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1 with cancer as compared to women with benign breast disease.
2 nhibition in the management of proliferative breast disease.
3 r and do not generally occur in noncancerous breast disease.
4 in extent than those associated with benign breast disease.
5 ypical ductal hyperplasia, an early stage of breast disease.
6 s to the etiology and molecular pathology of breast disease.
7 xenograft model of progressive proliferative breast disease.
8 d prevent progestin-dependent progression of breast disease.
9 than 60% (high volume) of their practice to breast disease.
10 CK2, frequently found overexpressed in human breast disease.
11 s for lesion detection and identification in breast disease.
12 e II microcalcifications that correlate with breast disease.
13 st tissues that comprise a broad spectrum of breast disease.
14 agnostics and improving our understanding of breast disease.
15 amenable to therapies for treatment of human breast disease.
16 d 20 were subsequently diagnosed with benign breast disease.
17 use SCNB in the evaluation and treatment of breast disease.
18 o assess their usefulness as models of human breast disease.
19 y history of breast cancer, and prior benign breast disease.
20 e risk of breast cancer in women with benign breast disease.
21 he presence of a PTEN mutation and malignant breast disease.
22 n 52 women suspected of having or with known breast disease.
23 sors could distinguish benign from malignant breast disease.
24 ation noted in the group of CD families with breast disease.
25 risk lesions resembling human proliferative breast disease.
26 Mammography is a routine investigation for breast disease.
27 that ZAG plays a role in the development of breast diseases.
28 ve the understanding of benign and malignant breast diseases.
30 s than 30% (low volume) of their practice to breast disease, 32.5% by surgeons who devoted 30% to 60%
31 who had been initially diagnosed with benign breast disease according to the Nurses' Health Studies.
34 reast cancer, endometriosis, and fibrocystic breast disease and has been hypothesized to exert its ef
35 BN uses probabilistic relationships between breast disease and mammography findings to estimate the
36 witch" to the angiogenic phenotype" in human breast disease and/or correlates with the thromboembolic
37 3-3zeta overexpression occurs in early stage breast diseases and contributes to transformation of hum
38 alization (percentage of practice devoted to breast disease) and hospital cancer program status, with
39 to 60% (medium volume) of their practice to breast disease, and 33.0% by surgeons who devoted more t
40 riched for African American patients, benign breast disease, and BRCA mutation carriers, and study fi
41 overexpression is a critical event in early breast disease, and down-regulation of p53 is one of the
42 ndetectable in normal breast tissues, benign breast diseases, and immortalized epithelial MCF-10A cel
44 ere larger than those associated with benign breast disease at biopsy (median, 10 mm vs 6 mm, respect
45 hort of women who were diagnosed with benign breast disease at the Mayo Clinic and who were subsequen
46 all women who received a diagnosis of benign breast disease at the Mayo Clinic between 1967 and 1991.
47 res of biopsy tissues from women with benign breast disease (BBD) and compare its performance to the
48 mber of nevi with personal history of benign breast disease (BBD) and family history of breast cancer
55 nths, 4-12 months, and 1-4 years) and benign breast disease (BBD) using multivariable logistic regres
58 history of breast or ovarian cancer, benign breast disease/biopsies, alcohol consumption, and body m
60 not only in the detection and evaluation of breast disease, but also in the diagnosis and management
63 sibility of sampling error and the nature of breast disease, close mammographic and clinical follow-u
64 with atypical hyperplasia in the Mayo Benign Breast Disease Cohort were identified through pathology
65 42 age-matched controls from the Mayo Benign Breast Disease Cohort, by determining number of acini pe
66 luding 62 in situ carcinomas) and 186 benign breast disease controls were recruited into the study.
67 positively associated with history of benign breast disease, family history of breast cancer, hormone
68 ng led to small changes in effects of benign breast disease, family history, and hormone therapy.
69 nopathies (LAP) associated with inflammatory breast diseases (granulomatous mastitis and acute suppur
70 of breast cancer, personal history of benign breast disease, height at age 25 years, age at menarche,
71 onfidence interval (CI): 1.73, 3.20), benign breast disease (HR = 1.56, 95% CI: 1.08, 2.26), asthma (
72 has progressed from the simple assessment of breast disease in a selected small number of symptomatic
73 breast cancer after the diagnosis of benign breast disease include the histologic classification of
76 ocystic change and papillomas, in all benign breast disease lesions, and in 89% of in situ and in 83%
77 nt therapy use, somatotype at age 18, benign breast disease, mammographic density, polygenic risk sco
82 use was concentrated in women without benign breast disease (p=0.01) or a family history of breast ca
85 regardless of the histologic type of benign breast disease (relative risk, 1.8; 95 percent confidenc
86 None of the control cases (women without any breast disease) revealed LOH either in the epithelial or
88 e frequency of nodules showing proliferative breast disease rose from 23% in the first transplant gen
89 quantify the growth rates of DCIS and benign breast disease that manifest as mammographic calcificati
90 F10AT xenograft model of human proliferative breast disease to examine the early effects of estradiol
91 e studied a large group of women with benign breast disease to obtain reliable estimates of this risk
93 ds ratio for protection against non-invasive breast disease was 0.26 (95% confidence interval 0.12-0.
94 mplification and/or overexpression in benign breast disease was associated with an increased risk of
96 iparous v parous; P =.45), history of benign breast disease (yes v no; P =.99), or family history of