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Scientific Program
28th International Conference on Cancer Research and Anticancer Therapies, will be organized around the theme “Furtherance and Innovations in Cancer Care”
Cancer Congress 2018 is comprised of 13 tracks and 163 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in Cancer Congress 2018.
Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.
Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.
Cancer cells have the capacity to divide in an uncontrollable manner. Cancer cells ignore signals that will be active in stopping the cell division, apoptosis and cell shedding. In a cancer cell, most of the genes metamorphose into a defective one. Cancerous tumors can spread into, or invade, nearby tissues so they are the cause of malignancy. By the progression of these tumors, some cancer cells can be fragmented and travel to other parts in the body through the plasma or the lymphatic system and forms another tumor cell far away from the original tumor which is called metastasis. Cancer pathogenesis deals with the molecular, biochemical, and cell-based approaches are included in cancer cell biology to better understand. Cancer Genetics deals with the cancer growth due to genetic changes, if the changes are present in germ cells it can be inherited from parents to off- springs. Tumor Immunology plays an important role in decision of new approaches for cancer therapeutics. Cancer Science Conferencesarticulate the evolutions in the cancer science field.
- Track 1-1Cancer Pathogenesis
- Track 1-2Cancer Tumors
- Track 1-3Molecular Oncology
- Track 1-4Tumor Immunology
- Track 1-5Cancer Genetics
Organ Specific Cancers are cancers named based on the location of cancer in the body organ. Its incidence is showing an increasing trend in various parts of the earth and has been a significant public health problem despite advances in the understanding of the molecular and cellular events that underlie.
- Track 2-1Prostrate cancer
- Track 2-2Colorectal cancer
- Track 2-3Oesophagal cancer
- Track 2-4Breast & ovarian cancer
- Track 2-5Head and neck cancer
- Track 2-6Cervical cancer
- Track 2-7Liver Cancer
- Track 2-8Pancreatic cancer
- Track 2-9Brain cancer
- Track 2-10Gastrointestinal cancer
- Track 2-11Bile Duct cancer
- Track 2-12Bladder cancer
- Track 2-13 Bronchial cancer
- Track 2-14Skin Cancer
Unlike diagnostic efforts prompted by symptoms and medical signs, cancer screening involves efforts to detect cancer after it has formed, but before any noticeable symptoms appear. This may involve physical examination, blood or urine tests or medical imaging.
Cancer screening is not available for many types of cancers. Even when tests are available, they may not be recommended for everyone. Universal screening or mass screening involves screening everyone. Selective screening identifies people who are at higher risk, such as people with a family history. Several factors are considered to determine whether the benefits of screening outweigh the risks and the costs of screening. These factors include:
- Track 3-1Screening mammography
- Track 3-2Sigmoidoscopy
- Track 3-3Breast Cancer Screening
- Track 3-4Cervical Cancer Screening
- Track 3-5Colorectal Cancer Screening
- Track 3-6Lung Cancer Screening
- Track 3-7Oral Cancer Screening
- Track 3-8Pancreatic Cancer Screening
- Track 3-9Prostate Cancer Screening
- Track 3-10Whole Body Imaging
It is another interdisciplinary region including organic, measurable and computational sciences. Now a day’s bioinformatics innovation is for the most part utilized for the special growth investigation. Ribosomal S6 protein kinase 4 (RSK4) is a vital novel tumor silencer that hinders breast cancer cell development and initiates senescence. Utilizing pair proclivity cleaning, we got protein buildings that associated with RSK4 or RSK4m. Mass range examination was performed to distinguish the acquired protein edifices, and bioinformatics investigation was performed.
- Track 4-1Cancer Bioinformatics
- Track 4-2Translational Bioinformatics
- Track 4-3Bioinformatics Gene
- Track 4-4Bioinformatics Drug
- Track 4-5Biology Bioinformatics
Therapies such as acupuncture and massage can be a useful complement to conventional methods of treating cancer. But “cure-all” solutions that claim to eliminate disease naturally aren’t proven to work — and can actually be dangerous for people with cancer. Although it's easier to prevent cancer than to reverse it once it has taken hold, it is nevertheless reversible with holistic therapies that address imbalances of the body, mind and spirit. Herbal medicine uses plants, or mixtures of plant extracts, to treat illness and promote health.
- Proper nutrition and clean water
- Detoxification
- Immune building
- Oxygen therapy
- Natural chemotherapies
- Lifestyle changes: adequate sleep, sunlight & exercise
- A positive attitude
- Spiritual cleansing
- Track 5-1Herbal Medicine
- Track 5-2Proper Nutrition and clean water
- Track 5-3Lifestyle Changes
- Track 5-4Spiritual Cleansing
- Track 5-5A Positive attitude
- Track 5-6Acupuncture
- Track 5-7Massage
- Track 5-8Rehabilitation Therapy
Targeted therapy is a special type of chemotherapy that exploits differences between normal cells and tumor cells. It's occasionally utilized alone, however frequently other disease medicines are utilized with targeted therapy.
As the name proposes, targeted therapies interfere with particular proteins engaged with tumorigenesis. Instead of utilizing expansive base growth medications, concentrating on particular atomic changes which are one of a kind to a specific disease, directed tumor treatments might be all the more remedially gainful for some malignancies, including lung, colorectal, breast, lymphoma and leukaemia.
