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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.
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, ...
As part of its Speaking Out video series, CURE talked to Dr. Brian Keith McNeil, on behalf of ZERO-End Prostate Cancer, about ...
“Most folks who are diagnosed with them end up dying from them, usually within a year or two. We don't have great treatments.
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.