Pancreatic Cancer Risk, Screening and Prevention
Pancreatic cancer accounts for about 3% of new diagnoses. Learn the risk factors, from smoking to diabetes to family history.
Pancreatic cancer accounts for about 3% of new diagnoses. Learn the risk factors, from smoking to diabetes to family history.
When discussing risk factors for cancer, among other health conditions, one that often comes up is race.
Liquid biopsies analyze blood, urine, or sputum for DNA signatures of cancer, and can detect many cancers earlier than current screening protocols. The technology is still developing, but could radically transform cancer diagnosis and treatment.
Screening recommendations should reflect both your lifetime and near-term risk. In some situations, the costs may outweigh the benefits.
Your liver is your largest internal organ, and liver cancer risk is closely tied to hepatitis, alcohol use, and more.
Uterine cancer is the most common gynecologic cancer. Learn how hormonal factors, BMI, and reproductive history shape your risk.
Kidney cancer makes up 4-5% of new diagnoses and is more common in men. Learn the risk factors and what you can do.
Ovarian cancer risk is shaped by reproductive history, genetics, and lifestyle. Learn what the science says about prevention.
Bladder cancer accounts for 4% of US diagnoses. Learn the symptoms, screening options, and prevention strategies to reduce your risk.
Catch screening recommendations are informed by near-term risk. Although your lifetime risk for a particular cancer may be elevated, that doesn't mean that near-term screening is always the right decision.
Catch shares cutting-edge science and simple actions that could change your future.
The Catch program, products, and services are intended only for maintaining and encouraging a healthy lifestyle and are not to be used for the diagnosis, cure, management, prevention, or treatment of any disease or condition. The Catch membership, products, and services should never be used for medication management or dosing decisions.