NCCN Releases New Resource to Help Patients Understand Inflammatory Breast Cancer
The NCCN has published a new patient resource to explain the rare and aggressive form of breast cancer, inflammatory breast cancer (IBC). The NCCN Guidelines for Patients: Inflammatory Breast Cancer aims to empower patients with information about IBC’s treatment approaches and differences from other types of breast cancer.
The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) has released a new resource for patients to help them understand inflammatory breast cancer (IBC), a rare and aggressive form of breast cancer. The NCCN Guidelines for Patients: Inflammatory Breast Cancer explains how IBC is different from more common forms of breast cancer and its treatment approaches. The resource is available for free at NCCN.org/patientguidelines or through the NCCN Patient Guides for Cancer App, thanks to funding from the NCCN Foundation. The resource is expected to empower patients to advocate for themselves when making tough decisions, as well as provide crucial information for patients to understand treatment and learn about survival rates that have improved in recent years.
IBC is estimated to account for 1-6% of all breast cancer cases in the United States and usually diagnosed at a younger age. While the tools used for IBC are similar to those used for other types of breast cancer, the sequence and tempo are different. Treatment typically includes systemic therapy to shrink the tumor, followed by surgery to remove the breast and lymph nodes, and then radiation therapy. Many patients have advanced disease by the time of their diagnosis, and it can advance to the metastatic stage more quickly. It is important to take note of unusual skin changes to the breast, including redness, swollen nipple area, or warmth to the touch, as these could be harmless or signs of IBC.
The NCCN Guidelines for Patients: Inflammatory Breast Cancer is the latest addition to NCCN’s library of patient resources for breast cancer. The resource aims to provide expert cancer treatment information to inform and empower patients and caregivers, through support from the NCCN Foundation. The NCCN’s patient resources for breast cancer were recently named the 2022 Excellence in Cancer Patient Education award winner from the Cancer Patient Education Network (CPEN). Patients can also find other patient guidelines, language translations, webinars, and short videos containing expert-vetted information about breast cancer at NCCN.org/breast-cancer-resources.
Revealing disparities that drive preterm birth rates
The March of Dimes report scored the U.S. overall a D+ grade on preterm birth rate at 10.4%, but states differ dramatically in their scores. New Hampshire, for example, scored an A- with 7.9% of infants born prematurely, while Mississippi, where 15% of infants are born prematurely, scored an F. Texas’ rates aren’t the worst in the country, but it scores notably worse than the national rate of 10.4%, with 11.1% of babies – 43,344 in total – born prematurely in 2024. And Texas has an especially large effect on the low national score because 10 of the 46 cities that receive a D or F grade – defined in the report as a rate higher than the national rate of 10.4% – are located there. In 2023, Texas had the highest number of such cities in the U.S. That may be in part because access to maternal care in Texas is so limited. Close to half of all counties across the state completely lack access to maternity care providers and birthing facilities, compared with one-third of counties across the U.S. Moreover, more counties in Texas are designated as health professional shortage areas, meaning they lack enough doctors for the number of people living in these areas. Shortages exist in 257 areas in Texas for primary care doctors, 149 for dentists and 251 for mental health providers. But even against the backdrop of geographic differences in health care access, the starkest contribution to the state’s preterm birth rates comes from ethnic and racial disparities. Mothers of non-Hispanic Black (14.7%), American Indian/Alaskan Native (12.5%), Pacific Islander (12.3%) and Hispanic (10.1%) descent have babies prematurely much more often than do mothers who are non-Hispanic white (9.5%) or Asian (9.1%). These numbers reflect the broader landscape of maternal health in the U.S. Although nationwide maternal mortality rates decreased from 22.3 to 18.6 deaths per 100,000 live births from 2022 to 2023, Black women died during pregnancy or within one year after childbirth at almost three times the rate (50.3%) of white (14.5%), Hispanic (12.4%) and Asian (10.7%) women.Adequate prenatal birth care in the U.S. is critical to reversing preterm birth trends.Ratchat/iStock via Getty Images Plus
Preterm birth in context
Having a baby early is not the normal or expected outcome during pregnancy. It occurs due to complex genetic and environmental factors, which are exacerbated by inadequate prenatal care. According to the World Health Organization, women should have eight or more doctor visits during their pregnancy. Without adequate and quality prenatal care, the chances of reversing the preterm birth trends are slim. Yet in Texas, unequal access to prenatal care remains a huge cause for concern. As the March of Dimes report documents, women of color in Texas receive adequate prenatal care at vastly lower rates than do white women – a fact that holds true in several other states as well. In addition, Texas has the highest uninsured rate in the nation, with 17% of women uninsured for health coverage, compared with a national average of 8%. Nationwide, public health experts, community advocates and families are calling for comprehensive health insurance to help cover the costs of prenatal care, particularly for low-income families that primarily rely on Medicaid for childbirth. Cuts to funding for the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid outlined in the 2025 Budget Reconciliation Act make it likely that more Americans will lose access to care or see their health care costs balloon. But state-level action may help reduce access barriers. In Texas, for example, a set of laws passed in 2025 may help improve access to care before, during and after pregnancy. Texas legislators funded initiatives targeted at workforce development in rural areas – particularly for obstetrician-gynecologists, emergency physicians and nurses, women’s preventive safety net programs, and maternal safety and quality improvement initiatives. Rising rates of chronic diseases, such as hypertension, obesity and diabetes, also contribute to women giving birth prematurely. While working with the state maternal mortality and morbidity review committee, my team and I found that cardiovascular conditions contributed to the 85 pregnancy-related deaths that occurred in 2020. An upward trend in obesity, diabetes and hypertension before pregnancy are pressing issues in the state, posing a serious threat to fetal and maternal health.
