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August 21, 2007
BehindTheMedspeak: MyBiopsy.org
From the website:
- Welcome to MyBiopsy.org
Pathologists, physicians who study tissues and cells to identify and diagnose cancer and other diseases, have developed patient information on a variety of cancer and cancer-related diseases.
Each page includes answers to questions about what the disease is, what treatment options are available, questions you should ask your doctors, a definition of key terms, and pictures of a normal tissue as well as one that is diseased.
Each page was developed for you by pathologists to help you learn more about your specific disease. Because the more you know, the more empowered you become about your own health.
Sandra G. Boodman had the following to say about this new website — which I predict will be a huge success — in an item in today's Washington Post Health section.
- Plain-Spoken Pathology
Pathology reports are among the most impenetrable medical records patients encounter. They're also among the most important, because they help guide treatment. Now a new Web site aims to deconstruct the technical jargon and enable cancer patients and their families to better comprehend their illness and take action.
Launched by the College of American Pathologists, the site, at www.MyBiopsy.org, includes easy-to-understand information about 20 common cancers, including breast, lung, colon and prostate tumors. It also features treatment options, definitions of key terms such as "noninfiltrating" and photographs of normal and abnormal tissue.
The goal of the site, developed by physicians who specialize in the analysis of blood, body fluid and tissue samples, is to provide useful information at the time of diagnosis, when news of a malignancy can be overwhelming.
For example, the section on prostate cancer — one of the most common cancers facing American men — describes what a pathologist looks for when examining tissue from a biopsy under a microscope. It also explains how prostate cancer is graded and staged and what those measurements of a tumor's aggressiveness and spread mean.
The site describes current options for treating prostate cancer, including watchful waiting for older men with low-grade and slow-growing tumors; surgery, which is commonly recommended for younger men with smaller cancers that do not appear to have spread; and various forms of radiation.
There are also links to clinical trials sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, definitions of common terms such as adenocarcinoma (the type of tumor that accounts for 95 percent of prostate cancers) and a half-dozen suggested questions to ask a physician.
August 21, 2007 at 05:01 PM | Permalink
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Comments
I had a colonscopy 3 years ago and had two polyp removed, dx:1)Ileocecal valve bioopsy:Colonic Mccosa with no histologic abnormality, 2) cecal polyp Biopsy: Tubulovillous adenoma. I had another
colonscopy in 1/08 and dx was Villous Adenoma. Doctor said this was the same polyp three years ago and had grown from 0.3 to 2.cm and looked really bad, however the biopsy was not cancerous. To be seen in three years. I have problems with being seen in another 3 years since this is the same polyp.
What do you think????
Thanks, Reva
Posted by: Reva S. Raynor | Mar 12, 2008 9:13:06 AM
My Son has Gastric cancer with many other complications, would like to know more about this type of cancer and is anything can be done for it or any new clinical trials.
Posted by: bevery kass | Sep 9, 2007 12:57:31 PM
Thank you Joe.
As a retired Pathologist I am particularly pleased to have you post this effort of my College to make pathology reports meaningful. It has always been a sorce of great frustration to me to work to get a report to a surgeon in 24hrs only to know that the patient has been told it will be a week before results will be available. I hope the College's efforts will also enlighten physicians who first recieve the reports enabling them to transmit their meanings to patients in a more timely manner.
Posted by: H. Larry Penning | Aug 21, 2007 10:17:38 PM
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