martes, 27 de agosto de 2013

Actividad 1. Uncovering the Biology of Cancers in Adolescents and Young Adults

Uncovering the Biology of Cancers in Adolescents and Young Adults

27.08.2013 12:42Uncovering the Biology of Cancers in Adolescents and Young Adults
The first scientific journal dedicated to cancers in adolescents and young adults (AYAs) published its first issue in March, marking a milestone for the emerging field of AYA oncology. But as experts noted in a roundtable discussion  in the issue, the field faces many challenges, particularly when it comes to understanding the biology of these diseases.
At one point in the conversation, Dr. Archie Bleyer of the St. Charles Regional Cancer Center in Bend, OR, shared a concern about the state of the science. "My concern, most of all, is that we have not understood the biology of these diseases because we have not researched them thoroughly enough," said Dr. Bleyer. "And therefore we may not know how to treat them as well as we could."
The participants agreed that a lack of tumor samples for study has slowed progress. Most specimens are collected during clinical trials, and AYAs have long been underrepresented in the limited number of trials open to them, though this may be changing.
 Lymphoblasts (leukemic cells in ALL) from bone marrow. (Image courtesy of Dr. Charles Mullighan)
Although the biology of AYA cancers is poorly understood, recent evidence suggests that some of these diseases may have unique genetic and biological features. Much of the research to date has involved acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), which is the most common pediatric cancer but also occurs in teens and young adults.
"We now have more evidence that there are distinct AYA subtypes of ALL, though the genomics of these subtypes needs to be clarified," said Dr. Bleyer, who is also a clinical research professor at Oregon Health and Science University.
He cited work done by Dr. Christine Harrison of Newcastle University in the United Kingdom. Her team of researchers found that some AYAs with ALL have genetic changes that are typical of younger patients, whereas others have previously unknown alterations.
Profiling Tumors
A clearer picture could emerge from a genomic analysis of more than 500 tumors from AYAs with ALL. The study, now under way, extends a recent analysis of tumors from children with ALL to teens and young adults.
This study is a major first step toward understanding how the biology of ALL differs between early childhood and early adulthood, noted Dr. Stephen Hunger of Children's Hospital Colorado and the University of Colorado School of Medicine. He also chairs the ALL committee of the Children's Oncology Group.
We think the spectrum of genetic lesions in ALL changes with age.

—Dr. Cheryl Willman
Some clues have already emerged from this work, according to Dr. Cheryl Willman, director of the University of New Mexico Cancer Center and a leader of the study. For instance, some AYA tumors have genetic alterations that are often seen in older children with ALL who are at high risk of relapse. (AYAs and high-risk older pediatric patients tend to have worse outcomes than the vast majority of younger children with ALL.)
"We're very interested in the final results," said Dr. Nita Seibel of the Clinical Investigations Branch in NCI's Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program. "The analysis could support the premise that ALL in AYAs is a different disease than what we see in pediatrics, where the cancer tends to respond to treatments."
The first phase of the AYA genomic profiling study is nearly complete. "We should have results to share in approximately 3 months," co-leader Dr. Charles Mullighan of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital wrote in an e-mail.
Discovering Potential Targets
By focusing on patients with poor outcomes, Drs. Mullighan and Willman and their colleagues have tried to elucidate the biology of these diseases and identify potential therapeutic targets.
The strategy appears to be paying off. In the pediatric study (part of the Childhood Cancer TARGET Initiative), the researchers identified cancer-related mutations in members of the JAK kinase gene family, along with other alterations. Mutations that increase the activity of JAK proteins have been seen in several cancers, and drugs that inhibit JAK are in early-phase clinical trials.
"The discovery of these mutations has allowed us to develop clinical trials of targeted therapies that we hope will improve the care of these patients," said Dr. Willman. Eventually, the researchers would like to analyze the genomes of adult tumors and compare the age groups.
"We think the spectrum of genetic lesions in the disease changes with age," said Dr. Willman, noting that ALL could be a model for investigating other AYA cancers.
A Workshop on AYA Biology
 A recent study found few age-specific differences in the biology of breast tumors.
Two years ago, NCI and the Lance Armstrong Foundation convened a workshop on the biology of cancers in AYAs. The meeting focused on ALL, as well as breast and colorectal cancers, and there was no clear consensus about whether these diseases have distinct biological features.

