Women survive lung cancer better than men
1st Nov 2005, 17:43 GMT
MONTREAL (Reuters Health) - Women have a better survival rate than men in early stage lung cancers, regardless of treatment or even lack of treatment. The findings, from a nearly 10-year review of Medicare records, were presented here at the annual meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians.
Women survive lung cancer better than men related news:
- Surviving Lung Cancer: Advantage for Women? — WebMD Health Headlines
- Women survive lung cancer better than men — Rednova News - Health
- Women survive lung cancer better than men (Reuters) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- CHEST: Women With Lung Cancer Live Longer Than Men — MedPage Today Hematology/Oncology
- Female cancer victims outlive men — Scotsman.com News - Cancer research
- Lung-Sparing Treatment For Cancer Proving Effective — Medical News Today RSS/XML Feed
- Cheek Cells Used to Identify Lung Cancer — Radiology News from StratCenter.com
- Cheek cells can detect lung cancer, says study — KeralaNext: Health
- New Technology Boosts Lung Cancer Treatment (HealthDay) — Yahoo! News: Health News
- Cheek Scrapings Can Detect Lung Cancer — Health News Online - Medical and health information and tools from Armenian Medical Network
Latest news from Reuters: Health:
- Camel milk ice cream to help trim Indian waists
- Diseased gums raise risk of pancreatic cancer
- FDA staff urges new caution on Roche flu drug
- Simple steps can speed heart attack care: study
- Children showing hardening of arteries: U.S. study
- Antibodies destroy HIV-infected cells
- New drug comb may lengthen ovarian cancer survival
- FDA OKs Genentech drug for early breast cancer
- Drug switch improves breast cancer survival: study