cancer

Helpz em Beat da

 Stupidz Cancer

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Are you at risk for breast cancer? Test getting two quick body scans a year. It might pave the way to better detect cancer.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer in the U.S. And the earlier you find it, the better you can treat it. If you’re at risk for breast cancer, test getting a quick body scan twice a year. You’ll help find out if these body scans might find breast cancer better than current methods.
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Want to keep your blood cancer away? See if high-dose chemo might help your body fight the disease

A third of people with a blood cancer that strikes your body’s defenses don’t survive for five years. The standard medicine, which kicks your immune system into action to kill your cancer, might get a boost from high-dose chemo. Try extra chemo to see if it might get rid of your disease better.
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Share your eating, drinking and sleeping patterns! It might help find links between eating habits and colon cancer risk so we can better prevent disease

Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death in the U.S. Share your eating, drinking, and sleeping habits! It might help reveal links between lifestyle habits and colorectal cancer risk, which might lead to better ways to prevent the disease.
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Can a pill that helps women with hot flashes prevent breast cancer too?

If you have certain cells in your milk ducts, you may be at risk for breast cancer. Up to 50% of you with these cells get invasive breast cancer if left untreated. Try a menopause medicine to see if it can stop these cells from turning into cancer. It may one day be an alternative to surgery.
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Try adding radiation or surgery to your prostate cancer treatment. It might help keep the disease away!

Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men. It often creeps back after treatment. You can use hormones to slow the cancer, but that alone won’t cure the disease. Try adding surgery or cancer-killing X-rays to your regular treatment. It might help you stay cancer-free for longer!
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Are you a cancer survivor aged 18 to 39? Let’s see if a smartphone app might help increase physical activity in people like you.

There are more than 600,000 adolescent and young cancer survivors in the U.S. Exercise can lead to better health outcomes and fewer cancer treatment-related side effects. Let’s see if a smartphone app might help people like you get more physically active!
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Are you a woman with the Breast Cancer 1 (BRCA1) gene mutation? Team up to see whether a new medication might decrease your risk of developing breast cancer!

A gene called breast cancer 1 (BRCA1) is one of the most common pieces of DNA in inherited breast cancer. If you have this gene and haven’t been diagnosed with cancer, team up to test a new med!
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