Hormone Therapy With or Without Combination Chemotherapy in Treating Node-Negative Breast Cancer (The TAILORx Trial)
Status: | Active, not recruiting |
---|---|
Conditions: | Breast Cancer, Cancer |
Therapuetic Areas: | Oncology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 75 |
Updated: | 3/14/2019 |
Start Date: | April 7, 2006 |
End Date: | September 9, 2030 |
Program for the Assessment of Clinical Cancer Tests (PACCT-1): Trial Assigning Individualized Options for Treatment:The TAILORx Trial
This randomized phase III trial studies the best individual therapy for women who have
node-negative, estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer by using a special test (Oncotype
DX), and whether hormone therapy alone or hormone therapy together with combination
chemotherapy is better for women who have an Oncotype DX recurrence score of 11-25. Estrogen
can cause the growth of breast cancer cells. Hormone therapy may fight breast cancer by
blocking the use of estrogen by the tumor cells or by lowering the amount of estrogen the
body makes. Drugs used in chemotherapy work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor
cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from
spreading. Giving hormone therapy together with more than one chemotherapy drug (combination
chemotherapy) has been shown to reduce the chance of breast cancer recurrence, but the
benefit of adding chemotherapy to hormone therapy for women with node-negative,
estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer is small. New tests may provide information about
which patients are more likely to benefit from chemotherapy.
node-negative, estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer by using a special test (Oncotype
DX), and whether hormone therapy alone or hormone therapy together with combination
chemotherapy is better for women who have an Oncotype DX recurrence score of 11-25. Estrogen
can cause the growth of breast cancer cells. Hormone therapy may fight breast cancer by
blocking the use of estrogen by the tumor cells or by lowering the amount of estrogen the
body makes. Drugs used in chemotherapy work in different ways to stop the growth of tumor
cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from
spreading. Giving hormone therapy together with more than one chemotherapy drug (combination
chemotherapy) has been shown to reduce the chance of breast cancer recurrence, but the
benefit of adding chemotherapy to hormone therapy for women with node-negative,
estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer is small. New tests may provide information about
which patients are more likely to benefit from chemotherapy.
PRIMARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To determine whether adjuvant hormonal therapy is not inferior to adjuvant chemohormonal
in women whose tumors meet established clinical guidelines for adjuvant chemotherapy and fall
in the "primary study group" category (Oncotype DX Recurrence Score 11-25).
II. To create a tissue and specimen bank for patients enrolled in this trial, including
formalin fixed paraffin embedded tumor specimens, tissue microarrays, plasma, and
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) obtained from peripheral blood.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To determine whether adjuvant hormonal therapy is sufficient treatment (i.e. 10 year
distant disease-free survival of at least 95%) for women whose tumors meet established
clinical guidelines for adjuvant chemotherapy and who fall into the "Secondary Study Group-1"
category (Oncotype DX Recurrence Score =< 10).
II. To compare the outcomes projected at 10 years by Adjuvant (with outcomes projected using
classical pathologic information including tumor size, hormone receptor status, and
histologic grade) with those made by the Genomic Health Oncotype DX test. Classical
pathologic information and outcome results will also be used to create and refine models that
would use classical information instead of or in combination with genomic tests.
III. To estimate failure rates as a function of recurrence score (RS) separately in the
chemotherapy (arms C, D) and no chemotherapy (arms A, B) groups. The purpose of the analysis
is to develop more precise estimates of the relationship between recurrence score and
chemotherapy treatment effect, if any, at the upper range of the RS 11 - 25 group.
IV. To determine the prognostic significance of the Oncotype DX recurrence score and of the
individual RS gene groups (proliferation gene group, human epidermal growth factor receptor
[HER]2 gene group, estrogen receptor [ER] gene group, invasion gene group, and other genes).
TERTIARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To evaluate the effects of chemotherapy and hormonal therapy vs hormonal therapy alone on
perceived cognitive impairment, fatigue, fear of recurrence among pre-menopausal patients,
endocrine symptoms and sexual dysfunction, and overall health-related quality of life (HRQL).
II. To determine whether perceived cognitive impairment, fatigue, fear of recurrence,
endocrine symptoms, and overall HRQL are similar for patients receiving chemotherapy plus
hormonal therapy in secondary study group 2 as for those in the primary study group (arm D vs
C).
III. To determine whether perceived cognitive impairment, fatigue, fear of recurrence,
endocrine symptoms, and overall HRQL are similar for patients receiving hormonal therapy
alone in secondary study group 1 as for those in the primary study group (arms A vs B).
