SKIP TO CONTENT
Johns Hopkins
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Black, Hispanic Survivors of Breast Cancer Have Higher Death Rates from Second Cancers

    Black, Hispanic Survivors of Breast Cancer Have Higher Death Rates from Second Cancers

    A recent study from the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center found that Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black female survivors of breast cancer experience higher death rates after being diagnosed with a second primary cancer than members of other ethnic and racial groups. Read more about the study here.

    SEE ALL NEWS
    Recent Posts
    Colon Cancer Screening: What You Need to Know Detecting Early-Stage Cancers with a New Blood Test Measuring Epigenetic Instability Oral Bacterium May Promote Breast Cancer Development and Spread Extra Copies of Chromosome 1q May Drive Pancreatic Cancer How Bacteria May Promote Breast Cancer Growth of Spreading Pancreatic Cancer Fueled By “Under-Appreciated” Epigenetic Changes Updated Guidelines Standardize How Tumor Response Is Measured After Surgery Running the Distance: Patient Teams with Johns Hopkins Medicine Dermatologists to Treat, Understand Rare Hereditary Cancer Syndrome New Technology: MRI-guided Focused Ultrasound for Prostate Cancer
    Johns Hopkins

    2026 © The Johns Hopkins University, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Johns Hopkins Health System. All rights reserved.
    Terms of Use Privacy Statement

    LinkedIn
    Back to top