Thursday, March 31, 2011

Tamoxifen Breast Cancer Drug

A breast cancer drug called Tamoxifen could be used to prevent breast cancer in certain older women who have high chances of developing the disease.

Due to the serious side effects associated with Tamoxifen, such as increased chances of uterine cancer, stroke as well as heart attack, one may wonder why anyone would take this drug as a preemptive measure against breast cancer.

The answer is because for a select demographic group of women - those over 50 and under 55, with a 66 percent or higher risk for cancer within the next five years - the risks of Tamoxifen may be outweighed by the potential benefits.


Tamoxifen was first approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1998 for women with high risks of breast cancer. The FDA decision was highly criticized by some researchers.

All information from www.breastcancersite.com



Kayla Wharton

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Competing At Mrs. Texas International

Top 5


I had a wonderful time competing for the title of Mrs. Texas International on March 11-13 in San Antonio, Texas. I loved meeting so many amazing ladies. I placed 4th runner-up and tied for Fitness wear I am very happy with my placement. I feel that I did my very best. Thank you to all my family and friends for all their support. Best of luck to the Winners they will do a wonderful job representing Texas.

Kayla & Valerie Hayes



Kayla Wharton

My Mothers First Zometa Treatment

I wrote a few weeks ago about my mother having a bone fracture in her back. And she has decided to start treatment to strengthen her bones. My mother had her first treatment of Zometa yesterday. Everything went well. This morning when we talked she said she had a hard time sleeping last night and she was tired this morning. Otherwise she said she is feeling good! I will keep everyone updated on her journey with Zometa and making her bones stronger. I am posting information again about the treatment my mother has started.

Please keep her in your prayers.


ZOMETA has treated over 3.8 million patients with bone metastases and bone complications from multiple myeloma worldwide in more than 9 years of real-world experience.

ZOMETA is a treatment for hypercalcemia of malignancy (HCM; a condition resulting in high calcium blood levels due to cancer). ZOMETA is also used to reduce and delay bone complications due to multiple myeloma and bone metastases from solid tumors; used with anti-cancer medicines. ZOMETA is not an anti-cancer therapy. If you have prostate cancer, you should have failed treatment with at least one hormonal therapy prior to taking ZOMETA.

Severe and occasionally incapacitating bone, joint, and/or muscle pain has been reported in patients taking bisphosphonates, including ZOMETA. HCM patients may experience flu-like symptoms (fever, chills, flushing, bone pain and/or joint or muscle pain).

ZOMETA is a prescription drug developed by Novartis Oncology. ZOMETA is given intravenously every 3 to 4 weeks in a doctor's office, a clinic or in a hospital on an "outpatient" basis. Once the infusion is prepared, the infusion process takes at least 15 minutes. Before ZOMETA was available, IV bisphosphonate therapy required at least 2 hours for administration.

ZOMETA reduces the risk of bone complications such as bone fracture, hypercalcemia of malignancy, and spinal cord compression. ZOMETA helps restore the normal process of bone remodeling, thus reducing the chance of bone complications. Even patients who have already had complications, such as bone fracture, radiation, or bone surgery, can be helped by treatment with ZOMETA. In these cases, ZOMETA may reduce the risk of additional complications.

ZOMETA was tested in three large studies involving over 3,000 cancer patients. These patients all had bone metastases from solid tumors (breast, prostate, lung, kidney cancer, genitourinary cancer, bladder cancer, colorectal cancer, other gastrointestinal cancers, liver cancer, head and neck cancer, malignant melanoma, sarcoma, and others) or multiple myeloma. They were all receiving chemotherapy or hormonal therapy. In these studies, patients who were given ZOMETA had fewer bone complications, a longer time until bone complications occurred, and a lower risk of developing bone complications, than patients who did not take ZOMETA.

www.zometa.com



Kayla Wharton

Friday, March 11, 2011

"Mammograms are among the best early detection methods, yet 13 million U.S. women 40 years of age or older have never had a mammogram."

—National Breast Cancer Foundation



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Thursday, March 10, 2011

The most common risk factors For Breast Cancer


The most common risk factors For Breast Cancer:

• Sex. The highest risk factor for breast cancer is being female; the disease is about 100 times more common among women.

• Age. The risk of breast cancer increases as a woman grows older. The risk is especially high for women age 60 and older. Breast cancer is uncommon in women younger than age 35, although it does occur. There is some evidence to suggest young African American women are at greater risk for breast cancer than young Caucasian women.

