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Medical Director of Saint Barnabas Health
Care System’s
Valerie Fund Children’s Centers for Cancer and Blood Disorders
supports continued pediatric cancer research
LONG BRANCH - June 1, 2007 — On
June 26, the childhood cancer community of survivors, parents,
patients, and health care providers will march in Washington D.C.
for “Reach
the Day: Conquer Childhood Cancer,” a national day of
awareness for childhood cancer. Since the mid-1950s, research has
improved the survival rates for childhood cancer from less than
10 percent to almost 80 percent overall.
Now that the
outlook for children with cancer has greatly improved, a major emphasis for the
past two-dozen years has been on improving the quality of life for patients cured
of cancer during childhood.
"Multiple
medical breakthroughs have transformed childhood cancer from a
virtual death sentence into a disease that children can increasingly
be expected to survive with minimal side effects in great majority
of cases," says Peri Kamalakar,
M.D., Medical Director of the Valerie Fund Children’s Center
for Cancer and Blood Disorders at Saint Barnabas Medical Center,
Children’s Hospital
at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center and at The Children’s
Hospital at Monmouth Medical Center. "Surpassing the 80 percent
survival rate is an important step toward our ultimate quest of
curing all children with this disease."
According
to the Children’s Oncology Group (COG), the largest pediatric
oncology research group in the world, the definition of “cure” for
children goes beyond achieving the disappearance of cancer to include
psychosocial, educational, and occupational reintegration of the
child into a successful life.
“Estimates
show that by 2010, one of every 640 21- to 30-year-olds will be a childhood cancer
survivor,” says Dr. Kamalakar, whose three Valerie Fund sites are members
of the COG and participate in ongoing pediatric cancer research. “Treatment
should not only control or eradicate the disease, but should, at
the same time, allow the child to achieve appropriate levels of
physical, social and emotional development.”
The Journey Toward Longer Life
One
of the most important contributions to developing better treatments
for children with cancer was the formation of a group
of hospitals that agreed to cooperate in clinical trials
that were organized by the National Cancer Institute.
These trials led to better treatments for acute leukemia,
the most common cancer among children.
National
studies showed the benefits of combining surgery, chemotherapy
and radiation therapy to treat certain types of cancers of the
kidneys and muscles, which occurred mainly in children, leading
to improved outcomes.
Looking to the Future
Today, COG
reports that new treatments based on immunology, bone marrow and
stem cell transplantation and those derived from molecular biology
and genetics are now in increasingly wider use.
This year,
a landmark piece of legislation called the Conquer Childhood Cancer
Act of 2007 was introduced that will provide critical resources
for the treatment, prevention and cure of childhood cancer. The Act brings hope to the more
than 12,500 children who are diagnosed with cancer each year by authorizing
$150 million over a five-year period to support National Cancer
Institute pediatric biomedical research programs, establish a national
childhood cancer registry, and enable researchers to study childhood
cancers and long-term effects of treatments.
Help Close to Home
The Saint
Barnabas Health Care System has three hospitals in New Jersey that
are part of the Valerie Fund, one of the largest and most advanced
pediatric oncology/hematology networks in the country. Because the centers
are outpatient facilities located near their homes, youngsters are able
to receive treatment without having to greatly alter their normal routines.
Young patients receive the most advanced range of diagnostic and therapeutic
treatment services from an expert team of specialists, including pediatric
hematologists/oncologists, surgeons, radiologists, nurses, social workers,
counselors and child life specialists.
You
can reach an attending pediatric hematologist/ oncologist 24 hours
a day for referrals at The Valerie Fund Children’s
Center at Saint Barnabas, (973) 322-2800; at the Children’s
Hospital of New Jersey at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center, (973)
926-7161 and at the
Children’s Hospital at Monmouth Medical Center, (732) 923-7455.
CONTACT: Beth Salamon
(973) 322-4926
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Monmouth Medical Center
300 Second Avenue
Long Branch, New Jersey 07740
PHONE: (732) 222-5200
©2007 Saint Barnabas Health Care System
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