MedPage Today on MSN
Low testosterone may raise risk of 'extreme' prostate cancer progression
Results challenge view that high testosterone fuels prostate cancer growth ...
Molecular profiling of tumors has been shown to improve risk stratification, and it may be useful for prostate cancer active surveillance.
A new study led by researchers at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center found that prostate cancer patients with low testosterone levels may have a higher risk of cancer progressing to a ...
The statistics are sobering and undeniable — African American men develop prostate cancer at twice the rate of white men and are more likely to die from the disease. This reality makes understanding ...
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men throughout the United States. Most men do not realize they have cancer due ...
February 1, 2012 — A new study suggests that vigorous physical activity will offer protection against prostate cancer progression because of its effects on DNA repair and cell-cycle pathways. The ...
Morning Overview on MSN
New prostate cancer immunotherapy cuts biomarkers by up to 99% in trial
A personalized peptide vaccine slashed prostate-specific antigen levels by as much as 99.6% in some men with advanced prostate cancer, according to a phase II clinical trial conducted at Kurume ...
Prostate cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death in men, and some experts project the number of cases to rise over the coming decades. But in a recent Urologic Oncology article, ...
But as it turned out, his transition from military service to civilian life came with prostate cancer. It was during his ...
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