Coalition for the Reversal of Breast Cancer Mortality in African American Women

A blog about research, awareness, prevention, treatment and survivorship of Breast Cancer and all cancers, including targeted scientific research and a grassroots approach to increase screening for cancer, especially in the low income and under-insured population of El Paso, Texas, with a view to expand this new health care model to many other 'minority' populations across the United States and beyond

Friday, December 7, 2012

SABCS: Black Women Less Likely to Undergo Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
By Dave Levitan | December 5, 2012


A large cohort study found that black women with early-stage invasive breast cancer were significantly less likely than white patients to undergo the less invasive axillary sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy. Black women also had a higher rate of lymphedema, due largely to that difference in treatment modalities.
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Caution, read the full report before jumping to conclusion!
http://www.cancernetwork.com/conference-reports/sabcs2012/content/article/10165/2118097

Peggy Kankonde at 5:26 PM
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