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ORLive Presents: Radiofrequency Ablation of a Kidney Tumor Live Webcast: From Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center: September 3, 2008 12:00 PM EDT (16:00 UTC) WINSTON-SALEM, NC--(MARKET WIRE)--Jul 21, 2008 -- A study of patients with kidney
cancer
has shown that radiofrequency ablation,
a
minimally invasive, kidney-sparing procedure, can be a successful
treatment
option for patients whose cancer has not spread beyond the
kidney, report
researchers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center.
"These results are significant and encouraging because the incidence of kidney cancer in the United States has increased by 126 percent over the past 50 years," said Ronald J. Zagoria, professor of radiologic sciences at Wake Forest Baptist and principal investigator of the study. For the past 50 years, the standard of care for kidney cancer has been radical nephrectomy -- removal of the kidney. More recently, partial nephrectomy has been shown to have equivalent results for curing small low-stage renal cancers, indicating that kidney-sparing procedures can be curative. However, nephrectomy is not ideal for many patients, such as those who cannot tolerate surgery because of other health-related conditions. Advances in imaging techniques have resulted in detecting the tumors when they are much smaller, often in patients who show no symptoms. The success of radiofrequency ablation in treating kidney cancer is largely dependent on tumor size. In this study, tumors smaller than 3 cm in diameter were completely ablated with a single treatment. Residual tumor was found only in patients with tumors greater than 3.1 cm, suggesting that larger tumors are more difficult to eradicate completely with radiofrequency ablation. "Radiofrequency ablation offers us another potentially curative option for appropriate patients," said Zagoria. While additional studies are needed to determine its long-term success, it could prove to be a useful treatment for patients who are not ideal surgical candidates. In addition, the length of hospital stay, cost and risk of complications for radiofrequency ablation are projected to be less than for nephrectomy. View a preview of this program and learn more by visiting OR-Live. VNR: www.OR-Live.com Video-Link Available: http://www2.marketwire.com/mw/frame_mw?attachid=797781 Contact: Contact:
Jonnie Rohrer
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Email Contact
Shannon Koontz
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Email Contact
Karen Richardson
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Email Contact
336-716-4587
Alex Fraser
Director of Marketing
OR-Live, Inc.
860-953-2900 x 214
Email Contact
Source: OR-Live, Inc.
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