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Research & Answers

Physician-backed insights to optimize your health and reduce long-term risks.

Eosinophilic Asthma: Half of All Severe Asthma Has a Specific Cause

About half of severe asthma cases share a single underlying driver: too many eosinophils, a type of white blood cell that floods the airways, fuels relentless inflammation, and doesn't respond well to standard inhalers. This subtype, called eosinophilic asthma, is now one of the clearest success stories in precision medicine. A simple blood test can flag it, and targeted biologic drugs can dramatically reduce flare-ups, improve lung function, and even make long-term remission a realistic goal. The catch? Many people with poorly controlled asthma still haven't been tested for it. If your asthma developed in adulthood, resists high-dose inhalers, or comes with nasal polyps, this is worth understanding.

Stage 4 Lung Cancer Life Expectancy With Treatment Now Ranges From Months to 5+ Years

The honest answer about stage 4 lung cancer survival is that it depends enormously on specifics most people never hear about until they're sitting in an oncologist's office. Median survival still lands somewhere between 7 and 12 months for many patients treated with standard chemotherapy alone. But certain combinations of tumor biology, treatment type, and patient fitness are pushing some people well past the 5-year mark. The distance between the worst-case and best-case scenarios has never been wider. That spread matters. It means a single "average" number is almost misleading. What actually predicts where someone falls on that spectrum is the type of lung cancer, whether it carries specific genetic mutations, how many places it has spread, overall health, and which treatments are on the table.

Stage 4 Pancreatic Cancer: Survival Ranges From Months to Years

Stage 4 pancreatic cancer carries one of the hardest prognoses in oncology, with typical survival measured in months. But buried in those statistics is a wide range. Median overall survival sits at 3 to 11 months with current standard chemotherapy, yet some patients, particularly those with limited metastases, good physical health, and responsive tumors, live several years and occasionally reach long-term remission. The difference between the short end and the long end of that range is not luck. It maps to specific, identifiable factors. Understanding which factors matter, and which treatments apply to which situations, is the most practical thing you can do with a stage 4 diagnosis. The research paints a clearer picture than most people expect.

Targeted Therapy – Research & Answers | Instalab