Terramed Alliance News Pregnant Women with Breast Cancer Do Not Have Worse Outcomes

Pregnancy-associated breast cancer (PABC) is defined as breast cancer that develops during or within one year after pregnancy. It is relatively rare, with approximately 10% of all breast cancer cases under age 40 occurring in pregnant women. However, some researchers have speculated that the incidence of PABC may increase as the average age at the time of pregnancy increases.

Some research has indicated that PABC has a worse outcome than other breast cancers; however, this could also be attributable to young age, since most women with PABC tend to be young and breast cancer in young women tends to have a worse prognosis.

» Read more: Terramed Alliance News Pregnant Women with Breast Cancer Do Not Have Worse Outcomes

Related posts

FDA Approved Leukemia Drugs Shows Promise In Ovarian Cancer Cells

The drug, when paired with a chemotherapy regimen, was even more effective in fighting ovarian cancer in cell lines in which signaling of the Src family kinases, associated with the deadly disease, is activated.

The study appears in the Nov. 10, 2009 edition of the British Medical Journal.

Ovarian cancer, which will strike 21,600 women this year and kill 15,500, causes more deaths than any other cancer of the female reproductive system. Few effective therapies for ovarian cancer exist, so it would be advantageous for patients if a new drug could be found that fights the cancer, said Gottfried Konecny, an assistant professor of hematology/oncology, a Jonsson Cancer Center researcher and first author of the study.

» Read more: FDA Approved Leukemia Drugs Shows Promise In Ovarian Cancer Cells

Related posts

Winning the war on cancer? Disease rates in U.S. drop below where they were in 1970s

Winning the war on cancer? Disease rates in U.S. drop below where they were in 1970s
It’s too soon to declare a victory, but it appears that the U.S. may be winning the battle with cancer.

Read more on New York Daily News

Related posts