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Dr. Demetrios Braddock, an associate professor of pathology at Yale University's School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut, whose research focuses in part on cancers that spread, said a two-centimeter (one-inch) lesion "isn't a small recurrence, that's a significant tumor." "Even if it were sarcoma, the way it's typically treated it to go back in and taken it out. That's how it would probably be treated up here in the U.S.," Braddock said, underscoring that's the procedure taken if the cancer hasn't spread. Molina, however, questioned even that surgery, noting that the pelvic region "is really fully packed with organs, nerves, blood vessels ... there is not much room to work." He added that Chavez's previous surgery in the same area would have produced scar tissue, further complicating the procedure. Molina said he didn't know about the specific capability of surgeons in Cuba to deal with such a tumor. But both he and several doctors interviewed in Brazil acknowledged that surgeons in the U.S. have the advantage of routinely encountering more complex cancer cases and also having a much larger pool of colleagues to consult. "When you go to a place like Cuba or Brazil, even with all the development in Brazil, you find less people with enough knowledge to make good advice about what to do," Molina said. "That is where the concern about Chavez comes in
-- the concern that the knowledge is not at the same level." Dr. Peter Bourne, chairman of the Medical Education Cooperation with Cuba, a nonprofit organization working to enhance ties between the Cuban and U.S. medical communities, said he routinely visits the island and knows its doctors are up to the challenge of treating all but the most "exotic" cancers. "They have a very excellent cancer institute in Havana, which is the facility where he's being treated," said Bourne, a former drug czar in the Carter administration who works closely with Cuban doctors and routinely visits the island. Chavez has not publicly specified where he's being treated in Cuba. Bourne, trained in psychiatry, acknowledged he has no inside information on the illness Chavez is facing. But based on the information that is public, it "seems certain he has cancer of the colon and that the treatment for it would be similar wherever he might seek it." Bourne, for one, said he thought Cuban doctors would be up to the task of tackling a dangerous recurrence of sarcoma. "They're very sophisticated in Cuba," he said, "and would be able to treat that as well as he would be treated anywhere."
[Associated
Press;
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