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 ...
A new study led by The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UT Health San Antonio) is shedding light on ...
Mulaney was on hand to present his wife with the "Woman of Impact" Aare at the Instyle Imagemaker Awards for her work in ...
Doctors are using limited guidance on screening and treatment approaches for transgender patients predisposed to cancer while ...
While most cancer happens by chance, about 5-10% of cases are hereditary. Hereditary cancers are caused by a harmful variant ...
Join the Women of the J at the Boulder JCC on Monday, October 28, from 6 to 8:30 pm for a night of Health Education about the ...
Research shows that the breast cancer gene 1 (BRCA1) not only pushes accurate DNA repair to guard against cancer but promotes ...
Amid breast cancer awareness month, Mathew Knowles talks with USA TODAY about his new partnership with 23andMe, the power of ...
April Carroll was first a patient, and then a volunteer instructor, at The Thomas F. Chapman Family Cancer Wellness Center at ...