Stopping smoking makes cancer treatments more effective, lessens treatment complications, and decreases the chances of cancer returning.
Whether for screenings, diagnosis, or treatment for yourself or someone you care about, Yale Cancer Center offers multidisciplinary care.
A sentinel lymph node biopsy is a procedure to determine whether cancer has spread to the lymph nodes. Learn about this procedure.
Chemotherapy uses drugs that kill cancer cells or stop them from multiplying. Learn more about this treatment.
Fatigue is a common side effect of treatment for cancer. Learn more about symptoms and treatment.
A type of cancer that starts in the liver and can cause stomach pain and swelling and jaundice.
Stomach cancer develops when malignant cells begin to grow somewhere in the five layers that form the stomach lining. Learn about symptoms and treatment.
“Tobacco cessation“ is another term for quitting smoking.
Tobacco dependence treatment and research are priorities at Yale Medicine; we offer new therapies and clinical trials to help people quit smoking.
Pediatric cancer surgery is a procedure to remove a cancerous tumor and the surrounding tissue in children. Learn about this procedure.