Dial back esophageal cancer screening: internists • Esophageal cancer news • Dec 04 12 A group of U.S. internal medicine doctors today recommended limiting esophageal cancer screening to people with chronic heartburn who have additional, more severe symptoms. Known as upper endoscopy, the screening procedure… Mayo study: Common diabetes drug may treat ovarian cancer • Ovarian Cancer news • Dec 03 12 Diabetic patients with ovarian cancer who took the drug metformin for their diabetes had a better survival rate than patients who did not take it, a study headed… Aspirin Linked to Lower Risk of Liver Cancer • Liver Cancer news • Dec 02 12 Aspirin and other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or NSAIDS may help prevent serious liver disease including cancer, new study found. Aspirin users were 41 percent less likely to develop… Scientists find ‘bully’ genes in common childhood tumor • Cancer news • Dec 02 12 In a genome sequencing study of 74 neuroblastoma tumors in children, scientists at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) found that patients… X-ray analysis deciphers master regulator important for skin cancer • Skin Cancer news • Dec 01 12 With the X-ray vision of DESY’s light source DORIS, a research team from Hamburg and Iceland has uncovered the molecular structure of a master regulator central to the… Study finds herbalists at higher urinary cancer risk • Bladder cancer news • • Kindey Cancer News • Nov 30 12 A small new study from Taiwan links a widely banned substance traditionally used in Chinese medicine to an elevated risk for kidney and bladder cancers among professional herbalists. Herbs,… Scripps Florida Scientists Uncover a Novel Cooperative Effort to Stop Cancer Spread • Cancer news • Nov 28 12 Scientists from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) have uncovered a group of what have been considered relatively minor regulators in the… Most women who have double mastectomy don’t need it, U-M study finds • Breast Cancer news • Nov 28 12 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… Study leaves women with conflicting advice on mammograms • Breast Cancer news • Nov 27 12 Controversial U.S. guidelines for mammography issued in 2009, calling for screening every two years rather than annually for women over 50 years old, can result in breast cancers being… Old habits die hard: Helping cancer patients stop smoking • Cancer news • Nov 27 12 It’s a sad but familiar scene near the grounds of many medical campuses: hospital-gowned patients, some toting rolling IV poles, huddled in clumps under bus shelters or warming… Yes, but breast cancer screening saved me • Breast Cancer news • Nov 26 12 So a study of numbers and percentages decides that routine mammograms are probably not financially worth it? What about a study of lives saved, hope restored and loved ones still… Laws don’t curb pricey prostate cancer treatments • Prostate Cancer news • Nov 25 12 Laws meant to prevent the overuse of expensive healthcare services don’t stop doctors from using pricey prostate cancer treatments, according to two new studies. Researchers found doctors used robots and… MicroRNA makes triple-negative breast cancer homesick • Breast Cancer news • Nov 23 12 Epithelial cells are homebodies – they like to attach to things and becoming detached initiates a form of cell suicide known as anoikis (literally “homeless” in Latin). But in order for… Kidney tumors have a mind of their own • Kindey Cancer News • Nov 23 12 New research has found there are several different ways that kidney tumours can achieve the same result – namely, grow. Scientists have been trying to figure out how different… New tumor tracking technique may improve outcomes for lung cancer patients • Lung Cancer news • Nov 20 12 Medical physicists at Thomas Jefferson University and Jefferson’s Kimmel Cancer Center are one step closer to bringing a new tumor-tracking technique into the clinic that delivers… Does your job increase your breast cancer risk? • Breast Cancer news • Nov 19 12 Is there a link between the risk of breast cancer and the working environment? A study published in BioMed Central’s open access journal Environmental Health provides further evidence on… Tired after cancer treatment? Walking may help • Cancer news • Nov 16 12 People who have been treated for cancer often have lingering fatigue, but a new analysis of more than three dozen studies suggests regular walking or cycling might help boost their… More than a million women could gain access to potentially life saving tests for cancer • Cancer news • Nov 15 12 A study by researchers at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS) indicates that full implementation of… Enhancing breast cancer detection • Breast Cancer news • Nov 14 12 Straightforward imaging with an infrared, thermal, camera for detecting breast cancer early without the discomfort or inconvenience of mammography or biomolecular tests, according to a study to be published in the International Journal… Cancer therapy - Nanokey opens tumors to attack • Cancer news • Nov 14 12 There are plenty of effective anticancer agents around. The problem is that, very often, they cannot gain access to all the cells in solid tumors. A new gene delivery… Early end-of-life talks tied to less aggressive care • Cancer news • Nov 13 12 Terminally-ill cancer patients are less likely to get aggressive end-of-life treatment, such as chemotherapy in the last two weeks of life, when they talk with their doctors early on… Scientists discover how stomach cancer spreads • Stomach Cancer news • Nov 13 12 Scientists at the University of Liverpool have found that the production of a protein that prevents the growth and spread of cancerous cells is impaired in patients with gastric cancer. Cancer… Stereoscopic mammography could reduce recall rate • Breast Cancer news • Nov 13 12 A new three-dimensional (3-D) digital mammography technique has the potential to significantly improve the accuracy of breast cancer screening, according to a study published in Radiology. Two-dimensional (2-D) x-ray mammography,… Black patients with kidney cancer have poorer survival than whites • Kindey Cancer News • Nov 12 12 Among patients with the most common form of kidney cancer, whites consistently have a survival advantage over blacks, regardless of patient and tumor characteristics or surgical treatment.… Top 10 foods that prevent breast cancer • Breast Cancer news • Nov 09 12 The World Health Organisation (WHO) has predicted that by 2020 the number of breast cancer cases will jump to an alarming figure and one in every eight women would run… Page 42 of 217 pages « First < 40 41 42 43 44 > Last » << Back to main