Posts Tagged ‘research’

May I remember your loved one at the Meso Symposium Tribute Ceremony?

17 Jun 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations, Research/Treatment

As those of you who follow this blog probably already know, I’ll be traveling to Washington, D.C., next week to attend the 2009 International Symposium on Malignant Mesothelioma, which is being presented by the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation (MARF). On Friday morning, a regular part of the conference is a Tribute Ceremony to honor those who have lost their struggle against mesothelioma. This is a poignant time to recognize those who were so needlessly lost, and to provide a way to communicate the urgent need for funding for research and treatment.

During the Tribute Ceremony, MARF will create a collage of photos of these loved ones who have passed away. I would be more than honored to carry your photo to Washington to add to this Tribute. You may send your photo electronically, by email, and I will make color prints to add to the collage. Please let me know if you would be interested in this. You can email mymeso@gmail.com or email me directly at wendi.lewis@beasleyallen.com.

On Thursday, I also will have the opportunity to visit Capitol Hill to ask our congressional representatives to provide federal funding for mesothelioma research and treatment, and for the ban of asbestos. Please take a moment to sign the petition for these endeavors – there is a link on our home page.

I look forward to attending the Symposium next week, and will be blogging from the conference, which will provide a wealth of information about the latest progress in mesothelioma research and treatment. The conference begins on Thursday, June 25, with the visits to Capitol Hill, and continues through Saturday featuring distinguished physicians, researchers and advocates. I’m sure there will be a lot of valuable information to share.

God bless you all!


Debbie hopes to make groundbreaking mesothelioma treatment more widely available

15 Jun 2009 by Wendi Lewis under News, People, Research/Treatment

I reported last week that Debbie Brewer, our friend in the UK, had another amazing report from Germany, where she has been undergoing chemoembolization to treat her mesothelioma. Her tumor has now shrunk a total of 83 percent! Debbie is sharing her experience with media in , hoping to gain more widespread acceptance of chemoembolization as a treatment for meso, and to raise that the therapy, currently in clinical trials, exists.

Debbie was diagnosed with mesothelioma in November 2006, at which time her doctor gave her only a few months to live. That was when Debbie began looking for new treatments. She began chemoembolization in May 2008.

Chemoembolization, which is being pioneered by Dr. Thomas J. Vogl at J.W. Goethe University Hospital at Frankfurt University, introduces chemotherapy directly into a tumor, where it is basically sealed off so that it is concentrated in the area of need. The clinical trial started three years ago, and will continue for about two more years. The treatment is only available at the clinic in Germany.

Recently, BBC News featured Debbie and her efforts to bring chemoembolization to the UK, and beyond.

Watch the video.


Reminder: Bowlathon meso fundraiser tomorrow

20 Mar 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, People, Research/Treatment

This is a reminder to our readers that the Mesothelioma Bowlathon fund raiser is set for tomorrow, March 21, at Ormond Lanes in Ormond Beach, Fla. This event is being organized by Tara Music, in honor of her father, Ray Beltrami, who passed away as a result of mesothelioma on July 1, 2008.

If you live in the Ormond Beach area, it’s not too late to participate! The event is set for 1-3 p.m., with registration beginning at the bowling alley at noon. The $15 registration fee includes three games, lunch and a t-shirt. Proceeds will benefit the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation, which is the national organization dedicated to eradicating mesothelioma as a life-ending disease.

If you are not able to participate in the event, you can still make a donation. Mail your contribution to Tara’s attention at 11 Woodgate Court, Ormond Beach, FL, 32174. For more informatin, you can email Tara at tmusic1@cfl.rr.com or call 386-405-8264.


Bowlathon to benefit mesothelioma research

2 Mar 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News

Live in Florida near Daytona? Sign up to participate in the Mesothelioma Bowlathon, set for Saturday, March 21, at Ormond Lanes in Ormond Beach, Fla. The event will be held from 1-3 p.m., with registration beginning at noon. A $15 registration fee includes three games, lunch and a T-shirt. Proceeds will benefit the Mesothelioma Applied Research Foundation.

The event is being organized by Tara Music, in honor of her father, Ray Beltrami. He was diagnosed with meso in January 2008, and passed away July 1, 2008.

“Because I could not do anything to save him, I have felt the need to spread about this horrific disease,” Tara says.

For more information, contact Tara at tmusic1@cfl.rr.com or call 386-405-8264. If you are on Facebook, you can visit the MyMeso page to find a link to this event. A map to this event is available.

If you are not able to attend, but would like to make a donation, you can mail your contribution to Tara’s attention at 11 Woodgate Court, Ormond Beach, FL, 32174.


Asbestos Awareness Conference set for March 28

5 Feb 2009 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, Organizations

The Asbestos Disease Organization (ADAO) has announced its Fifth Annual International Asbestos Conference is set for March 28, 2009, in Manhattan Beach, Calif. The purpose of the event is to educate the public about the dangers of asbestos, ban its use and encourage research efforts to improve treatment options for asbestos diseases like mesothelioma.

