_ Breast Cancer“One and Done” Breast Reconstruction By articleSome women with breast cancer can now undergo a “one and done” approach combining nipple-sparing mastectomy with immediate single-stage implant … Read More→
_ Breast Cancer Breast Cancer Treatment OptionsEncouraging Breast-Cancer News By articleAre we making progress in the battle against breast cancer? Statistics indicate it’s possible; as this post from the National … Read More→
_ Breast CancerPartial Breast Radiation As Effective As Whole Breast Therapy By articleWomen who were diagnosed with breast cancer and treated with a one-week regimen of partial breast radiation after their lumpectomy … Read More→
_ Breast Cancer Ovarian CancerHereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancers: Moving Toward More Precise Prevention By articleBy NIH Director Francis Collins, M.D., Ph.D. Inherited mutations in the BRCA1 gene and closely related BRCA2 gene account for … Read More→
_ Breast Cancer Medical CareAn Update on Precision Medicine By articleEveryone knows that different people don’t respond the same way to medications, and that “one size does not fit all.” … Read More→
_ Breast CancerUltrasound Helps Show Which Breast Ca Patients Need Lymph Nodes Removed By articleWhich breast cancer patients need to have underarm lymph nodes removed? Mayo Clinic-led research is narrowing it down. A study … Read More→
Breast CancerBreast Reconstruction Over Age 65: Implants vs. Patients’ Own Tissues By articleOlder women don’t have an increased overall risk of complications from implant-based breast reconstruction after mastectomy, but women aged 65 … Read More→
_ Breast CancerHow to Get The Best Mammogram Possible By articleEditor’s Note: Mammograms are one of the most commonly performed procedures for women, and there is little argument about their … Read More→
Breast CancerElderly Breast Ca Patients Get Radiation Despite Findings By thirdAGE articleAn analysis done at Duke University has found that while clinical trial data support omitting radiation treatments for elderly women … Read More→
_ Breast CancerNew Device May Ease Mammography Discomfort By thirdAGE articleResearchers have developed a new device that may result in more comfortable mammography. According to a study presented in December … Read More→
_ Breast CancerGetting Potentially Life-Saving Drugs to High-Risk Breast Cancer Patients Faster By thirdAGE articleBy Tatiana Prowell, M.D. and Richard Pazdur, M.D. Researchers at an international oncology conference held in October in Spain reported … Read More→
_ Breast CancerMeditation Improves Cells in Breast-Cancer Survivors By thirdAGE articlePracticing meditation can have a positive physical impact on breast-cancer survivors at the cellular level, research has found for the … Read More→
_ Breast CancerBreast Cancer Patients and Hot Flashes By thirdAGE articlePhysicians aren’t adequately treating hot flashes in breast-cancer patients, and that could have a serious effect on the patients’ health-care … Read More→
_ Breast CancerUpdate: Testing for the Breast Cancer Gene By thirdAGE articleShould you be tested to see if you have the breast-cancer gene? Here, experts from the federal Centers for Disease … Read More→
_ Breast CancerLooking Toward Changes in Breast-Cancer Detection By Jane Farrell articleScientists at the Food and Drug Administration are studying the next generation of screening and diagnostic devices, some of which … Read More→
_ Breast CancerA Link Between Bra Wearing and Breast Cancer? Forget about It By Jane Farrell articleDespite what some people believe, there’s absolutely no evidence of a link between wearing a bra and breast cancer risk … Read More→
_ Breast CancerBreast Screening Over Age 70 May Lead to Overdiagnosis By articleMammograms for women over the age of 70 s doesn’t prompt a sharp fall in advanced disease and may instead … Read More→
_ Breast CancerPerspectives on Breast Reconstruction By Sondra Forsyth articleLess than 42 percent of women underwent breast reconstruction following a mastectomy for cancer, and the factors associated with foregoing reconstruction included being black, having a lower education level and being older. That is the finding of Monica Morrow, M.D., of the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, and colleagues who published their results online August 20th 2014 JAMA Surgery.