"At the time, the best evidence for a biological difference was in colorectal cancer, but some of that evidence was from small studies that were limited in scope," said Dr. James V. Tricoli of NCI's Cancer Diagnosis Program and a co-author of a recent commentary about the meeting. "None of the evidence was clear-cut," he added.
The authors of the commentary agree with many in the field that more research is needed on the underlying biology of AYA cancers. It will also be important to learn whether these differences influence the clinical behavior of these cancers, they added.
"We need to understand the biology of the disease to ensure that we're giving patients the most appropriate treatment without over-treating them," said Dr. Anna Franklin, medical director of the Adolescent and Young Adult Program at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center. Other nonbiological factors may also influence outcomes, such as compliance with treatment and the unique psychological and social issues facing AYA patients.
In colorectal cancer, she noted, the standard treatments are designed for older patients, and these regimens may not be the most effective in young adults where the disease may have a distinct biology. Dr. Franklin is starting a study of colorectal cancer biology in young adults. The study, done with colleagues at M. D. Anderson and the University of Colorado, will compare different biologic features of tumors from younger and older patients, using freshly collected tissue and samples from tumor banks.
In breast cancer, few, if any, molecular differences have been identified in AYA patients that could distinguish these tumors from those that arise later in life.
"Most of the evidence [at the workshop] suggested that there were relatively few unique molecular differences in breast cancers that occur in the younger age group compared to when the disease occurs in older women," noted Dr. Donald Blair of NCI's Division of Cancer Biology.
This conclusion was supported by a recent study that also found few age-specific differences in the biology of breast tumors. Age alone, the study authors concluded, "does not appear to provide an additional layer of biologic complexity" above that of the particular subtype and grade of breast cancer.
But younger women are more commonly diagnosed with more aggressive breast cancer subtypes than their older counterparts, noted the study's lead author, Dr. Carey Anders of the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center. "At present, the reason for this difference is not completely understood and is certainly worthy of further study," she wrote in an e-mail.
Comparing Tumors in a Single Patient
Genomic approaches have also been used to investigate the biology of neuroblastoma, a cancer that arises in immature nerve cells. The disease primarily affects infants and children, but it can also occur in young adults. As with other AYA cancers, young adults tend to do worse than children.
"This disease in young adults is also very different biologically than the disease that occurs in childhood," said Dr. Javed Khan of the Pediatric Oncology Branch in NCI's Center for Cancer Research.
His group recently sequenced all of the protein-coding regions of the genome (known as the exome) in four samples from a 19-year-old woman with neuroblastoma whose cancer had spread to several organs. By comparing the exomes of normal cells, the primary tumor, and metastatic lesions, the researchers identified six potentially cancer-related mutations shared by the primary tumor and two metastases.

"The finding supports the hypothesis that all of the tumors originated from a common progenitor cell, and that few significant changes occurred during more than 3 years of treatment," said Dr. Khan. His group plans to publish the results this year.
Because of the poor outcomes associated with cancers in AYAs, more research is needed in this field, Dr. Khan added. He is planning a scientific meeting next year that will address the genomics of AYA cancers, particularly sarcomas.
Insights from Clinical Trials
Along with genomic studies, clinical trials will be critical for advances in treating AYA cancers, several researchers said. In ALL, for instance, prospective trials could help resolve a debate about whether AYAs with the disease should receive pediatric rather than adult regimens.
When does a younger adult become an older adult?

