Further study is required to determine the risk or value and the cost/benefit analysis of mammographic follow up of breast cancer.Polak PetrBeattie DeclanMcIlmunn ColinKirk StephenBritish Journal of Surgery
“Occasionally you might use [TC chemo] in a smalltriple-negative cancerthat you think might need chemotherapy, or in an older patient who might not handle a more intensive regimen like AC chemotherapy, which can cause heart damage,” Dr. Rodgers adds. Triple-negative breast cancer means the ...
Overview Symptoms Risks, Prevention & Screening Tests & Diagnosis Types Your Breast Cancer Care Team Treatment Living With Breast Cancer Remission & Recurrence Advanced Breast Cancer Support & Resources Appointment Prep Suspicious Mammogram Result: Follow-Up and Next Steps Medically Reviewed by Jennifer ...
for 10 to 14 days. You should feel better each day, and our surgeon will make sure you are as comfortable as possible. You will have follow-up appointments with your surgeon at least once per week for the first month. It is very normal to feel fatigued in the few weeks following ...
FULL PAPER British Journal of Cancer (2014) 110, 859–867 | doi: 10.1038/bjc.2013.800 Keywords: breast cancer; follow-up; discrete choice experiment; patient preferences What sort of follow-up services would Australian breast cancer survivors prefer if we could no longer offer long-term ...
These preliminary data map the plethora of issues that influence cancer patients in the years following treatment. Women who were attending follow-up appointments for breast cancer experienced similar levels of enablement following SBN consultations as would be expected from consultations with general pract...
Background The aim was to explore the experiences of women with breast cancer in relation to routine follow-up appointments in different settings, including the issues surrounding discharge from hospital care.BackgroundThe aim was to explore the experiences of women with breast cancer in relation to...
To identify adherence to follow-up recommendations in long-term breast cancer survivors (LTBCS) of the SURBCAN cohort and to identify its determinants, usi
Polly was two weeks old at this point and it wasn’t until the cancer had spread to my lymph nodes 3 months later that I went back for a follow up appointment. Maybe they decided not to do a core biopsy because I was breastfeeding, I’m not sure. Maybe it was because I’m young...
(not necessarily just breast cancer), the aftermath is often the hardest. I remember the distinct “WHAT NOW?” feeling after treatment was over. I was sent out into the world with a few follow up appointments scheduled for future dates in my back pocket, some daily meds to take and a ...