• Personal History. Women who have had breast cancer and women with a history of breast disease (not cancer, but a condition that may predispose them to cancer) may develop it again.

• Family History. The risk of developing breast cancer increases for a woman whose mother, sister, daughter, or two or more close relatives have had the disease. It is important to know how old they were at the time they were diagnosed.

• The Breast Cancer Genes. Some individuals, both women and men, may be born with an "alteration" (or change) in one of two genes that are important for regulating breast cell growth. Individuals who inherit an alteration in the BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene are at an "inherited" higher risk for breast cancer.. Women with a family history of breast cancer are encouraged to speak to a genetics counselor to determine the pros and cons of genetic testing.

Estrogen appears to play a key role in breast cancer. Although estrogen doesn't actually cause breast cancer, it may stimulate the growth of cancer cells.

Lower your risks for breast cancer:
• Decrease your daily fat intake - especially saturated or hydrogenated fats.
• Increase fiber in your diet.
• Eat fresh fruits and vegetables.
• Limit alcohol.
• Stay active.
• Don't smoke.

For additional information on risk factors, refer to the American Cancer Society's Breast Cancer Facts and Figures


Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Smoking And Second-Hand Smoke Linked To Breast Cancer

A new study of post-menopausal women finds that smoking, as well as second-hand smoke, is linked to higher risks of breast cancer, according to HealthDay.

"The findings are important because smoking was not previously thought to increase the risk of breast cancer, but this study adds to the increasing evidence that it does," Dr. Karen Margolis, lead scientist of the study from HealthPartners Research Foundation in Minneapolis, told the news source.

Researchers say that long-term smoking is correlated to higher breast cancer risks. However, smokers who stop smoking can lower their risks back to the average level, about 20 years after quitting.

The study looked at almost 80,000 women between the ages of 50 and 79, and found that smokers on average had a 16 percent higher risk of breast cancer compared to non-smokers.

Breast cancer affects about one in eight women in the United States, at some point in her life, according to the American Cancer Society. Regular exercise has been linked to lowering breast cancer risks, reported other recent studies.
www.breastcancersite.com



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Mrs. Texas International This Weekend!!!!

I compete for Mrs. Texas international this weekend, March 11-13. I am so Excited!!!! I am currently Mrs. North Texas International.

These are three areas of competition I will be competing in.

Interview (50% of score)

Interviews will be conducted between 5 judges and contestant. I will have 5 minutes with each judge. No political or religious questions allowed. I have a platform for which she will speak on during the year, if selected Mrs. Texas International.

Evening Gown (25% of score)

i will wear my own personal choice of evening gown. I am judged on grace, poise and elegance in Evening Wear. Andy will escort me in this segment of competition.


Fitness Wear (25% of score)

I will wear the state selected fitness wear, designed specifically for the International Pageant System. I will be judged on being physically fit, energetic, and healthy.

Thank you to all my sponsors for their support. Thank you to my friends and family for all the love and support you have given me.

You only have a few more day to vote for ME for People’s Choice Award! For those of you who have already voted thank you!

www.mrstexasinternational.com/contestantdetails.php?id=147



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Did you Know This About Breast Cancer?


How many new cases of breast cancer were estimated in the United States in 2009?

According to the American Cancer Society (ACS), an estimated 192,370 new cases of invasive breast cancer are expected to be diagnosed among women in the United States last year. Approximately 1,910 new cases are expected in men. The ACS also reports that an estimated 40,610 breast cancer deaths are expected in 2009 (40,170 women, 440 men).

How common is breast cancer in the United States?

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, aside from skin cancer.



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Monday, March 7, 2011

What Is Breast Cancer?


Breast cancer is cancer that forms in tissues of the breast, usually the ducts (tubes that carry milk to the nipple) and lobules (glands that make milk). It occurs in both men and women, although male breast cancer is rare.




Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Sunday, March 6, 2011

The Breast Cancer Site


•When breast cancer is found early, the five-year survival rate is 96%. Over 2 million breast cancer survivors are alive in America today.



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Friday, March 4, 2011

Zometa Failure Preventing Breast Cancer Recurrences

While looking on the internet about the next step my mother will be taking. I have come across new information. Not only was Zometa to help with bones but researchers were trying to use Zometa to prevent cancer. Well they haven’t succeeded. Please support Susan G. Komen in the fight for the cure so we can continue to find a cure.

www.usatoday.com reported:

One of the most promising new approaches for fighting breast cancer took a stunning setback Thursday when a major study showed that a bone-building drug did not stop cancer from returning or extend life for most women fighting the disease.

