Gynaecological cancer treatment enters new era of patient-tailored care

Advances in cancer prevention and treatment reported at this week´s premier European congress for specialists in gynaecological cancers show that care is being more effectively tailored to the needs of individual women, so that survival can be improved without the cost of added complications and reduced quality of life.

Speaking at this week’s 16th International Meeting of the European Society of Gynaecological Oncology (ESGO) in Belgrade, Serbia, the Society’s new President, Professor Ate van der Zee, from the Netherlands, stressed the value of this new approach:

“Our latest treatments take account of the fact that every woman is different, and it isn’t enough just to try to improve life expectancy. We need to try to minimise the effects of treatment on a woman’s working and family life, and to take more account of whether she still wants to have children.

“We have also learned how important it is to concentrate our expertise in specialist centres, especially when we are treating the rarer gynaecological cancers, so that women have access to the most up to date knowledge and expertise that doctors specifically trained in gynaecological cancer can provide.

“By building this expertise we can also ensure that new discoveries made in laboratories across Europe are translated into clinical treatments as efficiently as possible as we develop ever more refined therapies tailored to the unique genetic and other characteristics of our patients.” 
 

15.10.2009

Read all latest stories

Related articles

Photo

News • Breast cancer

Double mastectomy slashes risk - but not for all women

Healthy women who carry a breast cancer-causing mutation in the BRCA1 gene, not only reduce their risk of developing the disease but also their chances of dying from it if they have both breasts…

Photo

Article •

ECCO 15 and 34th ESMO Multidisciplinary Congress unites European Oncology

The first joint congress ECCO 15 - ESMO 34 of the European CanCer Organisation (ECCO) and the European Society for Medical Oncology (ESMO) is taking place this week in Berlin. It is the only…

Article •

MINDACT

Researchers around the globe are studying whether a genomic test, developed with micro-array technology, is superior to traditional methods in assessing aggressive breast cancer, and therefore could…

Related products

Subscribe to Newsletter