© 2001 by Oxford University Press
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 93, No. 23, 1761,
December 5, 2001
© 2001 Oxford University Press
IN THIS ISSUE |
Women with abnormal cytology in breast fluid obtained by nipple aspiration have an increased relative risk of breast cancer compared with women from whom no fluid was obtained and with women whose fluid had normal cytology. Wrensch et al. (p. 1791) extended their follow-up of a group of women who had undergone nipple aspiration and determined the breast cancer risk for a new group of women from whom nipple aspirate fluid was collected and studied. Overall, they found an increasing gradient of breast cancer risk with increasing severity of the cytological diagnosis, such that the risk
Radiation Pneumonitis in Breast Cancer Patients
HRT and Colorectal Adenoma Recurrence
T-cell Immunity Against HTLV-I-Associated Lymphomas
Expression of Fibroblast Growth Factors in Prostate Cancer
Risk Factors for Breast Carcinoma In Situ