Hopes that these drugs could also prevent cancer soared after a study two years ago found Zometa cut the risk of cancer recurrence by 30% in younger women forced into early menopause by hormone treatments they received.
The excitement grew last year, when a large study found that women who were not cancer patients and were taking daily bisphosphonate pills to prevent bone problems were about one-third less likely to develop breast cancer.

The new study was meant to be definitive. It tested Zometa in 3,360 women of all ages in seven countries who had breast cancer that had spread to lymph nodes. All received standard cancer treatments, and half also got periodic infusions of Zometa for five years.

After five years of follow up, about 400 women in each group had died or suffered a recurrence.
Side effects are a concern: 26 women on Zometa — 1 to 2% of the group — developed confirmed or suspected cases of jawbone decay, a serious problem long linked to bisphosphonates. Blood clots in the lung also were more common among those on Zometa, although not significantly so, Coleman said.

Zometa's role in cancer prevention remains uncertain, said Dr. Peter Ravdin of the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio, one of the organizers of the cancer conference.
"There are some indications that in some patients it may still have value," but the side effect profile "certainly means that this drug shouldn't be given without confidence that it will cause benefit," he said.
Studies testing other bisphosphonate drugs for breast cancer will have results in a year or two.

Breast cancer is the most common major cancer in women. About 207,000 new cases and nearly 40,000 deaths from it are expected in the United States this year.


www.bloomberg.com reported:

Novartis AG’s effort to add $1 billion in sales to its bone-repair drug Zometa with an extra approval in breast cancer stalled yesterday when the treatment failed to stop tumors from returning in a study.

Zometa combined with standard treatments didn’t slow the disease or prolong life, according to a 3,360-patient study presented at the San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium in Texas. An earlier, smaller study showed Zometa users were 32 percent less likely to have their cancer recur after five years.

Based on the new findings, Novartis, of Basel, Switzerland, will withdraw U.S. and European applications for Zometa approval to prevent breast cancer relapse. The company is reviewing whether a new trial is needed to refile for clearance. Positive results could have boosted Zometa sales as much as $1 billion in 2015, said Fabian Wenner, an analyst at UBS AG in Zurich.

“The data is a disappointment,” Andrew Weiss, an analyst at Bank Vontobel in Zurich said in an interview today. “Zometa was set to lose patent protection, so it’s not a bitter loss.”

Zometa has patent protection until 2013; a new application for use in breast cancer could have added three additional years in that indication, Wenner said.

“The trial casts real doubts on whether there is a role for Zometa in preventing recurrence of breast cancer,” said Eric Winer, chief of the division of women’s cancer at the Dana- Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, in an interview. Doctors prescribing Zometa to block the return of tumors “should stop or at least question that practice.”

Zometa, given as an infusion, also is sold at a lower dose under the name Reclast or Aclasta to treat osteoporosis. It belongs to a group of drugs called bisphosphonates that help maintain bone strength and may also fight cancer by stimulating immune cells, choking off the growth of blood vessels that feed tumors, and causing malignant cells to self-destruct.

“Bisphosphonates are commonly used to treat osteoporosis caused by breast cancer,” said Sharon Giordano, an oncologist at the University of Texas’ MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, in a telephone interview. “The million-dollar question is whether or not these drugs will also be effective in preventing breast cancer recurrences.”

About a half million women in the U.S. and Europe are diagnosed annually with breast cancer, and after treatment about 11 percent have their cancer return within five years.

Azure Study
A five-year study, dubbed Azure, compared Zometa added to chemotherapy to the other drugs alone. The main goal was to prolong the time women survived without tumors recurring. Novartis provided grant money to researchers at the University of Sheffield in England, who conducted the study.

In the study, 404 of the women getting Zometa and 403 of those on a placebo in addition to standard care developed invasive disease. A total of 243 Zometa patients and 276 on a placebo died, the researchers found. There were 17 confirmed cases of osteonecrosis of the jaw, a devastating side effect that causes the jawbones to die, and nine possible cases.

Zometa did show a benefit for the oldest women, those at least five years beyond menopause, increasing overall survival rates by 29 percent compared to those getting only chemotherapy. More work is needed to determine if that finding should change breast cancer care, researchers said.

Older Women
“This isn’t a treatment for everybody,” said Robert Coleman, an oncologist at Weston Park Hospital in Sheffield, England, and the study’s lead researcher, in a telephone interview. “But there is this group of older women that are behaving so differently we don’t think it’s a chance finding.”