Is Hormone Replacement Therapy Safe? What the FDA’s New Decision Means for Menopause Treatment
For more than 20 years, hormone replacement therapy for menopause has carried a warning label from the Food and Drug Administration describing the medication’s risk of serious harms – namely, cancer, cardiovascular disease and possibly dementia.
I treat menopause and its symptoms, and hormone replacement therapy can help – here’s the science behind the FDA’s decision to remove warnings
Genevieve Hofmann, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical CampusFor more than 20 years, hormone therapy for menopause has carried a warning label from the Food and Drug Administration describing the medication’s risk of serious harms – namely, cancer, cardiovascular disease and possibly dementia.On Nov. 10, 2025, the FDA announced that drugmakers should remove these “black box” safety warnings.The Conversation U.S. asked Genevieve Hofmann, a women’s health nurse practitioner at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, to explain how the decision will affect health care for people going through menopause or postmenopause.
How did the FDA’s decision come about?
When people think of hormone therapy for menopause, they generally think of systemic estrogen and progestogens – for example, pills or patches that deliver hormones throughout the body. Health care providers prescribed hormone therapy to manage symptoms of menopause such as hot flashes, night sweats and brain fog much more widely in the 1980s and 1990s than they do today. That’s because in the early 2000s, researchers analyzed data from a study called the Women’s Health Initiative and reported that hormone therapy increased the risk of breast cancer, heart disease, blood clots and stroke, as well as cognitive decline after menopause. After this research was first published in 2002, the use of hormone therapy fell by 46% within six months – both because clinicians were reluctant to prescribe it and patients were fearful of taking it. In 2003, the FDA added black box warnings – the most serious warnings, indicating a risk of serious harm or death – to all estrogen-containing hormone products for menopause.The FDA announced on Nov. 10, 2025, that it will ask drug companies to remove ‘black box’ warnings from hormone therapy for menopause. But researchers soon pointed out methodological flaws in the analysis. And over the past two decades, careful reanalyses of data from that study, as well as newer studies, have shown that systemic hormone therapy is very safe for most women, though there are nuances surrounding its use. Meanwhile, women’s health experts have been increasingly vocal in the past five years in calling to remove the black box warnings from a form of hormone menopause therapy that’s applied locally, not systemically. Topical localized estrogen is applied directly to the vagina and surrounding areas, usually in the form of a cream or vaginal insert. It’s used to treat the genitourinary syndrome of menopause, which manifests as genital and urinary symptoms. Even though topical estrogen products are extremely safe and were not evaluated in the Women’s Health Initiative study, the FDA warnings were added to them, too. In July 2025, the FDA held an expert panel to discuss what’s currently known about the risks and benefits of hormone therapy for menopause. At the meeting, most experts urged the agency to remove the warning labels on topical vaginal estrogen products. The Nov. 10 announcement was the outcome of that discussion, and it included both systemic and topical hormone therapy.
Why is systemic estrogen no longer considered unsafe?
Researchers are now finding that the balance of risks and benefits of systemic hormone therapy for menopause seems to depend strongly on when someone starts hormones, as well as the type, dose and length of use. For women under 60 or within 10 years of their final period, the therapy is much safer than it is for older women. A 2017 follow-up of Women’s Health Initiative participants showed that overall deaths from any causes actually decreased in this younger cohort of menopausal women taking hormones. For women who are more than 10 years from their final menstrual period, starting hormone therapy may increase their risk of cardiovascular disease. Researchers now refer to this as the timing hypothesis. Newer studies also support this idea. Also, some ways of delivering hormones to the body turned out to be safer than others. Taking estrogen orally, as pills or tablets, carries a higher risk of blood clots. Those risks go away when it’s delivered through the skin using a patch, gel or spray. Many more options for hormone therapy exist today than in the early 2000s. Additionally, it’s well established that hormone therapy improves bone health by preventing bone loss. Some studies suggest that in younger menopausal women, it may actually protect against cardiovascular disease, though this link is not yet proven and needs more study. Unfortunately, many people missed out on the timing window. In my practice, I see patients who went through menopause 10 or 15 years ago and either didn’t get hormone therapy at the time or stopped taking it when the initial Women’s Health Initiative results came out. Now, they are hearing about the benefits, and many want to try it. But their higher cardiovascular risk may overshadow the benefit.
What about topical estrogen?
