care workers were interviewed about cancer diagnosis disclosure. Only 25 patients (15%) were correctly informed of their diagnoses. Breast cancer patients were significantly more often informed than patients with other malignancies (p less than 0.05). Two hundred seventy-two of 380 hospital health workers interviewed (71%, p = 0.00) would want to know their own diagnoses should they suffer from cancer in the future, but only 19% (p = 0.00) would want such a diagnosis revealed to their similarly afflicted relatives. This information model, based on cancer taboo, is largely preferred by these healthy people and is followed by doctors, patients and family members. To inform our patients better, the mandatory uniform disclosure of the true diagnosis is not likely to be constructive at present. In our opinion a pragmatic approach is more realistic and humane. Nevertheless, we must hope that more modern cancer education will lead to the gradual elimination of this taboo in our society.
These initial results suggest that MRI could not be as precise for cervix cancer staging and evaluation of response to chemotherapy as has recently been postulated. This is especially important since a false negative result may induce the surgeon to perform laparotomy in error in cases of unresectable tumors.
A review has been conducted of 1433 patients treated by the Lung Cancer Unit of our hospital to assess the association of age with clinical characteristics of patients with lung cancer. The factors evaluated were tobacco, stage of disease, treatment and survival of patients treated surgically. A comparison was made of patients aged 65 or less with those over 65. There was a similar prevalence of smokers in both age groups. The stage of disease at time of diagnosis was similar (33% of the patients aged 65 or less were Stage I or II versus 37% of the older patients). The distribution by histological type showed significant differences (p < 0.05) with a higher percentage of squamous carcinoma in the younger group (54% versus 44%). Surgery was performed in 30% of the patients aged 65 years or less but only in 19% of the older cases (p < 0.05). Among those patients treated surgically there was no difference in the survival of younger and older patients.
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