Breast cancer is the second most common cancer among American women. Breast cancer death rates have been falling over the past 30 years. But nearly 13% of women are still diagnosed in their lifetime.
If you have a family history of breast cancer, should you consider genetic testing and could that give you an early heads up on a risk for prostate cancer? A local physician says yes.
One Valley mom's breast cancer diagnosis became a family diagnosis after she did genetic testing. A cancer diagnosis for anyone is scary, but especially for a mom of four at the age of 40.
Using a highly promising approach to speed breast cancer diagnostics, researcher W. Andy Tao of the Purdue Institute for Cancer Research is studying how specific blood particles could be used to ...