IV. To determine whether age will be inversely associated with a fear of recurrence,
independent of treatment assignment.
V. Among participants receiving hormonal treatment alone on arm A and arm B, to determine
whether Oncotype DX Recurrence score will be inversely correlated with fear of recurrence.
VI. To create a biospecimen repository including plasma, serum and CellSearch cassettes
containing circulating tumor cells (CTC) for evaluating determinants of late relapse,
including candidate biomarkers reflecting occult tumor burden (e.g., CTCs and plasma tumor
DNA) and host factors (e.g., estrogen, insulin growth factor-[IGF] axis, inflammation, etc).
VII. To create a biorepository of metastatic tumor samples in patients who have had a late
relapse.
VIII. To determine body mass index (BMI) and comorbidity burden in patients with operable
breast cancer five or more years after diagnosis.
IX. To determine whether there is a relationship between late relapse and BMI at diagnosis
and at 5 years after diagnosis, and whether BMI-associated inflammatory and/or metabolic
biomarkers are associated with early and late recurrence.
OUTLINE: This is a partially randomized study. Patients are assigned to 1 of 3 treatment
groups.
GROUP 1 (SECONDARY STUDY GROUP 1; ONCOTYPE DX RECURRENCE SCORE [ODRS] =< 10): Patients
receive standard hormonal therapy (e.g., tamoxifen alone orally (PO), aromatase inhibitor
[e.g., anastrozole, letrozole, or exemestane] alone PO, or tamoxifen PO followed by aromatase
inhibitor PO) at the discretion of the treating physician for 5 or 10 years (Arm A).
GROUP 2 (PRIMARY STUDY GROUP; ODRS 11-25): Patients are randomized to receive either hormonal
therapy alone (Arm B) or combination chemotherapy and hormonal therapy (Arm C).
Arm B (EXPERIMENTAL): Patients receive hormonal therapy as in Group 1 at the discretion of
the treating physician.
Arm C (STANDARD): Patients receive standard combination chemotherapy at the discretion of the
treating physician. Within 4 weeks after the last dose of chemotherapy, patients receive
hormonal therapy as in Group 1 at the discretion of the treating physician.
GROUP 3 (SECONDARY STUDY GROUP 2; ODRS >= 26): Patients receive combination chemotherapy as
in Group 2, Arm C followed by hormonal therapy as in Group 1. (Arm D)
Patients in all groups who have had breast-conservation surgery are also treated with
radiotherapy. Radiotherapy should begin within 4 weeks of registration for patients receiving
hormonal therapy alone or within 8 weeks after completion of chemotherapy. Patients
participating in National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) and/or Radiation
Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) partial irradiation trial(s) may receive partial breast
radiation.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: 11248 patients
FOLLOW UP: After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 3-6 months for
5 years and then annually up to 20 years.
I. To determine whether adjuvant hormonal therapy is not inferior to adjuvant chemohormonal
in women whose tumors meet established clinical guidelines for adjuvant chemotherapy and fall
in the "primary study group" category (Oncotype DX Recurrence Score 11-25).
II. To create a tissue and specimen bank for patients enrolled in this trial, including
formalin fixed paraffin embedded tumor specimens, tissue microarrays, plasma, and
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) obtained from peripheral blood.
SECONDARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To determine whether adjuvant hormonal therapy is sufficient treatment (i.e. 10 year
distant disease-free survival of at least 95%) for women whose tumors meet established
clinical guidelines for adjuvant chemotherapy and who fall into the "Secondary Study Group-1"
category (Oncotype DX Recurrence Score =< 10).
II. To compare the outcomes projected at 10 years by Adjuvant (with outcomes projected using
classical pathologic information including tumor size, hormone receptor status, and
histologic grade) with those made by the Genomic Health Oncotype DX test. Classical
pathologic information and outcome results will also be used to create and refine models that
would use classical information instead of or in combination with genomic tests.
III. To estimate failure rates as a function of recurrence score (RS) separately in the
chemotherapy (arms C, D) and no chemotherapy (arms A, B) groups. The purpose of the analysis
is to develop more precise estimates of the relationship between recurrence score and
chemotherapy treatment effect, if any, at the upper range of the RS 11 - 25 group.
IV. To determine the prognostic significance of the Oncotype DX recurrence score and of the
individual RS gene groups (proliferation gene group, human epidermal growth factor receptor
[HER]2 gene group, estrogen receptor [ER] gene group, invasion gene group, and other genes).
