Booster Shots

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Breast cancer diagnosis ... and the outcome

9:51 AM, August 4, 2008

NewapplegateThe specter of a breast cancer diagnosis haunts women worldwide, synonymous for some as a point of no return. And yet actress Christina Applegate, recently diagnosed, is expected to make a full recovery after treatment. Many do.

Although breast cancer remains the second-leading cause of cancer death in women (far behind lung cancer), Applegate's disease was caught in the early stages, which makes an enormous difference in treatment -- and prognosis.

Breastcancer.org offers a list of the stages of breast cancer, from 0 to 4, with 0 describing noninvasive cancer and 4 describing invasive cancer in which the tumor has spread beyond the breast, underarm and internal mammary lymph nodes.

The National Cancer Institute offers an online booklet "What You Need to Know About Breast Cancer." And the American Cancer Society offers a statistical look at the disease, with estimates of new breast cancer cases and deaths, plus factors that can affect survival.

For a personal take on breast cancer, go to My Breast Cancer Blog or Life With Breast Cancer. (If you have other breast-cancer-related blogs, submit them as a comment below.)

Other recent news on breast cancer:

Breast self-exams don't help. Or do they?

Taking the 'ouch' out of a mammogram

Exercise when young may cut breast cancer

Explain this: Breast cancer rates, sun exposure and Vitamin D

Hormone drugs had lasting breast cancer risk

-- Tami Dennis

Photo: Christina Applegate in "Samantha Who?" Credit: Randy Holmes / ABC

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Comments

Been thinking of Christina Applegate since the news broke. As someone else going through treatment, I hope she knows there are other's out there who are young and dealing with this always surprising disease.

My blog isn't particularly clinical, I leave that to the doctors. But if anyone wants to read about my experience, you can check out www.dtinthecity.blogspot.com

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Tami Dennis, who takes the word "skeptic" to previously uncharted territory, is the Times' Health and Science editor. She's adamant that pitches promoting awareness days, weeks or months are, by their nature, non-stories. And, because she's an adult, she refuses to use words like "veggies," "tummy" and "yummy."
Rosie Mestel, deputy Health and Science editor, studied genetics before abandoning flies, fungi and DNA for health/medical writing. Her hero is the biologist Ernst Haeckel, whose jellyfish paintings inspired snazzy chandeliers. Her favorite toast-spread is Marmite, a British delicacy made of yeast extract. Her least-favorite word is "millenniums."
Melissa Healy is a staff writer for the Health section reporting from Washington D.C. Healy's a veteran of The Times' National staff, having covered the Pentagon, Congress, poverty and social welfare, the environment, and the White House before shifting to Health in 2003. She writes frequently about mental health and human behavior, about federal health policy, prescription medication and ethics in medicine. More wonk than wellness freak, Healy chooses to believe in the health benefits of coffee and wine, and considers water a better work-out medium than beverage.
Karen Kaplan covers genetics, stem cells and cloning. She and colleague Thomas H. Maugh II comprise about 25% of the unofficial MIT-Alumni-in-Journalism Club, and she is proud to have taken more math (5) than English (0) courses in college. Her contributions to Booster Shots will, she hopes, appear more frequently than postings to her mommy blog.
Thomas H. Maugh II has been a science and medical writer at the Times for 23 years. Before that, he was on the staff of the journal Science for 13 years. He has bachelor's degrees in English and chemistry from MIT and a doctorate in chemistry from UC Santa Barbara.
After a brief stint as a sports writer, Shari Roan turned to health journalism and has covered the topic for The Times for 18 years. She is the author of three books and the mother of two daughters, both teenagers who refer to her as a "health freak." She likes to jog, watch baseball and is very happy that dark chocolate contains some health benefit.
Jeannine Stein writes about fitness, sports medicine and obesity for the Health section. She’s a gym rat from way back and never met an elliptical trainer she didn’t like. Well, maybe one or two. She tempers exercise with a steady diet of reality television because she believes it’s all about balance.