fbpx
Wikipedia

Cure

A cure is a substance or procedure that ends a medical condition, such as a medication, a surgical operation, a change in lifestyle or even a philosophical mindset that helps end a person's sufferings; or the state of being healed, or cured. The medical condition could be a disease, mental illness, genetic disorder, or simply a condition a person considers socially undesirable, such as baldness or lack of breast tissue.

An incurable disease may or may not be a terminal illness; conversely, a curable illness can still result in the patient's death.

The proportion of people with a disease that are cured by a given treatment, called the cure fraction or cure rate, is determined by comparing disease-free survival of treated people against a matched control group that never had the disease.[1]

Another way of determining the cure fraction and/or "cure time" is by measuring when the hazard rate in a diseased group of individuals returns to the hazard rate measured in the general population.[2][3]

Inherent in the idea of a cure is the permanent end to the specific instance of the disease.[4][5] When a person has the common cold, and then recovers from it, the person is said to be cured, even though the person might someday catch another cold. Conversely, a person that has successfully managed a disease, such as diabetes mellitus, so that it produces no undesirable symptoms for the moment, but without actually permanently ending it, is not cured.

Related concepts, whose meaning can differ, include response, remission and recovery.

Statistical model

In complex diseases, such as cancer, researchers rely on statistical comparisons of disease-free survival (DFS) of patients against matched, healthy control groups. This logically rigorous approach essentially equates indefinite remission with cure.[6] The comparison is usually made through the Kaplan-Meier estimator approach.[7]

The simplest cure rate model was published by Joseph Berkson and Robert P. Gage in 1952.[7] In this model, the survival at any given time is equal to those that are cured plus those that are not cured, but who have not yet died or, in the case of diseases that feature asymptomatic remissions, have not yet re-developed signs and symptoms of the disease. When all of the non-cured people have died or re-developed the disease, only the permanently cured members of the population will remain, and the DFS curve will be perfectly flat. The earliest point in time that the curve goes flat is the point at which all remaining disease-free survivors are declared to be permanently cured. If the curve never goes flat, then the disease is formally considered incurable (with the existing treatments).

The Berkson and Gage equation is  

where   is the proportion of people surviving at any given point in time,   is the proportion that are permanently cured, and   is an exponential curve that represents the survival of the non-cured people.

Cure rate curves can be determined through an analysis of the data.[7] The analysis allows the statistician to determine the proportion of people that are permanently cured by a given treatment, and also how long after treatment it is necessary to wait before declaring an asymptomatic individual to be cured.[3]

Several cure rate models exist, such as the expectation-maximization algorithm and Markov chain Monte Carlo model.[7] It is possible to use cure rate models to compare the efficacy of different treatments.[7] Generally, the survival curves are adjusted for the effects of normal aging on mortality, especially when diseases of older people are being studied.[8]

From the perspective of the patient, particularly one that has received a new treatment, the statistical model may be frustrating.[6] It may take many years to accumulate sufficient information to determine the point at which the DFS curve flattens (and therefore no more relapses are expected). Some diseases may be discovered to be technically incurable, but also to require treatment so infrequently as to be not materially different from a cure. Other diseases may prove to have multiple plateaus, so that what was once hailed as a "cure" results unexpectedly in very late relapses. Consequently, patients, parents and psychologists developed the notion of psychological cure, or the moment at which the patient decides that the treatment was sufficiently likely to be a cure as to be called a cure.[6] For example, a patient may declare himself to be "cured", and to determine to live his life as if the cure were definitely confirmed, immediately after treatment.

