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  1. About Cancer - NCI

    Information from the National Cancer Institute about cancer treatment, prevention, screening, genetics, causes, and how to cope with cancer.

  2. Find an NCI-Designated Cancer Center

    Find the locations of NCI-designated cancer centers by area, region, state, or name that includes contact information to help health care providers and cancer patients with referrals to clinical …

  3. What Is Cancer? - NCI

    Oct 11, 2021 · Explanations about what cancer is, how cancer cells differ from normal cells, and genetic changes that cause cancer to grow and spread.

  4. State Cancer Profiles > Incidence Rates Table

    Rates are for invasive cancer only (except for bladder cancer which is invasive and in situ) or unless otherwise specified. Population counts for denominators are based on Census …

  5. NCI-Designated Cancer Centers

    Mar 19, 2025 · NCI-Designated Cancer Centers deliver cutting-edge cancer treatments to patients in communities across the United States. Find a center near you and learn about its specific …

  6. Definition of oncology - NCI Dictionary of Cancer Terms

    oncology (on-KAH-loh-jee) A branch of medicine that specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.

  7. Becoming a Cancer Registry Professional - SEER Registrars

    The SEER Program Training web site provides web-based training modules for basic cancer registration and surveillance, site-specific modules covering cancers of individual systems and …

  8. Understanding Cancer - NCI

    Cancer is not one disease, but a collection of related diseases that can occur almost anywhere in the body. At its most basic, cancer is a disease of the genes in the cells of our body.

  9. Treatment Clinical Trials for Small Cell Lung Cancer

    NCI supports clinical trials studying new and more effective ways to detect and treat cancer. Find treatment clinical trials for small cell lung cancer.

  10. Non-malignant Brain Tumors - SEER Training

    On January 1, 2004, all cancer registrars in the United States will begin to identify and abstract benign and borderline tumors of the brain and central nervous system.