Latest Updates
-
Dhurandhar 16 Days Collection | Dhurandhar Beats Jawan, Stree 2 | Dhurandhar 500cr | Dhurandhar Day 16 Collection | Dhurandhar Box Office Collection Day 17 Prediction (December 21, 2025) | Dhurandhar Third Weekend Collection Prediction | Dhurandhar Today Collection -
How to Dress Well This Holiday Season Without Overthinking It -
From Guava To Kiwi: Fruits to Have in Winters to Boost Your Immunity -
David Guetta Returns to Mumbai After 8 Years, Lights Up Sunburn Festival 2025 -
How Homeopathic Remedies May Support Gut and Brain Health, Expert Explains -
Why Viral Fevers Are Lasting Longer This Year: Expert Explains The Immunity Shift Post-COVID -
Rekha’s Timeless Wedding Season Style: 5 Things to Pick From Her Latest Look -
Gold Rate Today in India Flat, Silver Prices Jump to New High of Rs 2.14 Lakh: Check Latest Prices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Pune, Ahmedabad & Delhi -
Happy Birthday Tamannaah Bhatia: What The 'Baahubali' Star's ‘Milky Beauty’ Skincare Looks Like Off Screen -
Govinda Birthday Special: Chi-Chi’s Bold And Unapologetic 90s Fashion Broke Every Style Rule
Breast Cancer In Males Is More Than In Females
NEW YORK, May 10 (Reuters) While breast cancer is far more common in women than in men, men may be more likely to die from early-stage breast tumors, a new study suggests.
breast cancer is rare, accounting for less than 1 per cent of all breast cancers. But unlike the case with breast cancer in women, there have been no improvements in survival the past 30 years in men with this disease.
The rarity of breast cancer in men has prevented clinical trials, and treatment is based on what's known about febreast cancer.
But the new findings, published in the journal Cancer, suggest that there may be biological differences in male and febreast cancers that affect survival. Specifically, men with relatively small tumors or tumors that had not yet spread to the lymph nodes had a shorter survival time than their female counterparts.
Among men whose breast cancer had not spread to the lymph nodes, the typical survival time was 6 years, compared with nearly 15 years among women.
The difference suggests a need for better understanding of breast cancer, and improved treatments, according to Dr Zeina A Nahleh and her colleagues at the University of Cincinnati.
The researchers based their findings on a large cancer registry maintained by Veterans' Affairs. They reviewed the records of 612 men treated for breast cancer and compared them with 2,413 women treated for the disease.
While Nahleh's team found no difference in survival times of men and women with more-advanced breast cancer, they did find one among patients with earlier-stage tumors.
When it came to treatment, men had lower rates of both chemotherapy and radiation than women did, but they were as likely as women to receive hormone therapy.
Hormonal therapies for breast cancer, such as the drug tamoxifen, block the ability of estrogen to fuel tumor growth. As in women, men's breast tumor cells often have receptors for estrogen, which means hormone therapy can be helpful.
However, Nahleh and her colleagues write, it's possible that men's breast tumors do not respond well to standard therapy with tamoxifen.
''A better understanding of this disease is needed,'' they conclude, ''so that new opportunities for therapeutic intervention may be developed.'' Reuters KN DB0931



Click it and Unblock the Notifications











