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1 minute read
MEDICAL MILESTONE
THE Doctor Balmis University Hospital in Alicante has participated in pioneering research worldwide that consolidates a new standard of treatment for initial lung cancer.
This means increasing the survival rate by 20 per cent and will benefit more than 6,000 patients in Spain every year.
The results of the study, Nadim II, from the Spanish Lung Cancer Group (GECP), have been published in the "New England Journal of Medicine" and endorse the great benefit of chemoimmunotherapy with nivolumab before operating on lung tumours in stage 3. Nivolumab is a type of monoclonal antibody therapy, which works by stimulating the immune system to kill cancer cells.
It consists of a new approach to the tumour in its initial stages that increases life expectancy. With this new scheme, 36.8 per cent of patients achieve complete reduction of the tumour, that is, almost four out of ten, compared to 6.9 per cent who were treated with chemotherapy alone.
Doctor Bartomeu Massuti, secretary of the group and head of Oncology at the Doctor Balmis Hospital in Alicante, pointed out that “This Spanish study opens the door to a global change in the treatment of patients with early lung cancer. Currently only 30 per cent of these patients survive five years. With the Nadim scheme this percentage could reach 70 per cent. Thousands of patients
See our advert on page 13 can benefit from improvements in response to treatment and survival each year in Spain”.
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“We are talking about a change in the therapeutic approach and strategy that involves many professionals: pathologists , surgeons, oncologists or radiotherapists. We have found a significant improvement that may put us on the path to curing a significant number of patients “ said Massuti.
The Nadim II data published in the New England Journal of Medicine opens the door to increasing the percentage of patients who achieve longterm complete remission of their tumour. In this sense, the data from the study reports that 36.8 per cent of the patients achieved a complete reduction of the tumour, compared to 6.9 per cent who did so with the traditional approach of applying the treatment after surgery.
BATISTE, the oldest grouper fish in Santa Pola aquarium, had barely any contact with humans for more than three years until Friday, July 28, when the aquarium reopened to the public. It was closed during the coronavirus pandemic and fell into slight disrepair.
After a €70,000 renovation project, the aquarium reopened in time for Batiste to celebrate his 35th birthday, and Santa