6 things women with breast cancer want their friends to know Invasive breast cancer will strike nearly 12 percent of women in the U.S. at some point during their lives.
US Catholic health group hit with complaint over sterilization ban The largest Roman Catholic health organization in the United States was accused in a federal complaint on Tuesday of failing to provide appropriate care by refusing on religious grounds to allow a pregnant woman with a brain tumor to be sterilized.
WHO cancer agency asked experts to withhold weedkiller documents The World Health Organization's cancer agency - which is facing criticism over how it classifies carcinogens - advised academic experts on one of its review panels not to disclose documents they were asked to release under United States freedom of information laws.
The secondhand smoke you don't even know you're exposed to is killing you Individuals who are unaware that they’re being exposed to secondhand smoke may face a higher risk of death from cancer and other smoking-related disease, according to a study from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
Changes in depression symptoms tied to lung cancer survival Worsening depression symptoms are associated with shorter survival for lung cancer patients, particularly those in the early stages of disease, according to a new U.S. study.
E-cigarettes could be used to help combat obesity in smokers trying to quit: study Researchers in Britain and New Zealand have found a potential new use for electronic cigarettes in smokers who want to give up - controlling appetite and limiting the weight gain that often comes with quitting.
'Cancer made me broke' Deadly as cancer may be to a person’s health, it also wreaks havoc on one’s finances.
FDA approves Merck's lung cancer drug as first-line treatment Merck & Co Inc on Monday said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved its immunotherapy Keytruda for use in certain previously untreated lung cancer patients, making it the only approved first-line treatment.