Chemotherapy
General Principles Tumor Growth and Chemotherapy There are a wide variety of chemotherapeutic agents and a growing number of targeted agents available to treat women with gynecologic cancers. The selection…
General Principles Tumor Growth and Chemotherapy There are a wide variety of chemotherapeutic agents and a growing number of targeted agents available to treat women with gynecologic cancers. The selection…
The disciplines of epidemiology and biostatistics apply to gynecologic oncology in defining cancer occurrence and survival, identifying risk factors, and implementing strategies for treatment or prevention, including the proper design…
Worldwide, 6,044,000 women are diagnosed with cancer and 3,345,000 die from the disease each year (1). From 1975–2010, the age-standardized incidence rates for cancers in women have increased by 42%…
For most women, a diagnosis of gynecologic cancer is a crisis, and it is essential to consider a patient’s psychological and behavioral responses when managing her disease. While most patients…
Cancer is diagnosed in 1 per 1,000 to 2,000 pregnancies, and is likely to increase with childbearing being delayed until higher maternal age in developed countries (1,2). Pregnancy does not…
Cancer is caused by a series of events that include the accumulation of successive molecular lesions and alterations in the tumor microenvironment (1). Molecular lesions include overexpression, amplification, or mutations…