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Hot flushes linked to breast cancer drug success

Hot flushes, night sweats or painful joints may be good news for women taking hormone-based drugs for breast cancer — it may mean their tumors are less likely to return, researchers said on Thursday.
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msnbc

Slight slowdown seen in new cancer cases

The rate of new cancer cases finally may be inching down — cautiously optimistic news but a gain that specialists worry could be derailed by economic turmoil.
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Voice of America Scientists Sequence Genome Of Cancer...

Discovery may lead to better ways to diagnose and treat cancer
11/10/08
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Voice of America Researchers Identify Defective Genes...

Culprit genes responsible for other cancer types, study finds
10/22/08
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Forbes Can Math Cure Cancer?

Radical researchers aim to customize cancer treatment with computers.
10/14/08
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WRAL.com Study: Bone drug helps chemo fight...

New research adds fresh hope that a drug that strengthens bones might also fight breast cancer.
12/11/08
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msnbc New test aims to ID breast cancer...

A new test to predict an ordinary woman's odds of getting breast cancer works better than a method doctors have relied on for decades, researchers reported Friday.
12/12/08
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WRAL.com New study firmly ties hormone use to...

Taking menopause hormones for five years doubles the risk for breast cancer, according to a new analysis of a big federal study that reveals the most dramatic evidence yet of...
12/13/08
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WRAL.com

Encouraging dip in rate of new cancers, deaths

The rate of new cancer cases finally may be inching down - cautiously optimistic news but a gain that specialists worry could be derailed by economic turmoil. Death rates from cancer have been dropping slowly for years, thanks to earlier detection and better treatments. But preventing cancer is the ultimate goal, and Tuesday's annual "Report to the Nation" on cancer also shows a small but encouraging change: The rate of new diagnoses among men dropped 1.8 percent a year between 2001 and 2005.
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Los Angeles Times

U.S. cancer rate declines for the first time

Government figures indicate that major progress is being made in prevention. But researchers warn that there are still some clouds on the horizon. For the first time since the government began compiling records, the rate of cancer has begun to decline, marking a tipping point in the fight against the second-leading cause of death among Americans.
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msnbc Study firmly ties hormone use to...

Taking menopause hormones for five years doubles the risk for breast cancer, according to a new analysis of a big federal study that reveals the most dramatic evidence yet of...
12/14/08
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msnbc Alternating breast cancer tests...

A screening schedule that alternates between a breast MRI and a mammogram every six months may spot early cancers in high-risk women better than an annual exam.
12/14/08
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Times Online Reolysin drug therapy may provide a...

A ubiquitous, harmless virus that is carried by most people at some point in their lives could help to fight cancer, studies suggest.
12/15/08
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msnbc Cancer is even deadlier for diabetics

Cancer, the world's No. 2 killer, is even more lethal for people with diabetes, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday.
12/16/08
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msnbc After breast cancer, weight stakes...

It’s common knowledge that keeping fit and maintaining an optimal weight are great ways to achieve overall health. But for breast-cancer survivors, the stakes are much higher.
10/08/08
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WRAL.com Nobels awarded for AIDS, cancer virus...

Two French scientists who discovered the AIDS virus and a German who defied convention in showing a viral cause for cervical cancer shared the Nobel Prize in medicine Monday for...
10/07/08
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WRAL.com

Encouraging dip in rate of new cancers, deaths

The rate of new cancer cases finally may be inching down - cautiously optimistic news but a gain that specialists worry could be derailed by economic turmoil. Death rates from cancer have been dropping slowly for years, thanks to earlier detection and better treatments. But preventing cancer is the ultimate goal, and Tuesday's annual "Report to the Nation" on cancer also shows a small but encouraging change: The rate of new diagnoses among men dropped 1.8 percent a year between 2001 and 2005.
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WRAL.com

New test aims to predict breast cancer risk better

A new test to predict an ordinary woman's odds of getting breast cancer works better than a method doctors have relied on for decades, researchers reported Friday. The test is the first to combine dozens of genes and personal factors like age and childbearing to gauge risk in women who don't have a strong family history of the disease. They account for three-fourths of all cases.
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WRAL.com 3 share Nobel prize for work on AIDS...

Three European scientists shared the 2008 Nobel Prize in medicine on Monday for separate discoveries of viruses that cause AIDS and cervical cancer, breakthroughs that helped...
10/06/08
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WRAL.com Task force: Colon cancer screenings...

Most people over 75 should stop getting routine colon cancer tests, according to a government health task force that also rejected the latest X-ray screening technology.
10/06/08
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Los Angeles Times Vitamin supplements don't fight...

A series of trials also shows that taking vitamins and minerals has no effect on preventing strokes, heart disease or other ailments. In some cases, they can even cause harm. ...
12/21/08
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Times Online British Sanger Institute to study...

Scientists have begun a groundbreaking study of cancer that will “mix and match” tumours with drugs to develop personalised therapies for patients.
12/23/08
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msnbc Is my cancer upsetting you?

When Alicia Staley, a 37-year-old systems analyst from Boston got the news that she had cancer, she knew she was in for an emotional rollercoaster. But she assumed she’d be...
10/01/08
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THE WHITE HOUSE - National Breast Cancer Awareness...

During National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, we underscore our commitment to fighting and preventing this devastating disease. Breast cancer is one of the most common types of...
10/01/08
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Voice of America Scientists Discover Gene That...

Finding is result of study looking at genes associated with colon cancer risk
09/30/08
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msnbc Wrestling bulging arms after breast...

Hospitals in about a dozen states are testing whether some simple steps, such as arm-strengthening exercises, could reduce the risk of one of breast cancer's troubling legacies...
12/29/08
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