Port's study included more than 1,100
women diagnosed with breast cancer at the Dubin Breast Center.
Not exact matches
Seventy - five percent of
women diagnosed with breast cancer have no family history or other factors that place them
at high risk for the disease.
Their analysis revealed that
women who underwent childbirth and who breastfed were
diagnosed with breast cancer at a later age, regardless of the patients» family history of
cancer.
A team of researchers based in Canada wanted to find out whether the stage
at which
breast cancer is
diagnosed — and post-diagnosis survival — differed between
women with and without cosmetic
breast implants.
The findings
at the Fred Hutch - led
Women's Health Initiative resulted in a change in menopause treatment that means 20,000 fewer women worldwide are diagnosed with breast cancer every
Women's Health Initiative resulted in a change in menopause treatment that means 20,000 fewer
women worldwide are diagnosed with breast cancer every
women worldwide are
diagnosed with breast cancer every year.
«More
women are now being
diagnosed with breast cancer than ever before, and these crucial findings could ultimately help us more accurately predict who is most
at risk and develop new targeted treatments.
Our mission is to offer a community of support to
women, of all Jewish backgrounds,
diagnosed with breast cancer or
at increased genetic risk, by fostering culturally - relevant individualized connections
with networks of peers, health professionals, and related resources.
The researchers found that non-Hispanic white
women were more likely to have smaller tumors, and more likely to have the less - aggressive HR + / HER2 - subtype of
breast cancer, compared
with African - American
women, who were more likely to have large tumors, more likely to have the aggressive triple - negative
breast cancer, and 40 to 70 percent more likely to be
diagnosed at stage 4 of all subtypes of
breast cancer.
See how a
woman diagnosed with breast cancer was supported throughout her experience at The Rosenfeld Cancer C
cancer was supported throughout her experience
at The Rosenfeld
Cancer C
Cancer Center.
Women diagnosed with breast cancer, however, were significantly older
at the time they first gave birth (p = 0.03), an observation consistent
with the original analysis of this case - control study [7].
Although being
diagnosed with breast cancer is usually an extremely stressful experience for most
women, a new study by researchers
at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center has found that there also can be unexpected benefits.
«More research should be done, but there is a growing body of evidence which suggests that
women previously
diagnosed with breast cancer should speak
with their doctor about possibly limiting their consumption of alcohol,» says the lead researcher on the study, Marilyn L. Kwan, PhD, a staff scientist
at Kaiser Permanente in Oakland.
At stages 2 and 3, some 93 % and 72 % of women, respectively, can expect to live at least five years after being diagnosed with breast cance
At stages 2 and 3, some 93 % and 72 % of
women, respectively, can expect to live
at least five years after being diagnosed with breast cance
at least five years after being
diagnosed with breast cancer.
Every year, 10,000 U.S.
women are
diagnosed with cervical
cancer, and 3,600 die from the disease, according to Debbie Saslow, PhD, director of breast and gynecologic cancer at the American Cancer Society in At
cancer, and 3,600 die from the disease, according to Debbie Saslow, PhD, director of
breast and gynecologic
cancer at the American Cancer Society in At
cancer at the American
Cancer Society in At
Cancer Society in Atlanta.
It's natural for
women who are
diagnosed with breast cancer to feel anxious about cancerous cells cropping up in their other
breast — and it can happen, says Todd Tuttle, MD, chief of surgical oncology
at the University of Minnesota Medical School.
Given the existence of (weak) evidence that postmenopausal therapy
with oral estrogen may increases
breast cancer risk, it is recommended that
women at risk of, or who already have been
diagnosed with breast cancer, should avoid soy products just to be on the safe side.
Some
women who have been
diagnosed with cancer in one
breast, particularly those who are known to be
at very high risk, may consider having the other
breast (called the contralateral
breast) removed as well, even if there is no sign of
cancer in that
breast.
The study looked
at over 1,000
women in the Seattle area, ages 20 - 24, that had been
diagnosed with breast cancer and more than 900
women without
breast cancer.
More than one in ten
women in the USA will be
diagnosed with breast cancer at some point during their lifetime.