The lancet oncology
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The lancet oncology · Nov 2021
ReviewNational cancer control plans across the Eastern Mediterranean region: challenges and opportunities to scale-up.
National cancer control planning is crucial for countries in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean region. This region is challenged with an increase in cancer incidence leading to substantial disease burden, premature deaths, and increasing health-care costs in most countries. Huge inequity in cancer control planning and implementation exists between and within the countries. ⋯ Additionally, political instability and conflicts affecting over half of the countries in the Eastern Mediterranean region have enormously affected cancer planning and implementation, both among the affected countries and those that host large numbers of refugees. In this Policy Review, we used the WHO regional framework for action on cancer to systematically analyse the status of cancer control planning and implementation across the six domains of cancer control, from prevention to palliation. We highlight the gaps, and the opportunities for bridging these gaps, to achieve scale-up on implementation of cancer control programmes in the Eastern Mediterranean region.
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The lancet oncology · Nov 2021
ReviewCancer control in Latin America and the Caribbean: recent advances and opportunities to move forward.
The increasing burden of cancer represents a substantial problem for Latin America and the Caribbean. Two Lancet Oncology Commissions in 2013 and 2015 highlighted potential interventions that could advance cancer care in the region by overcoming existing challenges. ⋯ An unforeseen challenge, the COVID-19 pandemic, strained all resources, and its negative effect on cancer control is expected to continue for years. In this Series paper, we summarise progress in several aspects of cancer control since 2015, and identify persistent barriers requiring commitment of additional resources to reduce the cancer burden in Latin America and the Caribbean.
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Despite the rapidly evolving treatment landscape in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), developments in neoadjuvant and adjuvant treatments have been nascent by comparison. Establishing overall survival benefit in the early-stage setting has been challenging because of the need for large trials and long-term survival data. ⋯ Multiple neoadjuvant trials with targeted therapy and immunotherapy, either alone or in combination with chemotherapy, have yielded unique insights into traditional response parameters, such as the discordance between RECIST response and pathological response, and expanded opportunities for biomarker discovery. With further standardisation of trial endpoints across studies, coupled with the implementation of novel technologies including radiomics and digital pathology, individual risk-stratified neoadjuvant treatment approaches are poised to make a striking impact on the outcomes of early-stage NSCLC.
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The lancet oncology · Nov 2021
ReviewPerspectives on emerging technologies, personalised medicine, and clinical research for cancer control in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Challenges of health systems in Latin America and the Caribbean include accessibility, inequity, segmentation, and poverty. These challenges are similar in different countries of the region and transcend national borders. The increasing digital transformation of health care holds promise of more precise interventions, improved health outcomes, increased efficiency, and ultimately reduced health-care costs. ⋯ Cancer research and innovation in the region are limited due to inadequate academic resources and translational research is almost fully dependent on public funding. Regulatory complexity and extended timelines jeopardise the potential improvement in participation in international studies. Emerging technologies, artificial intelligence, big data, and cancer research represent an opportunity to address the health-care challenges in Latin America and the Caribbean collectively, by optimising national capacities, sharing and comparing best practices, and transferring scientific and technical capabilities.