Novartis will withdraw its applications for approval of Zometa to prevent the recurrence of breast cancer in the U.S. and Europe, and plans to refile after discussing the Azure trial results with regulators, said Herve Hoppenot, head of oncology at Novartis. The company originally sought clearance based on the results of the earlier trial out of Austria.

“The future of the application itself is really unknown at this point,” Hoppenot said in a telephone interview. “We don’t know what the regulators will ask us to do. We need to define the group where it is beneficial. What the data tell us is that it will be a subgroup.”



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Thursday, March 3, 2011

As many of you know that I am competing in the Mrs. Texas International Pageant on March 13, 2011.
I am so excited!

Please take a minute to vote for me! Proceeds go towards the Miss Teen Texas International scholarship fund and to The American Heart Association's Go Red for Women Campaign.



Mrs. North Texas International - Kayla Wharton

www.mrstexasinternational.com

Thank you for all your support!

How to Conduct a Breast Self-Exam - What Is Your Shade Of PINK?


Three ways to preform self exams:

In the shower: Fingers flat, move gently over every part of each breast. Use your right hand to examine left breast, left hand for right breast.
Check for any lump, hard knot or thickening. Carefully observe any changes in your breasts.

Before a mirror: Inspect your breasts with arms at your sides. Next, raise your arms high overhead.

Look for any changes in contour of each breast, a swelling, a dimpling of skin or changes in the nipple. Then rest palm on hips and press firmly to flex your chest muscles. Left and right breasts will not exactly match — few women's breasts do.

Lying down: Place pillow under right shoulder, right arm behind your head. With fingers of left hand flat, press right breast gently in small circular motions, moving vertically or in a circular pattern covering the entire breast. Use light, medium and firm pressure. Squeeze nipple; check for discharge and lumps. Repeat these steps for your left breast.

If you have any questions please go to: thebreastcancersite.com.


Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Alcohol And Breast Cancer - What Is Your Shade Of PINK?



The use of alcohol is clearly linked to an increased risk of developing breast cancer. The risk increases with the amount of alcohol consumed. Compared with non-drinkers, women who consume 1 alcoholic drink a day have a very small increase in risk. Those who have 2 to 5 drinks daily have about 1½ times the risk of women who drink no alcohol. Excessive alcohol use is also known to increase the risk of developing cancers of the mouth, throat, esophagus, and liver. The American Cancer Society recommends that women limit their consumption of alcohol to no more than one drink a day.

Most of the excess cases were breast cancers. Allen and colleagues concluded that as many as 11% of breast cancers can be attributed to alcohol consumption.
Last year, about 250,000 women were diagnosed with invasive and non-invasive breast cancers in the U.S., according to the American Cancer Society. The latest research suggests that 27,000 of these cancers were alcohol related.

The study also shows that:

• Women who drank only wine had the same risk for developing cancer as those who drank beer, spirits, or a combination of alcoholic beverages.

• Less than 2% of the women in the study regularly consumed more than three drinks a day, but each additional drink increased risk.

• Women who smoked and drank alcohol had an increased risk of oral, throat, and esophageal cancer that was greater than the risk associated with smoking alone.



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Komen Race Team Shouse




ONE NIGHT ONLY!!!


You didn't ask for it, you got it! America's hottest rock charity band is teaming up with Komen Race Team Shouse to host a night of live music and breast cancer fundraising.

A $10 donation at the door goes to the Komen Race for the Cure and gets you in! The debut CD, "The Pink Album" from The Boobles can see you home!

And a silent auction benefiting Komen lets you go all... live-eBay on this mutha! With items like the American Past time auction containing passes to games for the upcoming Texas Rangers and Fort Worth Cats baseball seasons, the Big Burger Basket with loads of treats for hamburger lovers, The Colossal Coffee package with OH SO MUCH GOODNESS courtesy of our friends at Starbucks and Royal Cup, and even 16 hours of professional recording studio time (a $1600 value!) with Juergen Horn Productions... there'll be something for EVERYONE! What?!? YES! And so much more TBA soon... your head will spin while your feet dance! Not to mention you'll be able to finally get your hands on the debut album by The Boobles!! (All Boobles-related sales are donated to The Breast Cancer Research Foundation!)

BUT WAIT, THERE'S MORE!!
Two bouncy sets of Boobles tunes rocks the evening starting at 9:00PM, containing Boobles songs that you'll never hear on our studio albums!
And those famous J. Gilligan's Irish nachos!!

Make plans to come have a good time and celebrate life by supporting breast cancer research for a CURE!

www.theboobles.orgSee More



Kayla Wharton - Mrs. North Texas International