The conference will feature prominent physicians, scientists, safety and health directors, as well as survivors, who will present current information about the status of asbestos in the U.S. and worldwide. Discussion will include facts on exposure, asbestos-related diseases and how to prevent them, and where to turn for help.

In addition to the main event on Saturday, there will be an evening reception on Friday, March 27, featuring musician , whose father, legendary singer-songwriter Warren Zevon, died of mesothelioma in 2003; and a Unity and Remembrance Brunch on Sunday, March 29.

Five individuals will be honored for their outstanding work in raising about asbestos exposure: U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer for her work to ban asbestos in the U.S.;  Margaret Seminario, AFL/CIO, for her efforts to unite, educate and empower asbestos victims and workers; Dr. Stephen Levin, MD, for his research into the social and medical impact of asbestos; and Pralhad Malvadkar and Raghunath Manwar for their work with victims of asbestos exposure in India and worldwide.

The conference is presented by ADAO, the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute and the International Ban Asbestos Secretariat.

For more information or registration, visit ADAO online.


Alfacell moving forward with ONCONASE while feeling financial pinch

15 Dec 2008 by Wendi Lewis under News, Research/Treatment

Alfacell Corporation, which has completed a confirmatory Phase IIIb clinical trial for its unresectable malignant mesothelioma treatment ONCONASE, reported a net loss of about $2.8 million for the first quarter of fiscal 2009. Reported by MarketWatch, the financial results are for the fiscal quarter ending Oct. 31.

The company reports a drop in cash and cash equivalents to $2 million, down from $4.7 million in July 2008. However, the company received $1.1 million from the sale of state tax loss carryforwards in New Jersey in December 2008, and says its cash reserves “are sufficient to support its activites into the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2009,” according to the report.

Following the Phase IIIb clinical trial, it was determined ONCONASE results in a statistically significant improvement in survival for patients with unresectable malignant mesothelioma who have failed one prior chemotherapy regimen. This represents a currently unmet medical need, and Alfacell will meet with the Food and Drug Administration in January 2009 to discuss details of its planned New Drug Application submission.

According to information provided by Alfacell, “ONCONASE is a first-in-class therapeutic product candidate based on Alfacell’s proprietary ribonuclease (RNase) technology. A natural protein isolated from the leopard frog, ONCONASE has been shown in the laboratory and clinic to target cancer cells while sparing normal cells. ONCONASE triggers apoptosis, the natural death of cells, via multiple molecular mechanisms of action.”


UK’s youngest meso victim passes away

2 Sep 2008 by Wendi Lewis under News, People

A young woman believed to be ’s youngest mesothelioma patient, at age 28, passed away last week, just two years after her diagnosis, according to a story in the Daily Mail. Leigh Carlisle, who grew up in Manchester, had peritoneal mesothelioma, affecting the lining of the abdomen.

Because of its long latency period – from 20 up to 50 years – mesothelioma usually occurs in older people, age 50 and older. For that reason, Carlisle’s mesothelioma eluded diagnosis early on, with doctors mistaking her symptoms for ailments such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), pelvic infection and endometriosis. Doctors were stunned when they diagnosed peritoneal mesothelioma.

Because of her young age, researchers believe Carlisle may have come in contact with asbestos – the only known cause of mesothelioma – in her school, or possibly from a factory yard near her childhood home, which she used as a shortcut on her way to school each day. Asbestos sheets were cut at the yard.

According to the report, about 2,000 people in die from mesothelioma each year, a figure that has doubled since 1992. The paper reports that 90,000 people in the UK will die from the disease, and another 90,000 from other asbestos-related lung diseases.

Additionally, the report says about 200 school workers have died or are suffering from illnesses related to asbestos exposure in schools in , where it is estimated that about 13,000 schools still contain asbestos.

Following her diagnosis, Carlisle worked for mesothelioma and asbestos . Her family requests that donations in her memory be made to the Oldham Cancer Support Centre in Failsworth:

Oldham Cancer Support Centre
Failsworth Primary Care Centre
Ashton Road West
Failsworth
M35 0AD
Tel: 0161 906 2940


jazz CD a tribute to artist affected by meso

15 Aug 2008 by Wendi Lewis under Events, News, People

keithshadwick1 jazz CD a tribute to artist affected by mesoLast week, I mentioned that I’d come across an interesting story about a jazz musician and noted writer in , who released a recording of his work begun in 1973. Keith Shadwick was a professional musician in Australia at the time, and he, along with drummer Gary Norwell, had formed a band called Sun, with a few other musicians. The group released one album, but then broke up. Keith and Gary recorded several jazz tracks before going their separate ways, and Keith revived the project off and on, in the mid 1980s and again in 2005 when he was diagnosed with mesothelioma.

A British record label, Candid Records, agreed to release the CD, and Keith recruited a number of musicians to fill in the gaps on the tracks to finally see the project through. The CD was called Free Time, a name initally selected because the original tracks recorded in 1973-74 were done during a recording studio’s down time, when a friend who worked there was able to lend Keith and Gary the space. But the liner notes, penned by Keith to tell the story of how the recording came together, tend to more solemn reflection.

