June 21, 2012 By Jeffrey Norris
in Diseases, Conditions, Syndromes (Medical
Xpress) -- Liver cancer is expected to become more common in the United States
in coming years. “It’s deadly and it’s preventable,” says UCSF physician and
researcher Tung Nguyen, MD. The cause of more than eight in 10 liver cancers in
the United States
is chronic infection with the hepatitis B or hepatitis C virus. Today the
number of new hepatitis infections is declining. But just as there has been a
lag between the decline in smoking and the drop in lung cancers, it may take
many years before the trend toward fewer hepatitis cases and better hepatitis
treatments leads to fewer liver cancers instead of more. Nguyen — who emigrated
as a child from Vietnam
— is fighting hepatitis in Bay Area Asian American communities. Through
outreach and training of key community members and through campaigns in ethnic
media, Nguyen and his collaborators aim to help reverse the US liver cancer trend as quickly as
possible.
Hepatitis B Is Common Why focus on Asian Americans? Hepatitis B is common in many parts of the
globe, including Asia . Because of this, liver
cancer is the third most common cause of cancer death worldwide. Immigrants
from Asian countries are infected at high rates. So too are their children. For
instance, in San Francisco ,
where according to the 2000 census nearly one in three people is Asian or of
Asian ancestry, an estimated one in 10 Chinese is infected with hepatitis B. Today
in the United States ,
hepatitis C mainly is spread by IV drug users sharing needles. There is not yet
a commercially available vaccine. On the other hand, there are vaccines to
prevent hepatitis B infection. The vaccine strategy originated with pioneering
research at UCSF. Children in the United States now are routinely
vaccinated early. But mothers can easily pass hepatitis B to their children in
the womb. This is the major source of existing hepatitis infections in the U.S.
Asian American community, Nguyen says. In addition, many children who immigrate
to the United States
miss school vaccinations and risk becoming infected later. While most adults
clear the hepatitis B virus without becoming chronically infected, most infants
do not. Once infection becomes chronic, treatment can help control the virus,
but chronic infection lasts a lifetime. Only a minority infected with hepatitis
go on to develop liver cancer. But because so many in Asian communities already
are infected at birth, Nguyen explains, some are developing liver cancer in
their 30s or even in their 20s. Increasing liver cancer screening among people
who test positive for hepatitis is an important outreach goal, Nguyen notes.
Disease Is Often Symptomless Hepatitis often has no symptoms. “Some people get vaccinated without
getting tested first to see if they already have been infected,” Nguyen says.
“They think they are protected, when in reality they already may be infected,
and infecting others.” In addition to serving on the President’s Advisory
Commission on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, Nguyen is a partner in a
San Francisco Department of Public Health program to combat hepatitis B. The
aim of “San Francisco Hep B Free” is to screen, vaccinate and treat all Asians
and Pacific Islanders who live in the city, in part by providing free or
low-cost testing. Nguyen also directs the Vietnamese Community Health Promotion
Project through which he and his colleagues have targeted the community with
messages via radio, television, print publications and online media. Vietnamese
in the United States
have the highest rate of liver cancer, about 11 times higher than the rate
among whites. Provided by University
of California , San Francisco
Simple new procedure can remove impurities from pharmaceuticals Published on June 21, 2012 Scientists
are reporting development of a simple new procedure for removing almost 98
percent of an important impurity that can contaminate prescription drugs and
potentially increase the risk for adverse health effects in patients. Their
report appears in ACS' journal Organic Process Research & Development. Ecevit
Yilmaz and colleagues note that contamination of medications with so-called
"genotoxic" impurities (GTIs) have resulted in several major recent
drug recalls. GTIs may be ingredients used to make drugs, or they may be formed
during production of drugs, and can remain in the final product in minute
amounts. The presence of one GTI in the anti-viral medication Viracept
distributed in the European Union forced a recall in 2007. With GTIs an ongoing
serious concern for the pharmaceutical industry, the scientists sought a better
way to remove an important GTI called acrolein. They describe development of a
way to remove acrolein by using engineered particles based on silica and
polystyrene. Mixing the particles in a drug solution contaminated with acrolein
for 20 minutes resulted in removal of nearly 98 percent of the GTI without any
substantial removal of the active pharmaceutical ingredient. They note that
while the separation materials are readily available, there may be the need for
more research on the method before using it to clean up pharmaceuticals on a
commercial basis. Source: American Chemical Society
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