TERTIARY OBJECTIVES:
I. To evaluate the effects of chemotherapy and hormonal therapy vs hormonal therapy alone on
perceived cognitive impairment, fatigue, fear of recurrence among pre-menopausal patients,
endocrine symptoms and sexual dysfunction, and overall health-related quality of life (HRQL).
II. To determine whether perceived cognitive impairment, fatigue, fear of recurrence,
endocrine symptoms, and overall HRQL are similar for patients receiving chemotherapy plus
hormonal therapy in secondary study group 2 as for those in the primary study group (arm D vs
C).
III. To determine whether perceived cognitive impairment, fatigue, fear of recurrence,
endocrine symptoms, and overall HRQL are similar for patients receiving hormonal therapy
alone in secondary study group 1 as for those in the primary study group (arms A vs B).
IV. To determine whether age will be inversely associated with a fear of recurrence,
independent of treatment assignment.
V. Among participants receiving hormonal treatment alone on arm A and arm B, to determine
whether Oncotype DX Recurrence score will be inversely correlated with fear of recurrence.
VI. To create a biospecimen repository including plasma, serum and CellSearch cassettes
containing circulating tumor cells (CTC) for evaluating determinants of late relapse,
including candidate biomarkers reflecting occult tumor burden (e.g., CTCs and plasma tumor
DNA) and host factors (e.g., estrogen, insulin growth factor-[IGF] axis, inflammation, etc).
VII. To create a biorepository of metastatic tumor samples in patients who have had a late
relapse.
VIII. To determine body mass index (BMI) and comorbidity burden in patients with operable
breast cancer five or more years after diagnosis.
IX. To determine whether there is a relationship between late relapse and BMI at diagnosis
and at 5 years after diagnosis, and whether BMI-associated inflammatory and/or metabolic
biomarkers are associated with early and late recurrence.
OUTLINE: This is a partially randomized study. Patients are assigned to 1 of 3 treatment
groups.
GROUP 1 (SECONDARY STUDY GROUP 1; ONCOTYPE DX RECURRENCE SCORE [ODRS] =< 10): Patients
receive standard hormonal therapy (e.g., tamoxifen alone orally (PO), aromatase inhibitor
[e.g., anastrozole, letrozole, or exemestane] alone PO, or tamoxifen PO followed by aromatase
inhibitor PO) at the discretion of the treating physician for 5 or 10 years (Arm A).
GROUP 2 (PRIMARY STUDY GROUP; ODRS 11-25): Patients are randomized to receive either hormonal
therapy alone (Arm B) or combination chemotherapy and hormonal therapy (Arm C).
Arm B (EXPERIMENTAL): Patients receive hormonal therapy as in Group 1 at the discretion of
the treating physician.
Arm C (STANDARD): Patients receive standard combination chemotherapy at the discretion of the
treating physician. Within 4 weeks after the last dose of chemotherapy, patients receive
hormonal therapy as in Group 1 at the discretion of the treating physician.
GROUP 3 (SECONDARY STUDY GROUP 2; ODRS >= 26): Patients receive combination chemotherapy as
in Group 2, Arm C followed by hormonal therapy as in Group 1. (Arm D)
Patients in all groups who have had breast-conservation surgery are also treated with
radiotherapy. Radiotherapy should begin within 4 weeks of registration for patients receiving
hormonal therapy alone or within 8 weeks after completion of chemotherapy. Patients
participating in National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project (NSABP) and/or Radiation
Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) partial irradiation trial(s) may receive partial breast
radiation.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: 11248 patients
FOLLOW UP: After completion of study treatment, patients are followed up every 3-6 months for
5 years and then annually up to 20 years.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients with operable histologically confirmed adenocarcinoma of the female breast
who have completed primary surgical treatment and meet the following criteria:
- ER and/or progesterone receptor (PR)-positive: Estrogen and/or progesterone
receptor positive disease (as defined by local pathology laboratory)
- Negative axillary nodes: As assessed by a sentinel lymph node biopsy, an axillary
dissection, or both, and as defined by the Sixth Edition of the American Joint
Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging criteria
- Tumor size 1.1-5.0 cm (or 5 mm-1.0 cm plus unfavorable histological features):
- Unfavorable features defined as intermediate or poor nuclear and/or
histologic grade, or lymphovascular invasion
- NOTE: Definition of tumor size: The tumor size used for determination of
eligibility is the pathologic tumor size, which is usually determined by the
size of the tumor as measured by inspection of the gross specimen; if the
tumor size is measured microscopically and the tumor includes ductal
carcinoma in-situ, the measurement should include only the invasive
component of the tumor