“Then suddenly completion is in front of you and there is no free time anymore,” he writes, and it’s easy to see the dual implication of a completed project and a completed life.

Keith passed away just as the CD was pressed, and it is unlikely he saw it in its final form.

The special edition release of Free Time is available only through the Candid Records web site, and is shipped from the UK. Cost is £9.99 plus shipping, which totals around $24 U.S. once you figure in the exchange rate. But all proceeds from the sales will go to Bart’s Mesothelioma Research, an organization in dedicated to the treatment of mesothelioma.

I received my CD yesterday. Full of free-spirited modern jazz tunes highlighting Keith on saxophone, the CD is joyful and jamming and sometimes poignant. It is perhaps hardest to comprehend when mesothelioma steals the breath of those who create music, before it steals their life.


Shadwick CD benefits mesothelioma research

7 Aug 2008 by Wendi Lewis under News, People

keithshadwick Shadwick CD benefits mesothelioma researchThirty-four years after its original recording, Candid Records has released a jazz CD to honor the memory of noted British journalist and musician Keith Shadwick, with all proceeds from the sale going to Bart’s Mesothelioma Research, a charity based in the UK dedicated to studying the asbestos related disease.

Shadwick, who passed away from mesothelioma on July 28, 2008, was a respected journalist and author whose background as a jazz and rock musician in the 1970s led to a career focus on music and musicians. His credits include books on noted jazz musician Bill Evans, as well as Jimi Hendrix and Led Zeppelin. He also authored The Jazz & Blues Encyclopedia, the Guinness Guide to Classical Composers, and edited The Gramophone Good CD Guide. Additionally, he was a regular contributor to publications including Jazzwise magazine, The Independent and The Daily Mail.

According to an article published on All About Jazz.com, during his early 20s, Shadwick was a jazz and jazz/rock musician, playing saxophone, flute and piano. He was a founding member of the Sydney, Australia-based group, Sun, which released one self-titled album in 1972 before splitting up. In 1973 and 1974, the story reports, Shadwick and fellow Sun member, drummer Gary Norwell, recorded some jazz tracks with fellow musicians Justin McCoy and Robert Luckey when local Point Five Studio offered them use of its facility during a free downtime.

As a nod to their luck in securing the studio, the musicians named the album Free Time, but it was not completed or released. Shadwick held onto the tapes, and revived work on the recording in 1984, with guitarist Billy Jenkins, and again in 2005, with guitarist Mike Wollenberg.

All About Jazz notes that Shadwick was motivated to finish the album in 2005, when he was diagnosed with mesothelioma, and completed the project in 2007, although it is unlikely that he lived long enough to see its official pressing, which was delivered to his home right around the time of his death. The album was produced and released by Candid Records in the UK.

The Special Edition of the Free Time CD is available in limited release through the Candid Records web site, with all proceeds benefitting Bart’s Mesothelioma Research. Cost is £9.99 plus shipping, which totals around $24 U.S.


Why is EPA proposing relaxed asbestos rules?

6 Aug 2008 by Wendi Lewis under News, Organizations

The Environmental Protection Agency () Science Advisory Board (SAB) Asbestos Committee held public meetings July 21 and 22 in Washington, D.C., to discuss changes in the way it measures the risk posed by inhalation exposure to asbestos. Results of this meeting are coming under fire, as environmental groups, labor safety leaders, physicians, scientists and politicians object to the ’s proposed revised evaluation standards.

According to recent report in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, there were 20 experts appointed to the SAB’s asbestos panel, charged with evaluating the validity of the ’s plan to change how the toxicity of the six types of asbestos regulated by the government differ in danger. Its findings would be submitted to the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

According to the PI report, scientific advisors say the used the asbestos panel to submit new studies that contradict longstanding research into the dangers of asbestos. The new studies say chrysolite, in particular, the most common type of asbestos, isn’t dangerous and doesn’t cause mesothelioma.

PI quotes Dr. David Egilman, an occupational medicine specialist, who testified at the public meeting, as saying the new study was financed by mining and other asbestos-related industries, and said the studies have no scientific credibility.

Another vocal spokesperson at the hearing was Sen. Patty Murray, who sponsored S. 742, the Ban Asbestos in America Act of 2007, which passed the Senate on Oct. 4, 2007. Currently, it is the companion bill to H.R. 3339, the Bruce Vento Ban Asbestos and Prevent Mesothelioma Act, sponsored by Rep. Betty McCollum, which currently is in committee in the House of Representatives.

Sen. Murray has long been an advocate for a total asbestos ban, calling for better worker protection. The PI quotes Sen. Murray as telling the committee, “I’d like the political appointees at the to look into the eyes of a mesothelioma patient and say that asbestos isn’t dangerous. It appears that this administration is once again putting politics before public health.” Murray is currently chairwoman of the Senate Employment and Workplace Safety Subcommittee.

The asserts the new system is needed to improve how asbestos-contaminated Superfund sites are evaluated. The organization can move forward with its proposal without approval from the OMB or the SAB, if it so chooses.