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LONDON

JAMA. 1929;92(12):996-997. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700380054022.
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ABSTRACT

Advance in the Radium Treatment of Malignant Disease  Great attention is now being devoted in this country to the radium treatment of malignant disease and, whatever the ultimate position, it can be stated that, thanks to improved technic, a definite advance has been made. This was shown in striking fashion in the hunterian lecture delivered by Prof. G. E. Gask at the Royal College of Surgeons to a large audience, including the president, Sir Berkeley Moynihan, and followed by a demonstration of forty-nine cases. The lecture was a survey of the results obtained by the surgical unit of St. Bartholomew's Hospital, of which Professor Gask is director. In 1921 the unit began the radium treatment of malignant disease by embedding 150 Gm. of radium in sarcomas. The results were not encouraging. Of four patients treated in 1921 one was alive; of five treated in 1922, one; of four treated in

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