—Dr. Daniel DeAngelo
For a decade, researchers have known that some AYAs with ALL fare better when treated with pediatric regimens. These observations have come from retrospective analyses of clinical trials, however, and the reasons for the findings are unknown.
A prospective trial, CALGB-10403, could provide answers. This NCI-sponsored study is evaluating the effectiveness and side effects of a pediatric regimen in adolescents and young adults. "This is an important study because there has been debate over whether AYAs can tolerate the toxicities associated with pediatric-based approaches," said Dr. Seibel.
Prospective trials are also under way in Europe and at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, where pediatric ALL regimens have been the standard of care for patients between the ages of 1 and 50 since 2001.
Many doctors are hoping that the results of these studies will lead to a consensus about how to treat ALL in AYAs, noted Dr. Daniel J. DeAngelo, director of the adult leukemia clinic at Dana-Farber. He frequently receives phone calls from community doctors seeking advice about how to treat young adults.
"This question creates a lot of angst in the community," said Dr. DeAngelo. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network is reviewing the issue and will likely make a recommendation, he noted.
Provocative Questions
New Journal Focuses on AYA Oncology
A new journal dedicated to improving the care of AYA cancer patients and survivors was launched in May. The Journal of Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology  will publish research on the biology and treatment of these diseases as well as on the psychosocial and survivorship issues facing AYAs.
In addition, the journal will include forums on controversial issues in the rapidly evolving field. All articles in the first issue  are available online free of charge.

Meanwhile, the Dana-Farber group is trying to learn about the biology of ALL in AYAs. This work, they hope, will lead to a genetic or biological test that can identify, at the time of diagnosis, which young adults are most likely to respond to pediatric ALL regimens.
The researchers are also considering some provocative questions. "When does a younger adult become an older adult?" said Dr. DeAngelo. "We don't really have a handle on that yet."
As answers to this and other questions about AYA cancers emerge in the coming years, researchers can share their results in the Journal of Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology .

"I really believe we're going to prove in the years ahead that the biologic features of these cancers are different from the same cancers that arise in other age groups," said the journal's editor, Dr. Leonard Sender of the University of California, Irvine, and the Hyundai Cancer Institute at Children's Hospital of Orange County. "But we have to do the science."
—Edward R. Winstead

Extraido: http://www.cancer.gov/ncicancerbulletin/072611/page3


ACTIVIDAD 1: Preguntas con scanning y skimming

Scanning:
  1. ¿Cuál es el autor del texto?
    a- Daniel DeAngelo
    b- Edward R. Winstead
    c- Javel Khan
  2. Subraya la disciplina de investigación que realizó el texto.

Skimming:
  1. Encierra con un círculo en el texto el cáncer pediátrico más frecuente que también afecta a adolescentes y adultos jóvenes.
  2. Busque 3 tipos de cáncer distintos que se nombren en el texto.


TEXTO COMPLEMENTARIO: VIDEO

lunes, 12 de agosto de 2013

Actividad: Paulo Freire - con PORTUGUÉS

 VOCABULARIO 

ESPAÑOL                          INGLÉS                      PORTUGUÉS
educación bancaria                                    banking education                                educação bancária
pedagogía del oprimido                           pedagogy opprese                                 Pedagogia do Oprimido  
educación adultos                                        adult education                                       educação para adultos  
 religión                                                              religion                                                         religião  
Brasil                                                                   Brazil                                                             Brasil
clase obrera                                                      labor                                                              classe operária
situaciones vulnerables                             vulnerable situations                          situações vulneráveis      
opresores                                                            oppressors                                               opresores



TEXTO EN INGLÉS

Pedagogy of the Oppressed , Paulo Freire
... Once again men , challenged by the drama of the current time, they propose to themselves , as a problem . Discover who know little about himself, his " position in the cosmos ," and are worried to know more .
          
Will , in fact , in recognition of its know him a bit of the reasons for this demand. When installing on an almost , if not tragic discovery of his little knowledge of each other if they are the same problem inquire answer , and the answers lead to new questions .
            
The problem of humanization , although there was always the duty of an axiological point of view , its central problem , assumes today inescapable character of concern [ 1 ]Noted this concern implies arguably recognizing dehumanization , not only as a viable ontological , but as historical reality . It is also , and perhaps above all, from this painful realization that men wonder about the viability another - that of humanization.
          
Both the root of your inconclusiveness , which falls in a permanent search movement . Humanization and dehumanization , within the story , in a real , concrete , objective , are possibilities of men as beings conscious of their unfinished and inconclusive .But if both are possibilities , only the first seems to be what we call the vocation of men .
            
Vocation denied , but affirmed the denial itself . Vocation denied on injustice, exploitation , oppression , the violence of the oppressors . But affirmed the desire for freedom , justice , the struggle of the oppressed , for the recovery of his stolen humanity .
          
