Cancer Center at St. Luke's - The O'Quinn Medical Tower 6624 Fannin, Suite 1185 Houston, TX 77030
Oncology Clinic, Melanoma Center, Outpatient Infusion & Radiation Center - Kirby Glen Center 2457 S. Braeswood Houston, TX 77030
How to Contact Us
For an appointment with a Cancer Center at St. Luke's physician or if you have cancer-related questions, call 832-355-7139.
Mammography Scheduling: 832-355-8159
To see a list of specific Cancer Center at St. Luke's specialists, click on a specialty area below or contact the Cancer Center at St. Luke's at: 832-355-7139
Pros and cons with "easier" prostate cancer surgery Last Updated: 2009-10-13 13:01:07 -0400 (Reuters Health) NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More and more men with prostate cancer who opt to have the organ surgically removed are choosing less invasive keyhole "prostatectomy" over the more traditional open or "radical" prostatectomy.
Program eases trauma of chemotherapy side effects Last Updated: 2009-10-13 16:08:30 -0400 (Reuters Health) WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When Michele VonGerichten started chemotherapy to treat her breast cancer, one of her big worries was that her newly bald head would distract attention as she tried to carry on with her marketing job.
Green tea may curb risk of some cancers Last Updated: 2009-10-13 10:00:38 -0400 (Reuters Health) NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Drinking green tea may lower your risk of developing certain blood cancers, but it will take about 5 cups a day, according to a study from Japan.
Inhaled steroids: more harm than good in COPD? Last Updated: 2009-10-13 15:01:07 -0400 (Reuters Health) NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In people who suffer from COPD, a progressive lung disease that makes it hard to breathe, adding an inhaled steroid to a so-called "long-acting beta-2 agonist" may do more harm than good, new research hints.
Green tea linked to less stomach cancer in women Last Updated: 2009-09-25 14:00:27 -0400 (Reuters Health) NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - As if you needed another reason to drink green tea: Japanese women, but not Japanese men, who regularly drink 5 or more cups daily appear about 20 percent less likely to develop stomach cancer, study findings hint.