Related terms

Response
Response is a partial reduction in symptoms after treatment.
Recovery
Recovery is a restoration of health or functioning. A person who has been cured may not be fully recovered, and a person who has recovered may not be cured, as in the case of a person in a temporary remission or who is an asymptomatic carrier for an infectious disease.
Prevention
Prevention is a way to avoid an injury, sickness, disability, or disease in the first place, and generally it will not help someone who is already ill (though there are exceptions). For instance, many babies and young children are vaccinated against polio (a highly infectious disease) and other infectious diseases, which prevents them from contracting polio. But the vaccination does not work on patients who already have polio. A treatment or cure is applied after a medical problem has already started.
Therapy
Therapy treats a problem, and may or may not lead to its cure. In incurable conditions, a treatment ameliorates the medical condition, often only for as long as the treatment is continued or for a short while after treatment is ended. For example, there is no cure for AIDS, but treatments are available to slow down the harm done by HIV and extend the treated person's life. Treatments don't always work. For example, chemotherapy is a treatment for cancer, but it may not work for every patient. In easily cured forms of cancer, such as childhood leukaemia's, testicular cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma, cure rates may approach 90%.[9] In other forms, treatment may be essentially impossible. A treatment need not be successful in 100% of patients to be considered curative. A given treatment may permanently cure only a small number of patients; so long as those patients are cured, the treatment is considered curative.

Examples

Cures can take the form of natural antibiotics (for bacterial infections), synthetic antibiotics such as the sulphonamides, or fluoroquinolones, antivirals (for a very few viral infections), antifungals, antitoxins, vitamins, gene therapy, surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, and so on. Despite a number of cures being developed, the list of incurable diseases remains long.

1700s

Scurvy became curable (as well as preventable) with doses of vitamin C (for example, in limes) when James Lind published A Treatise on the Scurvy (1753).[10]

1890s

Antitoxins to diphtheria and tetanus toxins were produced by Emil Adolf von Behring and his colleagues from 1890 onwards. The use of diphtheria antitoxin for the treatment of diphtheria was regarded by The Lancet as the "most important advance of the [19th] Century in the medical treatment of acute infectious disease".[11][12]

1930s

Sulphonamides become the first widely available cure for bacterial infections.[citation needed]

Antimalarials were first synthesized,[13][14][15] making malaria curable.[16]

1940s

Bacterial infections became curable with the development of antibiotics.[17]

2010s

Hepatitis C, a viral infection, became curable through treatment with antiviral medications.[18][19]

