On 15 April 1999, physician Gillian Thomas published the editorial “Improved Treatment for Cervical Cancer – Concurrent Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy,” henceforth “Improved Treatment,” in The New England Journal of Medicine. In that editorial, she discusses the potential benefits of combining chemotherapy drugs with radiation to treat women with cervical cancer. At the time, healthcare professionals rarely treated cervical cancer by combining chemotherapy or radiation. Two months prior to Thomas’s publication, the US National Cancer Institute, headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland, released an announcement advocating for combining chemotherapy with radiation based on clinical trial results. In “Improved Treatment,” Thomas summarized the results of those clinical trials that had led to the announcement and communicated a new way to treat invasive cervical cancers, which persists as of 2019.
Details
- “Improved Treatment for Cervical Cancer – Concurrent Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy” (1999), by Gillian Thomas
- Darby, Alexis (Author)
- Guerrero, Anna Clemencia (Editor)
- Arizona State University. School of Life Sciences. Center for Biology and Society. Embryo Project Encyclopedia. (Publisher)
- Arizona Board of Regents (Publisher)
- literature
- Cervix uteri--Cancer
- Cervical Cancer
- Pelvis
- Papillomaviruses
- Pelvis--Examination
- Cervix uteri--Cancer--Diagnosis
- Cervix uteri--Diseases--Diagnosis
- Cervix uteri--Cancer--Patients
- Radiotherapy
- Chemotherapy
- Chemotherapy, Combination
- Generative organs, Female--Cancer--Chemotherapy
- Cancer in women--Alternative treatment--United States
- Cancer in women
- Cancer of Cervix
- Drug Therapy
- Radiation
- Publications
- Clinical trial
- Cervix uteri--Cancer--Handbooks, manuals, etc
- cancer treatment
- HPV
- papillomavirus