Genitourinary syndrome of menopause is ubiquitous – it affects every person with ovaries who goes through menopause, and the symptoms tend to worsen with age. They include vaginal dryness, painful sex and urinary issues such as an increase in urgency or frequency, along with incontinence. Urinary tract infections often tend to get more frequent with menopause, particularly in older women. Treating them can require multiple courses of antibiotics. Tissues in the genitourinary area are loaded with estrogen receptors – proteins in cells that bind the hormone. So adding some estrogen back to these areas can help restore the quality and thickness of these tissues, and possibly even promote the growth of healthy bacteria around the vagina and the urinary tract. The treatment can greatly improve quality of life and promote better health and longevity. Despite topical estrogen’s safety and effectiveness, the FDA did not distinguish between it and systemic estrogen when adding the black box warnings in 2003. For this reason, many providers whose patients have symptoms relating to the genitourinary syndrome of menopause have been reluctant to prescribe it. Often, providers simply don’t know that it has a different safety profile than systemic estrogen.
How will removing the black box warnings affect patients?
Overall, I see this as a big win for women and their ability to manage the symptoms of menopause. I think this will make clinicians and patients far less anxious about prescribing and taking this medication. Clinicians like me who specialize in women’s health and menopause – and who have been following the research – have been safely prescribing hormone therapy all along. But many general practitioners who often lacked either menopause-specific training or the time and resources to stay on top of the latest findings have been more reluctant to do so. Safety concerns that led to the black box warnings, especially in regard to local vaginal estrogen, have turned out to be overblown. While clinicians still need to consider who is a good candidate for systemic hormone use, the evidence shows that for most people, it is a safe option. Even more important, patients who were previously convinced that hormone therapy was unsafe may feel more comfortable discussing it with their provider and considering it. And if they do receive a prescription for hormone therapy, I hope that the likelihood of them starting this effective treatment is no longer hindered by reading a scary package insert that was based on outdated evidence. While this medication is not a silver bullet that reverses aging, starting hormones at the right time can safely improve symptoms that diminish people’s quality of life. So if you’re having symptoms that are bothersome, consider asking your provider about menopause hormone therapy to help manage them. Genevieve Hofmann, Assistant Professor of Nursing and Women’s Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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Portrait Of Smiling Female Doctor Wearing White Coat With Stethoscope In Hospital Office
Black Women’s Health Imperative Applauds USPSTF Guidelines—but Warns More Needed
A Shift in Screening Policy
In 2024, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) revised its breast cancer screening guidelines. Women at average risk are now advised to begin mammograms at age 40 instead of 50, with screenings every two years through age 74.
This update reflects rising rates of breast cancer among women in their 40s and new data showing earlier detection can save lives.
“Lowering the starting age to 40 is progress—but it doesn’t go far enough for Black women.” – BWHI Statement
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Why Black Women Are Calling for More
The Black Women’s Health Imperative (BWHI) welcomed the shift but voiced frustration that the guidelines still fall short in addressing the unique risks facing Black women.
•Younger onset: Black women are more likely to be diagnosed in their 30s and 40s.
•More aggressive cancers: Subtypes like triple-negative breast cancer appear disproportionately among Black women.
•Higher mortality: Despite similar or lower incidence compared to white women, Black women die at higher rates from breast cancer.
BWHI believes annual screening—not biennial—is necessary for many Black women to catch cancers earlier.
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Data Spotlight
•CDC data (2024): Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death among Black women under 45.
•Young women (20–44): Black women are almost twice as likely as white women to develop triple-negative breast cancer.
•Survival gaps: Later-stage diagnoses and unequal treatment access contribute to worse outcomes.
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Limitations of the New Guidelines
The Task Force’s recommendations are based on population averages. That means:
•Screening remains every other year, not annually.
•No risk-stratified guidance for groups with higher risks (like Black women).
•Evidence gaps remain for dense breasts, older women (75+), and genetic or familial risk groups.
BWHI’s Next Steps
The Black Women’s Health Imperative is pushing for:
Annual screening for Black women and those at higher risk.
Expanded research inclusive of Black women, focusing on biology, environment, and social determinants.
Access equity: Ensuring insurance and care coverage for earlier and more frequent screening.
Community outreach: Educating women about risks, symptoms, and when to request screening—even before age 40 if family history suggests it.
Beyond Screening: Closing the Care Gap
Detection is only part of the story. Research shows Black women face delays in follow-up testing and treatment after an abnormal mammogram, plus systemic inequities in access to newer therapies.
BWHI stresses that improving screening access without treatment equity risks leaving the mortality gap unchanged.
📊 Suggested Graphic: “Screening to Survival Pathway” – Detection ➝ Diagnosis ➝ Treatment ➝ Survival, with gaps highlighted for Black women.
More is Needed
The new USPSTF guidelines are a step in the right direction—but for Black women, they don’t go far enough. Earlier and more frequent screening, combined with equitable access to treatment and stronger community education, is essential.
As BWHI notes, real progress will come only when screening policies reflect the lived realities of Black women and the healthcare system commits to closing the gaps in both research and care.
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