See also

References

  1. ^ Fuller, Arlan F.; Griffiths, C. M. (1983). Gynecologic oncology. The Hague: M. Nijhoff. ISBN 0-89838-555-5.
  2. ^ Lambert PC, Thompson JR, Weston CL, Dickman PW (2007). "Estimating and modeling the cure fraction in population-based cancer survival analysis". Biostatistics. 8 (3): 576–594. doi:10.1093/biostatistics/kxl030. PMID 17021277.
  3. ^ a b Smoll NR, Schaller K, Gautschi OP (2012). "The Cure Fraction of Glioblastoma Multiforme". Neuroepidemiology. 39 (1): 63–9. doi:10.1159/000339319. PMID 22776797.
  4. ^ "Nearing a Cancer Cure?". Harvard Health Commentaries. 21 August 2006.
  5. ^ . TeensHealth. Nemours. May 2018. Archived from the original on 2008-04-13.
  6. ^ a b c Barnes E (December 2007). "Between remission and cure: patients, practitioners and the transformation of leukaemia in the late twentieth century". Chronic Illn. 3 (4): 253–64. doi:10.1177/1742395307085333. PMID 18083680. S2CID 13259230.
  7. ^ a b c d e Friis, Robert H.; Chernick, Michael L. (2003). Introductory biostatistics for the health sciences: modern applications including bootstrap. New York: Wiley-Interscience. pp. 348–349. ISBN 0-471-41137-X.
  8. ^ Tobias, Jeffrey M.; Souhami, Robert L. (2003). Cancer and its management. Oxford: Blackwell Science. p. 11. ISBN 0-632-05531-6.
  9. ^ Saltus, Richard (Fall–Winter 2008). "What is a Cure?" (PDF). Paths of Progress. Vol. 17, no. 2. Boston: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. p. 8. Retrieved August 2, 2020.
  10. ^ Bartholomew, M (2002-11-01). "James Lind's Treatise of the Scurvy (1753)". Postgraduate Medical Journal. BMJ. 78 (925): 695–696. doi:10.1136/pmj.78.925.695. ISSN 0032-5473. PMC 1742547. PMID 12496338.
  11. ^ (Report) (1896). "Report of the Lancet special commission on the relative strengths of diphtheria antitoxic antiserums". Lancet. 148 (3803): 182–95. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(01)72399-9. PMC 5050965.
  12. ^ Dolman, C.E. (1973). "Landmarks and pioneers in the control of diphtheria". Can. J. Public Health. 64 (4): 317–36. PMID 4581249.
  13. ^ Krafts K, Hempelmann E, Skórska-Stania A (2012). "From methylene blue to chloroquine: a brief review of the development of an antimalarial therapy". Parasitol Res. 111 (1): 1–6. doi:10.1007/s00436-012-2886-x. PMID 22411634. S2CID 54526057.
  14. ^ Hempelmann E. (2007). "Hemozoin biocrystallization in Plasmodium falciparum and the antimalarial activity of crystallization inhibitors". Parasitol Res. 100 (4): 671–76. doi:10.1007/s00436-006-0313-x. PMID 17111179. S2CID 30446678.
  15. ^ Jensen M, Mehlhorn H (2009). "Seventy-five years of Resochin in the fight against malaria". Parasitol Res. 105 (3): 609–27. doi:10.1007/s00436-009-1524-8. PMID 19593586. S2CID 8037461.
  16. ^ "Fact sheet about Malaria". World Health Organization. 14 January 2020. Retrieved 2020-08-04.
  17. ^ "Battle of the Bugs: Fighting Antibiotic Resistance". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 2016-05-04. Retrieved 2020-07-25. Just a few years after the first antibiotic, penicillin, became widely used in the late 1940s
  18. ^ Wheeler, Regina Boyle (2018-10-15). "Is Hep C Curable?". WebMD. Retrieved 2019-02-12.
  19. ^ "Hepatitis C - Symptoms and causes". Mayo Clinic. Retrieved 2020-07-25.

