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As per available reports about 31 relevant journals, 59 Conferences, 14 workshops, 11 National Symposiums, are presently dedicated exclusively to Cancer screening and about 2,070 articles are being published on Cancer screening.
Cancer screening aims to detect cancer before symptoms appear, This may involve blood tests, urine tests, other tests, or medical imaging. The benefits of screening in terms of cancer prevention, early detection and subsequent treatment must be weighed against any harms. Universal screening, mass screening or population screening involves screening everyone, usually within a specific age group. Selective screening identifies people who are known to be at higher risk of developing cancer, such as people with a family history of cancer. Screening can lead to false positive results and subsequent invasive procedures. Screening can also lead to false negative results, where an existing cancer is missed. Controversy arises when it is not clear if the benefits of screening outweigh the risks of the screening procedure itself, and any follow-up diagnostic tests and treatments. Screening tests must be effective, safe, well-tolerated with acceptably low rates of false positive and false negative results. If signs of cancer are detected, more definitive and invasive follow-up tests are performed to reach a diagnosis. Screening for cancer can lead to cancer prevention and earlier diagnosis. Early diagnosis may lead to higher rates of successful treatment and extended life. However, it may also falsely appear to increase the time to death through lead time bias or length time bias. Cancer risk is measured in different ways. The findings from surveys and studies about cancer risk are studied and the results are explained in different ways. Some of the ways risk is explained include absolute risk, relative risk , and odds ratios. Absolute risk: This is the risk a person has of developing a disease. Relative risk: This is often used in research studies to find out whether a trait or a factor can be linked to the risk of a disease.
Scope and Importance:
The field of translational Cancer screening is rapidly progressing, yet the systematic application of current knowledge to improve patient care remains a formidable challenge. National symposiums and Workshops provide a dedicated forum for the advancement, implementation and exchange of information about cancer screening and its allied areas. Around 20 National symposiums and Workshops are going to be held across the globe which includes “The Translantic Symposium On Colorectal Cancer Prevention” is an idea of detection and prevention, Head And Neck Cancer Alliance which seeks to enable an organized and strategic alliance of all stakeholders to dramatically shift the stage of discovery of head and neck cancers through united and collaborative efforts in prevention, early detection and research.
OMICS International, Organizes 1000+ Global Events Every Year across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific societies and Publishes 700+ Open access journals which contains over 100000 eminent personalities, reputed scientists as editorial board and organizing committee members. The conference series website will provide you list and details about the conference organize worldwide.
List of Best International Conferences
1. 3rd World Congress Women’s Health and Breast Cancer
October 13-15, Manchester, UK
2. Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome Conference
November 16-18, Seattle, USA
3. Pregnancy and Child Health Conference
August 29-31, Sao Paulo, Brazil
4. 2nd Gynecology and Obstetrics Conference
November 16-18, San Antonio, USA
5. 8th Euro Global Summit on Cancer Therapy
November 03-05, Valencia, Spain
6. Pancreatic and Colorectal Cancer Conference
March 29-30, Atlanta, USA
7. Public Health and Nutrition Conference
March 10-12, Madrid, Spain
8. Annual Congress on Primary Healthcare
April 25-27, Dubai, UAE
9. Annual Congress Trauma and Critical Care
March 07-09, Madrid, Spain
10. Annual Congress on Rare Diseases and Orphan Drugs
May 12-13, Chicago, USA
11. 4th Bacteriology and Infectious Diseases Conference
May 16-18, San Antonio, USA
12. Cancer Immunology and Immunotherapy Conference
July 28-30 Melbourne, Australia
13. 3rd Health Informatics and Technology Conference
June 27-29, New Orleans, USA
14. Hepatitis Vaccines Conference
June 16-18, Rome, Italy
15. 2nd Retroviruses and Novel Drugs Conference
June 30-July 01, Cape Town, South Africa
16. 13th Global Diabetes Conference
August 08-10, Birmingham, UK
17. 6th Global Healthcare and Fitness Summit
August 22-24, Philadelphia, USA
18. 2nd Breast Cancer Conference
September 19-21 Phoenix, USA
19. Cervical Cancer Conference
September 22-23, Vienna, Austria
20. 2nd Euro Health Care and Fitness Summit
September 26-28, London, UK
21. 5th Biometrics and Biostatistics Conference
September 29-October 01, Miami, USA
23. 3rd Hepatitis and Liver Diseases Conference
October 17-19, Dubai, UAE
24. 2nd Infectious Diseases Conference
August 25-27, Philadelphia, USA
25. 10th European Breast Cancer Conference
March 9-11, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
26. MENA Women’s Health Congress
Nov 5-7, Dubai, United Arab Emirates
27. IMPAKT 2016 Breast Cancer Conference
May 12-14, Brussels, Belgium
28. 3rd Conference on Epidemiology and Infectious Diseases
June 1-3, Nanjing, China
29. 33rd Annual Miami Breast Cancer Conference
March 10-13, Miami, USA
List of Society/Associations :-
1) American Cancer society, USA
2) American Society of Clinical Oncology, USA
3) German Cancer Society, Germany
4) Philippine Cancer Society, Inc. (PCSI), Philippines
5) Association of European Cancer Leagues, Europe
6) Association for International Cancer Research, UK
7) British Association of Surgical Oncology, UK
8) British Oncology Pharmacy Association, UK
9) Australian Association of Smoking Cessation Professionals, Australia
10) Australian Society of Gynaecologic Oncologists, Australia.
11) Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation
12) New Zealand Breast Cancer Foundation
13) Breast Cancer Society of Canada
14) Singapore Cancer Society
15) European Society of Breast Cancer Specialists
16) Irish Cancer Society
17) The Japanese Breast Cancer Society
18) HONG KONG BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION
19) American Society of Breast Surgeons
20) Korean Breast Cancer Society
List of Companies:-
1) Abbott laboratories
2) Aeterna zentaris
3) Agendia
4) Altheadx
5) Ambergen inc.
6) Astrazeneca plc
7) Atossa genetics inc.
8) Biotime
9) Ccc diagnostics llc
10) Clarinet
11) Dako
12) Eisai inc. (headquarters)
13) Eutropics pharmaceuticals
14) Fluxion biosciences
15) Genentech
16) Genomic health
17) Glaxosmithkline
18) Life technologies
19) Bristol-Myers Squibb
20) Merck
21) Medivation
22) FiercePharma
23) Gilead Sciences
24) AbbVie Inc.,
25) Novartis AG
26) AstraZeneca PLC
27) Johnson & Johnson
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This page was last updated on November 15, 2024