The Navigator - Navigenics Blog

Genetic insights into health and wellness

All results for "Prostate cancer" (2)

July 20, 2009

Thanks to genetic testing, a physician improves his own health

Julie Sevrens Lyons,

Health writer

Posted 10:00 AM PDT

imageMany physicians recommend the Navigenics genetic testing services to their patients as a way to help build a more personalized plan for disease prevention and better health. But doctors themselves also tell us how genetic insights improve their own lives. William, director of oncology at a leading diagnostic center, recently wrote to us about his own genetic discovery.

“My analysis was mostly reassuring, but showed two areas of increased risk,” he said. “One was for prostate cancer, which was not a surprise since my father died of prostate cancer. The second was celiac disease, which was a surprise. Although in retrospect, I had some subtle signs and symptoms which could be attributed to celiac disease: Poor digestion of fatty foods, low serum cholesterol, a mysterious skin rash, and recurrent aphthous ulcers,” or canker sores.

He followed up on his Navigenics results by getting two diagnostic tests for celiac disease—a blood test that looks for celiac-related factors and an upper endoscopy, which allowed his doctor to see inside his digestive tract and look for the tissue damage caused by celiac disease.

Both tests were positive, and showed that he already had a moderate to severe form of the disease.
From there, William knew that he could use his genetic test results to take action.

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Categories: About Navigenics, Celiac disease, Prostate cancer, Prevention, Vitamin D

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March 02, 2009

Cancer screening extends and improves lives

Julie Sevrens Lyons,

Health writer

Posted 09:00 AM PDT

imageCancer deaths among African-Americans have been steadily declining in recent years, but are still much higher than they should be.

For most types of cancer, blacks continue to have the highest death rate – and shortest survival – of any racial or ethnic group in the United States, the American Cancer Society reported recently in a sweeping review of African-Americans and cancer.

All too often, when cancer is diagnosed in an African-American patient, the disease is more advanced and harder to beat, the scientists found.

The issue has more to do with social and economic disparities – and a lack of early screening – than any biological differences associated with race, the scientists concluded. Inequalities in wealth, education and health insurance are partly to blame.

But cancer also is not being detected early enough.

As a result, more than 63,000 African-Americans will die from cancer this year.

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Categories: About Navigenics, Breast cancer, Colon cancer, Stomach cancer, Lung cancer, Prostate cancer

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