cure, other, uses, disambiguation, cure, substance, procedure, that, ends, medical, condition, such, medication, surgical, operation, change, lifestyle, even, philosophical, mindset, that, helps, person, sufferings, state, being, healed, cured, medical, condit. For other uses see Cure disambiguation A cure is a substance or procedure that ends a medical condition such as a medication a surgical operation a change in lifestyle or even a philosophical mindset that helps end a person s sufferings or the state of being healed or cured The medical condition could be a disease mental illness genetic disorder or simply a condition a person considers socially undesirable such as baldness or lack of breast tissue An incurable disease may or may not be a terminal illness conversely a curable illness can still result in the patient s death The proportion of people with a disease that are cured by a given treatment called the cure fraction or cure rate is determined by comparing disease free survival of treated people against a matched control group that never had the disease 1 Another way of determining the cure fraction and or cure time is by measuring when the hazard rate in a diseased group of individuals returns to the hazard rate measured in the general population 2 3 Inherent in the idea of a cure is the permanent end to the specific instance of the disease 4 5 When a person has the common cold and then recovers from it the person is said to be cured even though the person might someday catch another cold Conversely a person that has successfully managed a disease such as diabetes mellitus so that it produces no undesirable symptoms for the moment but without actually permanently ending it is not cured Related concepts whose meaning can differ include response remission and recovery Contents 1 Statistical model 2 Related terms 3 Examples 3 1 1700s 3 2 1890s 3 3 1930s 3 4 1940s 3 5 2010s 4 See also 5 ReferencesStatistical model EditIn complex diseases such as cancer researchers rely on statistical comparisons of disease free survival DFS of patients against matched healthy control groups This logically rigorous approach essentially equates indefinite remission with cure 6 The comparison is usually made through the Kaplan Meier estimator approach 7 The simplest cure rate model was published by Joseph Berkson and Robert P Gage in 1952 7 In this model the survival at any given time is equal to those that are cured plus those that are not cured but who have not yet died or in the case of diseases that feature asymptomatic remissions have not yet re developed signs and symptoms of the disease When all of the non cured people have died or re developed the disease only the permanently cured members of the population will remain and the DFS curve will be perfectly flat The earliest point in time that the curve goes flat is the point at which all remaining disease free survivors are declared to be permanently cured If the curve never goes flat then the disease is formally considered incurable with the existing treatments The Berkson and Gage equation is S t p 1 p S t displaystyle S t p 1 p times S t where S t displaystyle S t is the proportion of people surviving at any given point in time p displaystyle p is the proportion that are permanently cured and S t displaystyle S t is an exponential curve that represents the survival of the non cured people Cure rate curves can be determined through an analysis of the data 7 The analysis allows the statistician to determine the proportion of people that are permanently cured by a given treatment and also how long after treatment it is necessary to wait before declaring an asymptomatic individual to be cured 3 Several cure rate models exist such as the expectation maximization algorithm and Markov chain Monte Carlo model 7 It is possible to use cure rate models to compare the efficacy of different treatments 7 Generally the survival curves are adjusted for the effects of normal aging on mortality especially when diseases of older people are being studied 8 From the perspective of the patient particularly one that has received a new treatment the statistical model may be frustrating 6 It may take many years to accumulate sufficient information to determine the point at which the DFS curve flattens and therefore no more relapses are expected Some diseases may be discovered to be technically incurable but also to require treatment so infrequently as to be not materially different from a cure Other diseases may prove to have multiple plateaus so that what was once hailed as a cure results unexpectedly in very late relapses Consequently patients parents and psychologists developed the notion of psychological cure or the moment at which the patient decides that the treatment was sufficiently likely to be a cure as to be called a cure 6 For example a patient may declare himself to be cured and to determine to live his life as if the cure were definitely confirmed immediately after treatment Related terms EditResponse Response is a partial reduction in symptoms after treatment Recovery Recovery is a restoration of health or functioning A person who has been cured may not be fully recovered and a person who has recovered may not be cured as in the case of a person in a temporary remission or who is an asymptomatic carrier for an infectious disease Prevention Prevention is a way to avoid an injury sickness disability or disease in the first place and generally it will not help someone who is already ill though there are exceptions For instance many babies and young children are