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Several important papers have been published in the last 2 months, none more important than the realization that breast cancer rates have dropped precipitously since the publication of the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) in 2002.
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Breast cancers that are "triple-negative" (ie, ER, PR, HER2-negative) are considered high risk, yet there remains variability, with some demonstrating less malignant features than others.
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Breast cancer statistics indicate a rapid decrease in prevalence immediately after the publicity surrounding the reports from the Women's Health Initiative.
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In a family-based research cohort, men were followed for up to 40 years after the birth of their children, and those with only daughters had a 40% higher risk of prostate cancer compared with men with at least one son.
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Trastuzumab has previously been demonstrated to be active against HER2 positive breast cancer when used in the metastatic setting.
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Imatinib inhibits the BCR/ABL tyrosine kinase in CML, leading to improved responses over standard therapy. This report provides 5 year follow-up from the seminal IRIS study of upfront imatinib for chronic phase CML among the 553 patients randomized to 400 mg of imatinib.
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Patients with coronary artery disease who have received intra-coronary, drug-eluding stents (DES) may benefit from longer courses of clopidogrel than is currently standard.
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An increasing number of active therapies have become available for multiple myeloma in addition to high dose chemotherapy followed by autologous transplant (ASCT).
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Breast cancer patients who received either high-dose, standard-dose or no chemotherapy were studied prospectively, utilizing a comprehensive battery of neuropsych tests.
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Immediate breast reconstruction after mastectomy has intuitive appeal, but concern has been raised that such an approach hinders postmastectomy radiotherapy.