With over 3 million women battling breast cancer today, everywhere you turn there is a mother, daughter, sister, or friend who has been affected by breast cancer.
I'm a huge breast cancer awareness advocate because my mom went through breast cancer recently. It really brought our family closer.
I was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2004.
Cancer has been unfortunately in my life. My mom's best friend is kicking ass in her battle with breast cancer. Both of my grandmas had cancer. I recently lost a friend to cancer.
I do a lot of races for the cure for breast cancer.
There can be life after breast cancer. The prerequisite is early detection.
My goal is people associate November with COPD awareness month as much as they notice October with breast cancer and pink. That'd be a great thing if it happened. The fact that COPD kills more people than breast cancer and diabetes put together shoul...
People used to say everyone knows someone who's had breast cancer. In the past few weeks, I've learned something else: Everyone has someone close to them who has had breast cancer.
My mother has battled breast cancer three times.
Women who have been recently diagnosed with breast cancer can learn a tremendous amount from women who have already been treated.
I grew up knowing the importance of breast cancer.
When one person gets cancer, the whole family gets cancer.
Well, right now, technically, I have no breast cancer.
Once I overcame breast cancer, I wasn't afraid of anything anymore.
A breast cancer might turn out to have a close resemblance to a gastric cancer. And this kind of reorganization of cancer in terms of its internal genetic anatomy has really changed the way we treat and approach cancer in general.
In mid-July 2007, after a routine mammogram, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. As cancer diagnoses go, mine wasn't particularly scary. The affected area was small, and the surgeon seemed to think that a lumpectomy followed by radiation would eradic...
I didn't know anything about breast cancer when I got it.
My mom was diagnosed with breast cancer when I was 13 and it was something we weren't really aware of as a family.
I always sort of thought, 'I'm probably going to get breast cancer. There's a really good chance.'
I know so many people who have battled breast cancer and they didn't all make it.
Both of my grandmothers were diagnosed with breast cancer - one is a survivor and one passed away.