vaccinated against polio a highly infectious disease and other infectious diseases which prevents them from contracting polio But the vaccination does not work on patients who already have polio A treatment or cure is applied after a medical problem has already started Therapy Therapy treats a problem and may or may not lead to its cure In incurable conditions a treatment ameliorates the medical condition often only for as long as the treatment is continued or for a short while after treatment is ended For example there is no cure for AIDS but treatments are available to slow down the harm done by HIV and extend the treated person s life Treatments don t always work For example chemotherapy is a treatment for cancer but it may not work for every patient In easily cured forms of cancer such as childhood leukaemia s testicular cancer and Hodgkin lymphoma cure rates may approach 90 9 In other forms treatment may be essentially impossible A treatment need not be successful in 100 of patients to be considered curative A given treatment may permanently cure only a small number of patients so long as those patients are cured the treatment is considered curative Examples EditCures can take the form of natural antibiotics for bacterial infections synthetic antibiotics such as the sulphonamides or fluoroquinolones antivirals for a very few viral infections antifungals antitoxins vitamins gene therapy surgery chemotherapy radiotherapy and so on Despite a number of cures being developed the list of incurable diseases remains long 1700s Edit Scurvy became curable as well as preventable with doses of vitamin C for example in limes when James Lind published A Treatise on the Scurvy 1753 10 1890s Edit Antitoxins to diphtheria and tetanus toxins were produced by Emil Adolf von Behring and his colleagues from 1890 onwards The use of diphtheria antitoxin for the treatment of diphtheria was regarded by The Lancet as the most important advance of the 19th Century in the medical treatment of acute infectious disease 11 12 1930s Edit Sulphonamides become the first widely available cure for bacterial infections citation needed Antimalarials were first synthesized 13 14 15 making malaria curable 16 1940s Edit Bacterial infections became curable with the development of antibiotics 17 2010s Edit Hepatitis C a viral infection became curable through treatment with antiviral medications 18 19 See also Edit Medicine portalEradication of infectious diseases Preventive medicine Remission medicine Relapse the reappearance of a disease Spontaneous remissionReferences Edit Fuller Arlan F Griffiths C M 1983 Gynecologic oncology The Hague M Nijhoff ISBN 0 89838 555 5 Lambert PC Thompson JR Weston CL Dickman PW 2007 Estimating and modeling the cure fraction in population based cancer survival analysis Biostatistics 8 3 576 594 doi 10 1093 biostatistics kxl030 PMID 17021277 a b Smoll NR Schaller K Gautschi OP 2012 The Cure Fraction of Glioblastoma Multiforme Neuroepidemiology 39 1 63 9 doi 10 1159 000339319 PMID 22776797 Nearing a Cancer Cure Harvard Health Commentaries 21 August 2006 What s the Difference Between a Treatment and a Cure TeensHealth Nemours May 2018 Archived from the original on 2008 04 13 a b c Barnes E December 2007 Between remission and cure patients practitioners and the transformation of leukaemia in the late twentieth century Chronic Illn 3 4 253 64 doi 10 1177 1742395307085333 PMID 18083680 S2CID 13259230 a b c d e Friis Robert H Chernick Michael L 2003 Introductory biostatistics for the health sciences modern applications including bootstrap New York Wiley Interscience pp 348 349 ISBN 0 471 41137 X Tobias Jeffrey M Souhami Robert L 2003 Cancer and its management Oxford Blackwell Science p 11 ISBN 0 632 05531 6 Saltus Richard Fall Winter 2008 What is a Cure PDF Paths of Progress Vol 17 no 2 Boston Dana Farber Cancer Institute p 8 Retrieved August 2 2020 Bartholomew M 2002 11 01 James Lind s Treatise of the Scurvy 1753 Postgraduate Medical Journal BMJ 78 925 695 696 doi 10 1136 pmj 78 925 695 ISSN 0032 5473 PMC 1742547 PMID 12496338 Report 1896 Report of the Lancet special commission on the relative strengths of diphtheria antitoxic antiserums Lancet 148 3803 182 95 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 01 72399 9 PMC 5050965 Dolman C E 1973 Landmarks and pioneers in the control of diphtheria Can J Public Health 64 4 317 36 PMID 4581249 Krafts K Hempelmann E Skorska Stania A 2012 From methylene blue to chloroquine a brief review of the development of an antimalarial therapy Parasitol Res 111 1 1 6 doi 10 1007 s00436 012 2886 x PMID 22411634 S2CID 54526057 Hempelmann E 2007 Hemozoin biocrystallization in Plasmodium falciparum and the antimalarial activity of crystallization inhibitors Parasitol Res 100 4 671 76 doi 10 1007 s00436 006 0313 x PMID 17111179 S2CID 30446678 Jensen M Mehlhorn H 2009 Seventy five years of Resochin in the fight against malaria Parasitol Res 105 3 609 27 doi 10 1007 s00436 009 1524 8 PMID 19593586 S2CID 8037461 Fact sheet about Malaria World Health Organization 14 January 2020 Retrieved 2020 08 04 Battle of the Bugs Fighting Antibiotic Resistance U S Food and Drug Administration 2016 05 04 Retrieved 2020 07 25 Just a few years after the first antibiotic penicillin became widely used in the late 1940s Wheeler Regina Boyle 2018 10 15 Is Hep C Curable WebMD Retrieved 2019 02 12 Hepatitis C Symptoms and causes Mayo Clinic Retrieved 2020 07 25 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cure amp oldid 1171074550 Remission, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.