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PubMed Central (PMC3 - NLM DTD) (2,081,148 recursos)
Archive of life sciences journal literature at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH), developed and managed by NIH's National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) in the National Library of Medicine (NLM).

Mostrando recursos 81 - 100 de 1,849

81. Introduction: challenging established dogma - Santen, Richard J

82. Does presurgical treatment destroy important prognostic information - Dixon, J Michael

83. Surrogates are just surrogates, but helpful just the same - Fabian, Carol

84. Do classical oestrogen markers predict for clinical response to endocrine therapy? - Miller, William R

85. The origins of oestrogen receptor negative breast cancer - Allred, D Craig

86. The oestrogen paradox: an hypothesis - Santen, Richard J

87. Oestrogen is bad for patients with breast cancer? - Jordan, V Craig; Ariazi, Eric A; Lewis-Wambi, Joan S; Swaby, Ramona R; Cunliffe, Heather E; Riegel, Anna T; Wellstein, Anton

88. Introduction to clinical research sessions - Ingle, James N

89. Oxford Overview - Ingle, James N

90. Endocrine and targeted treatments for breast cancer - Hudis, Clifford A

91. Clinical outcomes: to be a surrogate or not to be ...? - Cameron, David

92. Metabolic approaches to breast cancer treatment and prevention - Howell, Anthony

93. Breast cancer risk-assessment models - Evans, D Gareth R; Howell, Anthony
There are two main questions when assessing a woman for interventions to reduce her risks of developing or dying from breast cancer, the answers of which will determine her access: What are her chances of carrying a mutation in a high-risk gene such as BRCA1 or BRCA2? What are her risks of developing breast cancer with or without such a mutation? These risks taken together with the risks and benefits of the intervention will then determine whether an intervention is appropriate. A number of models have been developed for assessing these risks with varying degrees of validation. With further improvements...

94. Clinical trial update: implications and management of residual disease after neoadjuvant therapy for breast cancer - Mayer, Erica L; Carey, Lisa A; Burstein, Harold J
Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer has a well-established role in the management of patients with locally advanced or early stage disease. Multiple trials have demonstrated superior survival outcomes in individuals achieving a pathologic complete response at the time of definitive surgery, and sophisticated genetic methods may predict which patients will be in this category. Those with less than a pathologic complete response remain at significant risk of recurrent disease, and currently no further standard therapy exists. Ongoing studies of novel agents may lead to improved therapeutic outcomes for this high-risk population.

95. Clinical trials update: endocrine and biological therapy combinations in the treatment of breast cancer - Leary, Alexandra F; Sirohi, Bhawna; Johnston, Stephen RD
A greater understanding of the biological mechanisms responsible for de novo and acquired endocrine resistance has led to the rational design of clinical trials exploring the benefit of combining hormonal therapies with novel biological agents in an effort to enhance the efficacy of ER+ breast cancer treatment. These studies are increasingly including parallel biological analyses to elucidate the molecular characteristics of those tumors that are most likely to respond to specific targeted/endocrine combinations in an effort to develop a tailored approach to the management of individual patients. Unfortunately despite encouraging preclinical data, some of these combinations have yielded disappointing results...

96. Role of human HGFIN/nmb in breast cancer - Metz, Rebecca L; Patel, Prem S; Hameed, Meera; Bryan, Margaret; Rameshwar, Pranela

97. BP1 transcriptionally activates bcl-2 and inhibits TNF?-induced cell death in MCF7 breast cancer cells - Stevenson, Holly S; Fu, Sidney W; Pinzone, Joseph J; Rheey, Jinguen; Simmens, Samuel J; Berg, Patricia E

98. Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is transcriptionally induced by the Y-box binding protein-1 (YB-1) and can be inhibited with Iressa in basal-like breast cancer, providing a potential target for therapy - Stratford, Anna L; Habibi, Golareh; Astanehe, Arezoo; Jiang, Helen; Hu, Kaiji; Park, Eugene; Shadeo, Ashleen; Buys, Timon PH; Lam, Wan; Pugh, Trevor; Marra, Marco; Nielsen, Torsten O; Klinge, Uwe; Mertens, Peter R; Aparicio, Samuel; Dunn, Sandra E

99. Autocrine WNT signaling contributes to breast cancer cell proliferation via the canonical WNT pathway and EGFR transactivation - Schlange, Thomas; Matsuda, Yutaka; Lienhard, Susanne; Huber, Alexandre; Hynes, Nancy E

100. Comparison of different commercial kits for HER2 testing in breast cancer: looking for the accurate cutoff for amplification - Cayre, Anne; Mishellany, Florence; Lagarde, Nicole; Penault-Llorca, Frédérique

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