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June 30, 2006 (San Diego) — False-positive results on positron emission tomography (PET) with computed tomography (CT) scans, which may suggest that there is a malignancy when in fact there is none, ...
When a new, more sensitive imaging tool hit the scene, it became the go-to tool for detecting recurrent prostate cancer. But now experts are rethinking how, or whether, to act on positive findings.
The use of PET-CT scans may help identify subclinical GCA and malignancies among patients with PMR, even in the absence of overt clinical symptoms.
“Most folks who are diagnosed with them end up dying from them, usually within a year or two. We don't have great treatments.
As part of its Speaking Out video series, CURE talked to Dr. Brian Keith McNeil, on behalf of ZERO-End Prostate Cancer, about ...
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