Development of individualized minimally invasive therapy and multidisciplinary care for gastrointestinal cancer
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DOI[10.31662/jmaj.2022-0082]to the data of the same series
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- Material Type
- 記事
- Author/Editor
- Yuko Kitagawa
- Publication, Distribution, etc.
- Publication Date
- 2022-07-15
- Publication Date (W3CDTF)
- 2022-07-15
- Periodical title
- JMA Journal
- No. or year of volume/issue
- 5(3)
- Volume
- 5(3)
- ISSN (Periodical Title)
- 2433-3298
- ISSN-L (Periodical Title)
- 2433-328X
- Text Language Code
- eng
- DOI
- 10.31662/jmaj.2022-0082
- Persistent ID (NDL)
- info:ndljp/pid/14494928
- Collection
- Collection (Materials For Handicapped People:1)
- Collection (particular)
- 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション > 電子書籍・電子雑誌 > その他
- Acquisition Basis
- インターネット資料収集保存事業(WARP)
- Date Accepted (W3CDTF)
- 2025-10-21T09:04:40+09:00
- Date Captured (W3CDTF)
- 2024-09-26
- Format (IMT)
- application/pdf
- Access Restrictions
- インターネット公開
- Availability of remote photoduplication service
- 不可
- Periodical Title (URI)
- Periodical Title (Persistent ID (NDL))
- info:ndljp/pid/14494924
- Data Provider (Database)
- 国立国会図書館 : 国立国会図書館デジタルコレクション
- Summary, etc.
- <p>Today, approximately one in every two people in Japan is diagnosed with cancer at least once in their lifetime, making cancer control a matter of national concern. However, advances in diagnosis and treatment have made it possible to cure 70%-80% of cancers. Early-stage malignancies can now be resolved in nearly all cases, with the current challenge lying in how to fully cure the patient in a manner that conserves the affected organ and its function. Minimally invasive, function-preserving surgery for early-stage tumors will likely further evolve with the introduction of robotics and individualized surgery. Meanwhile, cancers that are difficult to control-advanced or intractable forms-require a multidisciplinary approach combining diverse therapeutic strategies. The future of treatment for advanced cancer promises to bring innovations such as individualized treatment planning based on cancer genome analysis, precise determination of treatment responsiveness using gene mutations as indicators, and early diagnosis of metastasis/recurrence through liquid biopsy. This paper provides an overview of the current state and future prospects of multidisciplinary cancer care, with a focus on the author's field of expertise-upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancers.</p>
- DOI
- 10.31662/jmaj.2022-0082
- Access Restrictions
- インターネット公開
- Data Provider (Database)
- 科学技術振興機構 : J-STAGE
- Summary, etc.
- <p>Today, approximately one in every two people in Japan is diagnosed with cancer at least once in their lifetime, making cancer control a matter of national concern. However, advances in diagnosis and treatment have made it possible to cure 70%-80% of cancers. Early-stage malignancies can now be resolved in nearly all cases, with the current challenge lying in how to fully cure the patient in a manner that conserves the affected organ and its function. Minimally invasive, function-preserving surgery for early-stage tumors will likely further evolve with the introduction of robotics and individualized surgery. Meanwhile, cancers that are difficult to control-advanced or intractable forms-require a multidisciplinary approach combining diverse therapeutic strategies. The future of treatment for advanced cancer promises to bring innovations such as individualized treatment planning based on cancer genome analysis, precise determination of treatment responsiveness using gene mutations as indicators, and early diagnosis of metastasis/recurrence through liquid biopsy. This paper provides an overview of the current state and future prospects of multidisciplinary cancer care, with a focus on the author's field of expertise-upper gastrointestinal (GI) cancers.</p>
- DOI
- 10.31662/jmaj.2022-0082
- Access Restrictions
- インターネット公開
- Related Material (URI)
- Data Provider (Database)
- 国立情報学研究所 : CiNii Research
- Original Data Provider (Database)
- Japan Link Center雑誌記事索引データベースCrossref
- Bibliographic ID (NDL)
- 14494928