- The tumor must be human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (Her2)/neu negative by
either fluorescent in-situ hybridization (FISH) or immunohistochemistry (e.g. 0
or 1+ by DAKO Herceptest)
- The patient and physician must be agreeable to initiate standard chemotherapy and
hormonal therapy as adjuvant therapy
- A tissue specimen from the primary breast cancer has been located and is ready to be
shipped to the appropriate laboratory after consent is obtained and within 3 days
following pre-registration; NOTE: For determination of the Oncotype Recurrence Score,
tissue must be shipped to Genomic Health; if the Oncotype DX Recurrence Score was
previously performed by Genomic Health (prior to pre-registration), tissue must be
submitted to the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG)-American College of
Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) Central Biorepository and Pathology Facility upon
randomization
- Leukocyte count >= 3500/mm^3
- Platelets >= 100,000/mm^3
- Serum creatinine =< 1.5 mg/dL
- Serum aspartate transaminase (AST) that is =< 3-fold the upper institutional limits of
normal
- Patients must be disease-free of prior invasive malignancies for >= 5 years with the
exception of curatively-treated basal cell or squamous cell carcinoma of the skin or
carcinoma in situ of the cervix; patients with a previous ipsilateral or contralateral
invasive breast cancer, or with bilateral synchronous cancers, are not eligible;
patients with previous ipsilateral or contralateral ductal in situ carcinoma (DCIS)
are not eligible
- Prior treatment
- Mandatory prior surgery criteria:
- Patient must pre-register within 84 days from the final surgical procedure
required to adequately treat the primary tumor (please note that if margins
are not clear and a resection has to be conducted after pre-registration but
before randomization, the patient will be deemed to be within the 84 day
window allowed by protocol and therefore eligible)
- All tumors should be removed by either a mastectomy or local excision plus
an acceptable axillary procedure (i.e., sentinel lymph node biopsy, axillary
dissection, or both); there must be adequate (at least 1 mm if margin width
specified) tumor-free margins of resection (for invasive and ductal
carcinoma in-situ) in order for the patients to be eligible; patients with
lobular carcinoma in-situ involving the resection margins are eligible
- Criteria re: other prior treatments:
- No prior chemotherapy for this malignancy
- No prior radiation therapy for this malignancy; this includes no prior
MammoSite Brachytherapy radiation therapy (RT)
- Hormonal therapy: Patients who develop breast cancer while receiving a
selective estrogen-receptor modulator (SERM; e.g., tamoxifen, toremifene,
raloxifene) or an aromatase inhibitor (e.g., anastrazole, letrozole,
exemestane) for breast cancer prevention or a SERM for other indications
(e.g., raloxifene for osteoporosis) are not eligible; however, patients may
have received up to 8 weeks of a SERM or aromatase inhibitor for this
malignancy and still be eligible for study entry
- Patients must have an anticipated life expectancy of at least 10 years
- Women must not be pregnant or breast-feeding; all females of childbearing potential
must have a blood test or urine study within 2 weeks prior to pre-registration to rule
out pregnancy
- Women of childbearing potential must be strongly advised to utilize an accepted
and effective form of non-hormonal contraception (e.g. intrauterine device,
condoms, diaphragm, abstinence)
- Patients must not have previously had the Oncotype DX Assay performed, with the
exception of patients who have had the assay performed and have a recurrence score of
11-25
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients with the following medical conditions should not be enrolled on the study:
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease requiring treatment
- Chronic liver disease (e.g., cirrhosis, chronic active hepatitis)
- Previous history of a cerebrovascular accident
- History of congestive heart failure or other cardiac disease that would represent
a contraindication to the use of an anthracycline (e.g., doxorubicin or
epirubicin)
- Chronic psychiatric condition or other condition that would impair compliance
with the treatment regimen
We found this trial at
1161
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1201 Camino de Salud Northeast
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131
Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131
(505) 272-4946
University of New Mexico Cancer Center It’s been 40 years since the New Mexico State...
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Harold Alfond Center for Cancer Care MaineGeneral's Harold Alfond Center for Cancer Care (HACCC) is...
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Tufts Medical Center Tufts Medical Center is an internationally-respected academic medical center – a teaching...