Targeted drugs can work to:
- Block or turn off chemical signals that tell the cancer cell to grow and divide
- Change proteins within the cancer cells so the cells die
- Stop making new blood vessels to feed the cancer cells
- Trigger your immune system to kill the cancer cells
- Carry toxins to the cancer cells to kill them, but not normal cells
- Track 6-1Monoclonal antibodies
- Track 6-2Small molecule drugs
- Track 6-3Targeted therapy for breast cancer
- Track 6-4Targeted therapy for Colorectal Cancer
- Track 6-5Targeted therapy for Lung Cancer
- Track 6-6Targeted therapy for Melanoma
- Track 6-7Challenges of targeted therapies
In this therapy, the stem cells that give rise to the different blood cells in the body are transplanted into the bone marrow of the patient, where they regenerate the blood. This is a vital and often lifesaving treatment because chemotherapy destroys the bone marrow alongside cancer cells and the blood cells must be replenished for the patient's treatment to be successful.
In a stem cell transplant, healthy blood-forming stem cells are injected through a needle in the veins. The types of Stem Cell Transplants are:
- Autologous, which means the stem cells come from you, the patient
- Allogeneic, which means the stem cells come from someone else. The donor may be a blood relative but can also be someone who is not related.
- Syngeneic, which means the stem cells come from your identical twin, if you have one
- Track 7-1Autologous Stem Cell Therapy
- Track 7-2Allogeneic Stem Cell Therapy
- Track 7-3Syngeneic Stem Cell Therapy
- Track 7-4Embryonic Stem Cell Lines
- Track 7-5Mesenchymal Stromal Cells
- Track 7-6Sources of Stem Cells
Radiation therapy occurs in the presence of biochemical recurrence after prostatectomy to assess whether this results in shifts of histopathological prognostic factors such as the Gleason Score usingionizing radiation (such as megavoltage X-rays or radionuclides) in the treatment of cancer. The field of radiation oncology covers the integration of radiation therapy into multimodal treatment approaches. Radiation Oncology provides an open access forum for researchers and clinicians involved in the management and treatment of cancer patients, bringing together the latest research and advances in the field.
- Track 8-1Radiation therapy
- Track 8-2Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy
- Track 8-3Intensity Modulated Radiotherapy
- Track 8-4Intravascular Brachytherapy
- Track 8-5Prostate Seed Implant
Pharmacology deals with action of drug in the body. Cancer Pharmacology deals with the drugs used in cancer treatment, their mechanism of action, their side effects and their mode of elimination. Combination of Drugs and their efficacy has been a major choice of research interest.
- Track 9-1Cancer Drugs
- Track 9-2Anti-cancer drugs mechanism of action
- Track 9-3Cancer Drugs absorption and Distribution
- Track 9-4Cancer Drugs Metabolism
- Track 9-5Side Effects of Synthetic Drugs in Cancer Treatment
Precision medicine is an expression that is regularly used to depict how genetic data about aperson’s disease is being utilized to treat their diseases. Cancer is an infection of the genome and as more is found out about growth tumors, the more we are finding that every tumor has its own arrangement of hereditary changes. Understanding the hereditary changes that are in disease cells is prompting more powerful treatment techniques that are custom fitted to the genetic profile of every patient's growth. Precision medicine helps doctors select treatments that are most likely to help patients based on a genetic understanding of their disease.
- Track 10-1Tumor DNA sequencing in Cancer Treatment
- Track 10-2Cancer Genomics
- Track 10-3Protein Biomarkers
- Track 10-4Tumor Heterogeneity
- Track 10-5Genomic and Translational Research
Nanotechnology an extremely wide and versatile field, can affect many of its composing disciplines in amazingly innovative and unpredictable ways. In fact, nanotechnology and the ideas and methods that it encompasses can be applied to almost any problem that leading researchers face today. Even the most seemingly impossible problems like HIV and cancer become only obstacles in the path to solutions. Nanotechnology can be used in several clinical applications. Nanotechnology is used in the diagnosing, detecting and treating of the tumor cells.
- Track 11-1Function of Tumor Microenvironment in Cancer Progression
- Track 11-2Function of Chemo Drugs in cancer
- Track 11-3Stealth Nanoparticles and Tumor Penetrating Peptides
- Track 11-4Vector-host interactions governing epidemiology
- Track 11-5New Nano-materials in treatment of cancer
- Track 11-6Imaging and drug delivery using Theranostics nanoparticles
- Track 11-7Early Diagnosis and Imaging of cancer using nanoparticles
- Track 11-8Advances in Nanotechnology
An oncology nurse is a nursing professional who specializes in caring for people with cancer.Oncology nurses often serve as your first line of communication, and help coordinate the many aspects of your care throughout cancer treatment. Nursing Management is an important chapter of the nursing education. The nursing professionals in radiation oncology field will be highly demandable. Oncology nursing professionals mostly gives the palliative care for patients and comforts them. Cancer Congress 2018 will create a new revolution in cancer science and cancer nursing field.
- Track 12-1Nursing education
- Track 12-2Nursing Management
- Track 12-3Clinical Nursing
- Track 12-4Critical Care
- Track 12-5Continuing Nursing Education
Chemotherapy(Chemo) is a type of treatment that includes a medication or combination of medications to treat cancer. The goal of chemo is to stop or slow the growth of cancer cells. Chemo is considered asystemic therapy. This means it may affect your entire body. Chemo medications attack rapidly growing cancer cells, but they can also affect healthy cells that grow rapidly. Chemotherapy is the utilization of any medication to treat any disease. In any case, to a great many people, the word chemotherapy implies drugs utilized for disease treatment. It's frequently abbreviated to "chemo." Surgery and radiation treatment remove, murder, or harm disease cells in a specific region, yet chemo can work all through the entire body. This implies chemo can destroy malignancy cells that have spread (metastasized) to parts of the body far from the first (essential) tumor.
- Track 13-1Types of Chemotherapy
- Track 13-2 Dosage
- Track 13-3Mechanism of Action
- Track 13-4Resistance
- Track 13-5Chemotherapy Side effects
- Track 13-6Occupational precautions