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Genetically Guided Choices for Chemotherapy
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To The Editor: In his Commentary on health care in the age of genetic medicine, Dr Evans1 highlights the advent of individualized medicine as a "threshold that is so monumental it mandates changes in the structure of health care delivery" and notes that "[d]riven by advances in genomics, emerging insight into each individual's unique susceptibility to disease promises to transform patient care."1 He draws attention to technology that is also relevant to the Commentary by Drs Hudis and Modi,2 in which they note that postoperative adjuvant chemotherapy initially "required a shift in thinking . . . because it included the use of potentially toxic drugs in patients, some of whom were presumably already cured of malignancy."2
Adjuvant therapy (and neoadjuvant therapy, according to Drs Hudis and Modi) has been shown to provide improvement in prognosis for surgical patients.3 However, not all patients require such therapy; some patients who receive neoadjuvant therapy achieve no improvement . . . [Full Text of this Article]
George L. Anesi, BS
george.anesi@case.edu Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine Cleveland, Ohio
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