“We Believe in Memphis” is a media outreach ministry that’s aim is to tell the good stories and good news of the Memphis Metro area. Our WCC founder, Dr. Bill West, meets with Stan Stanford and Maxi Dunham to talk about his own story, West Cancer Center, and his goals for the future! To view the entire segment, please visit http://www.webelieveinmemphis.org/west-cancer-center-dr-bill-west/.
Posts By: Julie Flanery
WCC’s Dr. Schwartzberg, MD, on HR+ Breast Cancer: Treatment Trial Results
West’s very own Dr. Lee Schwartzberg participated in the 2017 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium video program yesterday! During his time at #SABCS17, he was interviewed about Phase II study findings evaluating exemastane with or without enzalutamide in patients with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. Click below to see the full video! http://www.ascopost.com/videos/2017-san-antonio-breast-cancer-symposium/lee-s-schwartzberg-md-on-hrplus-breast-cancer-treatment-trial-results/
Meeting the Needs for Better Quality Cancer Care – New Hybrid Cancer Center Model Leads the Way
A new cancer center model is helping meet the demand for better quality cancer care in community settings. An original paper in ADC Review | Journal of Antibody-drug Conjugates, a peer-reviewed journal published by InPress Media Group, LLC, describes the concept. Hybrid academic-community cancer centers began emerging and evolving at several sites in some southern… Read more »
WCC Partners with Lady Tiger Basketball Team
Join our West Cancer Center family on Sunday, December 3 at 2pm for the University of Memphis Lady Tiger Basketball Game against Illinois! The Women’s Basketball Team visited our Wolf River Campus on Friday, December 1 to meet patients and give away free game tickets and t-shirts. The game ball will be awarded to the… Read more »
University of Memphis Women’s Basketball Makes Second Visit To West Cancer Center
Members of the University of Memphis women’s basketball team as well as coaches and additional athletic support staff made its second visit Friday morning to the West Cancer Center in Germantown. The Tigers made their first trip just over a year ago. “There are hundreds of people that walk through these doors every day and… Read more »
WCC Thoracic Oncologist, Dr. Benny Weksler, Interviews with KWAM on Lung Cancer Screenings & Awareness
Our very own Thoracic Oncologist, Dr. Benny Weksler, appeared on KWAM The Voice‘s radio show this month in honor of Lung Cancer Awareness. Dr. Weksler spoke with radio host, Bernadette Davis, about the importance of lung cancer screenings and shared information about West Cancer Center’s resources, such as our smoking cessation clinic and patient support… Read more »
JAK Pseudokinase Domain Variants Highlight nRTK nsSNPs Identified with Next-Generation
Matthew Stein, MD (Hematology/Oncology) Presenting at: IASLC (Int’l Assoc. for the Study of Lung Cancer) Yokohama, Japan-October 16, 2017 Abstract 10429 JAK Pseudokinase Domain Variants Highlight nRTK nsSNPs Identified with Next-Generation Sequencing in NSCLC Patients Type: Peer Review Topic: 02. Biology/Pathology Authors: Matthew K. Stein, Lindsay K. Morris, Mike G. Martin; West Cancer Center, University… Read more »
Memphis Friends of Israel Festival
Join our West Cancer Center family on Sunday, December 3 at the Agricenter of Memphis for the Israel Festival! We will be on-site from 10am until 5pm. We hope you’ll stop by to learn about the services we offer our Memphis community and to pick up some free gifts for you and your family! … Read more »
Treatment becomes group effort
Doctors were just guessing a decade ago when they gave Alison Cairnes’ husband a new drug they hoped would shrink his lung tumors. Now she takes it, but the choice was no guesswork. Sophisticated gene tests suggested it would fight her gastric cancer, and they were right. Cancer patients increasingly are having their care… Read more »
Memphis reducing racial disparity in breast cancer deaths
In a study that received national publicity three years ago, Memphis was identified as having by far the greatest disparity in breast cancer-mortality rates between black and white women of any of the 50 largest U.S. cities from 2005 through 2009. Locally, black women during that five-year period died from the disease at a rate of 44.3 per 100,000… Read more »