Not exact matches
About 70
percent of women who have both
breasts removed following a
breast cancer diagnosis do so despite a very low risk of facing cancer in the healthy breast, new research from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center
cancer diagnosis do so despite a very low risk
of facing
cancer in the healthy breast, new research from the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center
cancer in the healthy
breast, new research from the University
of Michigan Comprehensive
Cancer Center
Cancer Center finds.
A 2005 study showed that 92
percent of nearly 3,000 women with
breast cancer who walked or did other exercise three to five hours weekly were still alive 10 years after their
diagnosis, compared with 86
percent of those who exercised less than an hour a week.
African American women with early stage, invasive
breast cancer were 12 percent less likely than Caucasian women with the same diagnosis to receive a minimally invasive technique, axillary sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy, even as the procedure had become the standard of surgical practice, according to research from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer C
cancer were 12
percent less likely than Caucasian women with the same
diagnosis to receive a minimally invasive technique, axillary sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy, even as the procedure had become the standard
of surgical practice, according to research from The University
of Texas MD Anderson
Cancer C
Cancer Center.
As many as 30
percent of patients who survive childhood Hodgkin lymphoma develop a secondary
cancer after
diagnosis, primarily
breast cancer, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, thyroid
cancer or acute leukemia.