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Roswell Park Cancer Institute Welcome to Roswell Park Cancer Institute (RPCI), America's first cancer center...
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1 South Prospect Street
Burlington, Vermont 05401
Burlington, Vermont 05401
802-656-8990
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1300 Jefferson Park Avenue
Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
Charlottesville, Virginia 22908
434-243-6784
University of Virginia Cancer Center We are fortunate in having state of the art clinical...
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166 Stoneridge Drive
Columbia, South Carolina 29210
Columbia, South Carolina 29210
803-461-3000
South Carolina Oncology Associates, PA South Carolina Oncology Associates (SCOA) is the only comprehensive cancer...
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Medical City Dallas Hospital If you have concerns for your health, that of a family...
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City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center City of Hope is a leading research and treatment...
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Inova Fairfax Hospital Inova Fairfax Hospital, Inova's flagship hospital, is an 833-bed, nationally recognized regional...
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Hurley Medical Center From its founding in 1908, Hurley Medical Center has devoted itself to...
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Holy Cross Hospital While spirituality plays an essential role in the way that we minister...
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Brooke Army Medical Center Brooke Army Medical Center (BAMC) is the Flagship of Army Medicine!...
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University of Mississippi Medical Center The University of Mississippi Medical Center, located in Jackson, is...
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Bronson Methodist Hospital Our healthcare system serves patients and families throughout southwest Michigan and northern...
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West Michigan Cancer Center In 1994, Borgess Health Alliance and Bronson Healthcare Group opened the...
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1800 West Charleston Boulevard
Las Vegas, Nevada 89102
Las Vegas, Nevada 89102
(702) 383-2000
University Medical Center of Southern Nevada University Medical Center is dedicated to providing the highest...
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529 West Markham Street
Little Rock, Arkansas 72205
Little Rock, Arkansas 72205
(501) 686-7000
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in...
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Medical Center of Central Georgia Navicent Health is a designated Level I Trauma Center and...
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North Shore University Hospital North Shore-LIJ Health System includes 16 award-winning hospitals and nearly 400...
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4805 Northeast Glisan Street
Portland, Oregon 97213
Portland, Oregon 97213
(503) 215-1111
Providence Portland Medical Center We strive to give those we serve exceptional, compassionate health care...
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3181 Southwest Sam Jackson Park Road
Portland, Oregon 97239
Portland, Oregon 97239
503 494-8311
Oregon Health and Science University In 1887, the inaugural class of the University of Oregon...
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Rhode Island Hospital Founded in 1863, Rhode Island Hospital in Providence, RI, is a private,...
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401 College Street
Richmond, Virginia 23298
Richmond, Virginia 23298
(804) 828-0450
Virginia Commonwealth University Massey Cancer Center Founded in 1974, VCU Massey Cancer Center is a...
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University of Rochester The University of Rochester is one of the country's top-tier research universities....
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4502 Medical Drive
San Antonio, Texas 78284
San Antonio, Texas 78284
(210) 567-7000
University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio The University of Texas Health Science...
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Naval Medical Center - San Diego We are the largest and most comprehensive military healthcare...
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Avera Cancer Institute Avera, the health ministry of the Benedictine and Presentation Sisters, is a...
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601 South Sherman Street
Spokane, Washington 99202
Spokane, Washington 99202
(509) 228-1000
Cancer Care Northwest - Spokane South Cancer Care Northwest is the Inland Northwest’s premier cancer...
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Abington Memorial Hospital Abington Memorial Hospital (AMH) is a 665-bed, regional referral center and teaching...
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Bixby Medical Center ProMedica's Mission is to improve your health and well-being. Which is why,...
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170 North 1100 East
American Fork, Utah 84003
American Fork, Utah 84003
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Saint Joseph Mercy Hospital St. Joseph Mercy Ann Arbor Hospital is a 537-bed teaching hospital...
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1500 East Medical Center Drive
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109
800-865-1125
University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center The U-M Comprehensive Cancer Center's mission is the conquest...
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Randolph Hospital Since 1932, Randolph Hospital has been fortunate to employ dedicated and loyal personnel...
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Piedmont Hospital For more than a century, Piedmont Healthcare has been a recognized leader in...
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Northside Hospital Northside Hospital-Atlanta (in Sandy Springs) opened in 1970. The original facility had 250...
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Medical Center of Aurora At The Medical Center of Aurora and Centennial Medical Plaza patients...
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Rush - Copley Medical Center Rush-Copley is proud to be the leading provider of health...
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