Results 151 to 160 of about 121,909 (198)
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Bilateral Cancer of the Breast

Tumori Journal, 1982
The authors reviewed a series of 2311 primary breast cancers followed-up from 1 to 11 years after radical mastectomy. Twenty-eight simultaneous and 40 metachronous contralateral breast cancers were observed in the study period with an average annual incidence rate of 4.5%.
ROSSELLI DEL TURCO M   +5 more
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Bilateral breast cancer

Seminars in Surgical Oncology, 1991
AbstractBilateral breast cancer has a cumulative incidence of 7% to 20% in patients with primary operable breast cancer, and the majority of these lesions are metachronous. A consensus on the management of the contralateral breast has been elusive. Much of the confusion arises from the fact that there exist marked differences of opinion regarding the ...
A A, Fracchia, P I, Borgen
openaire   +2 more sources

Bilateral breast cancer

Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1985
AbstractBetween the years 1972 and 1982, 1,880 women were treated for breast cancer at the Tel‐Aviv Medical Center. One thousand two hundred fifteen detailed charts are included in our study. Sixty‐six patients (5.4%) were diagnosed as having bilateral breast cancer. The mean age at first tumor diagnosis was 55.1 years.
M, Michowitz   +3 more
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Bilateral Simultaneous Breast Cancer

Archives of Surgery, 1955
Operable carcinoma occurring simultaneously in both breasts at the time of the first examination is an uncommon clinical entity. Reference to it, however, was made by Nisbet,1in 1800, and since that time its presence has been noted frequently in most large series.
W W, CARROLL, T W, SHIELDS
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Survival in bilateral breast cancer

Cancer, 1985
The presence of bilateral invasive breast cancer places the patient in a state of double jeopardy. At Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, the overall 10-year recurrence rate for unilateral Stage I breast cancer was 16%, whereas the recurrence rate for simultaneous, bilateral Stage I breast carcinoma was 29%: almost twice as high.
A A, Fracchia   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Familial bilateral breast cancer

Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1981
AbstractThe occurrence of bilateral breast cancers in three members of one family is reported. In two members, evidence of a distinct primary lesion in each breast was verified. The occurrence of unilateral breast cancer and other cancers in other members of the family was surveyed.
A S, Al-Jurf   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Bilateral Breast Cancer

Surgical Clinics of North America, 1978
The true incidence of bilateral breast cancer, both simultaneous and subsequent, is higher than older statistics indicate, and the frequency can be expected to increase as more efficient methods of detection and treatment become commonplace. Furthermore, there is a subgroup of patients who have an especially high risk for having a second primary cancer
openaire   +2 more sources

[Bilateral breast cancer].

Tumori, 2003
Bilateral breast cancer has a cumulative incidence of 3-13% in patients with primary breast cancer, and the majority of these lesions are metachronous. The synchronous and metachronous bilateral breast cancer have at greater risk for distant metastasis than unilateral breast cancer.
C, Amodeo   +6 more
  +8 more sources

Bilateral Breast Cancer

Surgical Clinics of North America, 1990
A second primary breast cancer in the opposite breast can be either synchronous or metachronous. The majority are metachronous. A woman who has had breast cancer has a fivefold increase in risk for a second breast cancer. Additional risk factors include multifocal cancer, lobular carcinoma in situ, and an original cancer at an early age with long ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Bilateral breast cancer.

Journal de radiologie, d'electrologie & archives d'electricite medicale, 2007
17073 Background: The clinical significance of bilateral breast cancer is unclear and its influence on prognosis is controversial. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of bilateral breast cancer on the prognosis compared with unilateral breast cancer and examine clinicopathologic characteristics of Bilateral and Unilateral breast cancer ...
J. Oh, B. Park
  +6 more sources

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