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Increased risk to develop testicular cancer for men with abnormal birth weights
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There might be some bad news out there for men with above or below normal birth weights -- new studies are showing that they might be at a high risk for testicular cancer than those who were born a more normal size.
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Testicular cancer fundraiser held in Bedford
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About 820 cases of testicular cancer are diagnosed annually in Canada and it is the number one killer for men between the ages of 20 and 30.
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Testicular cancer survivors and first-time cancer patients have the same chance
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Men who survive testicular cancer are just as likely to survive a second cancer as men who never had testicular cancer, according to a study led by Dr. Catherine Schairer from the National Cancer Institute.
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Report about intense therapy for relapsed testicular cancer patients
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Intense does of anticancer drugs can cure a large majority of men with testicular cancer after first-line treatment fails, according to a study out of Indiana University.
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Happy or sad World Cancer Day?
Published 02/9/2007 in All Cancers , Blood Cancer , Bone Cancer , Brain Cancer , Breast Cancer , Esophageal Cancer , Eye Cancer , Kidney Cancer , Leukemia , Lung Cancer , Multiple Myeloma , Non Hodgkins Lymphoma , Oral Cancer , Ovarian Cancer , Pancreatic Cancer , Pet Cancers , Pregnancy and cancer , Prostate Cancer , Teen Cancers , Testicular Cancer , Throat Cancer , Thymic Cancer , Thyroid Cancer , Tissue Cancers , Tongue Cancer , Uterine Cancer , Young Adult Cancers , Liver Cancer , Cancer events , Pink products , Daily news , Opinion , Saturday Six , Sunday Seven , Head and Neck Cancer | Unrated
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I guess the concept is happy -- the public urging for our world's policy makers to make cancer a top priority -- but the fact that becomes all too apparent on this World Cancer Day is quite sobering. More than seven million people die from cancer and close to 11 million new cases are diagnosed worldwide each year. In 2006, cancer killed more people than AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis combined.
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