Bls 1 frá 3959 niðurstöður
Women who test positive for a genetic breast cancer marker may have more than a 50% chance of developing the disease. Although past screening technologies have sought to identify actual breast cancers, as opposed to predisposition, the history of screening may help predict the societal response to
A postal survey of current management of breast cancer among surgeons in Great Britain was carried out. The results showed that there is no consensus among surgeons about the treatment of primary breast cancer. Many different types of primary surgery are practised, and patterns of referral for
An important report in this issue of the journal by Vogel et al. (beginning on p. 696) discloses long-term follow-up data of the Study of Tamoxifen and Raloxifene (STAR) showing persisting strong effects of both drugs in preventing invasive and noninvasive breast cancer after drugs were stopped in
Steroid receptors appear to have prognostic significance in operable and disseminated breast cancer, but not in primary locally advanced disease. Information on receptor status gives some indication of the pattern of metastatic disease. Absence of ER and PgR detect effectively patients who will not
Tamoxifen and GnRH analogues (GnRHa) represent the mainstay of endocrine manipulations in premenopausal women. The estrogen blockade obtained by aromatase inhibitors (AIs) plus GnRHa suppresses circulating estrogens more deeply than tamoxifen plus GnRHa. Retrospective and prospective evidence
Progress in biomarkers research has resulted in increasing awareness of the heterogeneity of breast cancer. The identification of subtypes with different clinical behavior and the possibility of using targeted therapy in specific subgroup of patients (eg, those with tumors overexpressing HER2) raise
OBJECTIVE
We describe the case of a patient with metastatic breast cancer who presented with eyelid margin thickening and madarosis more suggestive of sebaceous cell carcinoma than metastatic disease. Histopathology confirmed metastatic breast adenocarcinoma.
METHODS
A 59-year-old woman with a known
A large-scale trial of methods of early detection of breast cancer has been started in Great Britain. This non-randomized trial aims to compare breast cancer mortality over several years among women aged 45-64 years who have been offered various services for early detection of breast cancer. A