Department of Veterans Affairs researchers at five medical centers are working together to develop an artificial intelligence algorithm that can predict aggressive prostate cancer. The new research ...
Black men in the United States are more likely to develop prostate cancer than white men, and after diagnosis, they're more likely to have advanced disease and to die than white men with the disease.
Black men in the United States are more likely to develop prostate cancer than white men, and after diagnosis, they're more likely to have advanced disease and to die than white men with the disease.
*Classification performance AUC and balanced accuracy (mean and std, %) using case-level bags on final tiles with a fixed feature setting and dino cls keep=4. Best result per column in bold. This is ...
Dr. Luca Valle, assistant professor of radiation oncology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, was awarded a $2.1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to develop ...
SEATTLE — Our nation’s veterans are nearly twice as likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer than the general population, and the disease often has no symptoms. But when it comes to screening for ...
A phase II study of GM-CSF, IFN alpha and IL-2 in adjuvant setting for high-risk renal cell carcinoma patients No significant financial relationships to disclose. This is an ASCO Meeting Abstract from ...
OSDOL HAS HIS STORY FROM OAKLAND FOR THE PAST TWO YEARS, IRAQ WAR VETERAN KEVIN MARTIN HAS HAD TO ENDURE PAINFUL TREATMENTS FOR PROSTATE CANCER HERE AT THE VA. PITTSBURGH. BUT A LAWSUIT SAYS THAT ...
NORFOLK, Va. — Prostate cancer is the second-most deadly cancer among men in the United States. Rates are rising and experts are not sure why. But there is good news: when detected early, prostate ...