In the news today: Byelections, Quebec premier, N.S. strike, New cancer study

A mammogram room is pictured inside the Regina Breast Health Centre in Regina on Monday, April 14, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeremy Simes

TORONTO - Cancer experts say a new study highlights the need for more support and screening of people who survived cancer as adolescents and young adults as they face an increased risk of getting cancer again later. 

Senior author Miranda Fidler-Benaoudia, a cancer epidemiologist at the University of Calgary and Cancer Care Alberta, said the research counted the development of new cancers — not recurrences of their original cancers — in Alberta patients who had first been diagnosed between the ages of 15 and 39.   

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