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 Product Name+   Description 
 Cancer Doesn't Have to Cost You Your Fertility (HealthDay)   Cancer treatment advances are giving younger patients the chance to preserve their fertility, enabling them to start families at a future date, a new review states. 
 Cancer Survivors Face Future Risk (HealthDay)   The ever-improving treatments that are successfully helping cancer patients are also increasing the risk they will live long enough to develop second cancers, a study sponsored by the National Cancer Institute indicates. 
 Chemotherapy Can Replace Radiation for One Type of Testicular Cancer (American Cancer Society)   <b>Summary:</b> A large European study of men with stage I seminoma, a form of testicular cancer, has shown that treating them with a single injection of the drug carboplatin prevents recurrence just as well as radiation therapy. The study app 
 Fathering Children May Be a Problem for Testicular Cancer Survivors (American Cancer Society)   Although treatment will cure most men with testicular cancer, it can leave as many as one-third of them sterile, according to French researchers. Men facing this disease should be counseled to consider banking their sperm for future use, they wrote in the 
 Health Tip: Are You at Risk for Testicular Cancer? (HealthDay)   Testicular cancer, which usually strikes men ages 15 to 34, is one of the most common tumors seen in men under age 40, according to Seton Hall University in New Jersey. 
 Health Tip: Prevent Testicular Cancer (HealthDay)   Testicular tumors are among the more common cancers occurring in men under 40. Seton Hall University in New Jersey advises men to conduct regular self-examinations. Here's how: 
 Metabolic Syndrome Plagues Some Who Survive Testicular Cancer (HealthDay)   In some ways, a measure of success sought by cancer doctors is to see their patients live long enough to develop other health problems. 
 Testicular Cancer Survivors Have Higher Rates of Other Cancers (American Cancer Society)   <b>Summary:</b> Testicular cancer survivors have about twice the risk of developing some other form of cancer in their lifetime than men who never had testicular cancer, according to a study in the <i>Journal of the National Cancer Insti 
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