Dehumanization , which is not the case , only that we have stolen their humanity , but also , albeit differently , in that the steal is distortion of the vocation to be more . It is possible distortion in history , but historical vocation . In fact, if we admit that dehumanization is historical vocation of men , nothing more would have to do , but to adopt an attitude of utter despair or cynical . The struggle for humanization , by free labor , the alienation , the affirmation of men as people, as " beings for themselves " would not have meaning. This is possible only because dehumanization , even a concrete fact in history , is not however, given destiny but the result of an "order " that generates unjust violence of the oppressors and the latter being less. 

The Oppressed - CONTRADICTION oppressors .oVERCOMING YOUR 
The violence of the oppressors that is also dehumanized , it introduces another vocation - to be the least . How to be more distortion , being less oppressed leads , sooner or later , to fight against those who made ​​them less. And this fight makes sense only when oppressed , seek to regain their humanity, which is a way to create it , do not feel idealistamente oppressors , nor become , in fact , oppressors of the oppressors , but restorers of humanity in both. And there is the great humanistic and historical task of the oppressed - liberate yourself and the oppressors . Those who oppress , exploit and rape , because of their power , can not , roeste power, the force of liberation of the oppressed or themselves. Only the power that is born of the weakness of the oppressed will be sufficiently strong to free both. That is why the power of the oppressors , when seeking to mitigate against the weakness of the oppressed , not only almost always expressed in false generosity as never to exceed . The oppressors falsely generous need , so that your " generosity " continue having the opportunity to hold up , presence of injustice . The "order " unjust social is generating source , permanent, this " generosity " that is nourished by death, despair and misery [ 2 ]Hence the desperation of this " generosity " to any threat , though tenuous , to its source . Can never understand this " generosity " that true generosity is to fight to make them disappear reasons that feed the false love . The false charity , which results in the outstretched hand of the " fired from life," fearful and insecure, crushed and defeated . Outstretched hand and shaking of the tattered world of the " wretched of the earth ." This generosity is fighting for , each is more , these hands , whether of men or people , extend less in gestures of supplication . humble supplication of the powerful . E will be doing , increasingly , human hands which work and transform the world .This teaching and learning that they have to leave, however , the " wretched of the earth " , the oppressed of the world's tattered and it really sympathize with them . Fighting for the restoration of their humanity will be , whether men or people , trying to restore the true generosity .Who better than the oppressed , find yourself prepared to understand the terrible significance of an oppressive society ? Who will feel better than them, the effects of oppression ? About more than them, including the need to move the release ? Release that does not come by chance , but by the praxis of their quest , the knowledge and recognition of the need to fight for it . Struggle for the purpose that they give the oppressed , be an act of love, with which to oppose the disaffection contained violence of the oppressors , even when it 's revised false generosity that . "


