WASHINGTON (DC News Now) — Regular mammograms to screen for breast cancer should start younger, at age 40, according to the U ...
As breast cancer diagnoses among young people are on the rise, experts are lowering the age at which women should start ...
In February, Nicole revealed more cancer has been found in her lymph nodes amid her battle with a 'very rare' form of breast ...
The risk of a woman getting breast cancer in her early 30s is less than 5 percent. That’s about one in every 204 women, ...
More and more young women are being diagnosed with breast cancer. This is a story about the additional challenges young ...
Jennifer Day was among the 150 survivors picked to walk the parade. A special moment she shared with her mom and other brave ...
Among participants with high-risk nonmetastatic breast cancer, daily aspirin use did not improve the risk for breast cancer ...
The U.S. Preventative Services Task Force released a new guideline suggesting women over the age of 40 get checked for breast cancer every other year.
During a Case-Based Roundtable® event, Ruth M. O'Regan, MD, led a discussion on whether to order next-generation sequencing and/or circulating tumor DNA testing for a patient with hormone ...
Women are now advised to get a mammogram every other year starting at age 40 and until age 74, according to new ...
An expert panel in the U.S. says women should begin mammogram screening at age 40—a decade earlier than previously ...
Though the average age of those diagnosed is 62 years old, new studies show more younger women are being diagnosed.