TEXTO EN PORTUGUÉS 

Pedagogia do Oprimido- Paulo Freire
“...Mais uma vez os homens, desafiados pela dramaticidade da hora atual, se propõem, a si mesmos, como problema. Descobrem que pouco sabem de si, de seu “posto no cosmos”, e se inquietam por saber mais.
          Estará, aliás, no reconhecimento do seu pouco saber de si uma das razões desta procura. Ao instalar-se na quase, senão trágica descoberta do seu pouco saber de si, se fazem problema a eles mesmos indagam respondem, e suas respostas os levam a novas perguntas.
            O problema de sua humanização, apesar de sempre dever haver sido, de um ponto de vista axiológico, o seu problema central, assume, hoje, caráter de preocupação iniludível[1]
Constatar esta preocupação implica, indiscutivelmente, em reconhecer a desumanização, não apenas como viabilidade ontológica, mas como realidade histórica. É também, e talvez sobretudo, a partir desta dolorosa constatação, que os homens se perguntam sobre a outra viabilidade – a de sua humanização.
          Ambas, na raiz de sua inconclusão, que os inscreve num permanente movimento de busca. Humanização e desumanização, dentro da história, num contexto real, concreto, objetivo, são possibilidades dos homens como seres inconclusos e conscientes de sua inconclusão.
Mas, se ambas são possibilidades, só a primeira nos parece ser o que chamamos de vocação dos homens.
            Vocação negada, mas também afirmada na própria negação. Vocação negada na injustiça, na exploração, na opressão, na violência dos opressores. Mas afirmada no anseio de liberdade, de justiça, de luta dos oprimidos, pela recuperação de sua humanidade roubada.
          A desumanização, que não se verifica, apenas, nos que têm sua humanidade roubada, mas também, ainda que de forma diferente, nos que a roubam, é distorção da vocação do ser mais. É distorção possível na história, mas não vocação histórica. Na verdade, se admitíssemos que a desumanização é vocação histórica dos homens, nada mais teríamos que fazer, a não ser adotar uma atitude cínica ou de total desespero. A luta pela humanização, pelo trabalho livre, pela desalienação, pela afirmação dos homens como pessoas, como “seres para si”, não teria significação. Esta somente é possível porque a desumanização, mesmo que um fato concreto na história, não é porém, destino dado, mas resultado de uma “ordem” injusta que gera a violência dos opressores e esta, o ser menos.
A CONTRADIÇÃO OPRESSORES-OPRIMIDOS.
SUA SUPERAÇÃO
A violência dos opressores que os faz também desumanizados, não instaura uma outra vocação – a do ser menos. Como distorção do ser mais, o ser menos leva os oprimidos, cedo ou tarde, a lutar contra quem os fez menos. E esta luta somente tem sentido quando os oprimidos, ao buscar recuperar sua humanidade, que é uma forma de criá-la, não se sentem idealistamente opressores, nem se tornam, de fato, opressores dos opressores, mas restauradores da humanidade em ambos. E ai está a grande tarefa humanista e histórica dos oprimidos – libertar-se a si e aos opressores. Estes, que oprimem, exploram e violentam, em razão de seu poder, não podem ter, roeste poder, a força de libertação dos oprimidos nem de si mesmos. Só o poder que nasça da debilidade dos oprimidos será suficientemente forte para libertar a ambos. Por isto é que o poder dos opressores, quando se pretende amenizar ante a debilidade dos oprimidos, não apenas quase sempre se expressa em falsa generosidade, como jamais a ultrapassa. Os opressores, falsamente generosos, têm necessidade, para que a sua “generosidade” continue tendo oportunidade de realizar-se, da permanência da injustiça. A “ordem” social injusta é a fonte geradora, permanente, desta “generosidade” que se nutre da morte, do desalento e da miséria[2]
Daí o desespero desta “generosidade” diante de qualquer ameaça, embora tênue, à sua fonte. Não pode jamais entender esta “generosidade” que a verdadeira generosidade está em lutar para que desapareçam as razões que alimentam o falso amor. A falsa caridade, da qual decorre a mão estendida do "demitido da vida”, medroso e inseguro, esmagado e vencido. Mão estendida e trêmula dos esfarrapados do mundo, dos “condenados da terra”. A grande generosidade está em lutar para que, cada vem mais, estas mãos, sejam de homens ou de povos, se estendam menos, em gestos de súplica. Súplica de humildes a poderosos. E se vão fazendo, cada vez mais, mãos humanas, que trabalhem e transformem o mundo.
Este ensinamento e este aprendizado têm de partir, porém, dos “condenados da terra”, dos oprimidos dos esfarrapados do mundo e dos que com eles realmente se solidarizem. Lutando pela restauração de sua humanidade estarão, sejam homens ou povos, tentando a restauração da generosidade verdadeira.
Quem, melhor que os oprimidos, se encontrará preparado para entender o significado terrível de uma sociedade opressora? Quem sentirá, melhor que eles, os efeitos da opressão? Quem, mais que eles, para ir compreendendo a necessidade da libertação? Libertação a que não chegarão pelo acaso, mas pela práxis de sua busca; pelo conhecimento e reconhecimento da necessidade de lutar por ela. Luta que, pela finalidade que lhe derem os oprimidos, será um ato de amor, com o qual se oporão ao desamor contido na violência dos opressores, até mesmo quando esta se revista da falsa generosidade referida.”