Print Departments and specialties Mayo Clinic has one of the largest and most experienced practices in the United States, with campuses in Arizona, Florida and Minnesota. Staff skilled in dozens of specialties work together to ensure quality care and successful recovery. Departments that treat this condition Breast and Melanoma Surgical Oncology in Rochester Breast Cancer Surgery Program in Jacksonville Breast Clinic Cancer Care at Mayo Clinic Oncology (Medical) Radiation Oncology By Mayo Clinic Staff Request an appointment Diagnosis & treatment July 19, 2024 Print Living with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)? Connect with others like you for support and answers to your questions in the Breast Cancer support group on Mayo Clinic Connect, a patient community. Breast Cancer Discussions Anastrazole and anxiety 131 Replies Thu, Apr 23, 2026 chevron-right Signatera Test. Is it truly helpful and worthwhile? 122 Replies Wed, Apr 22, 2026 chevron-right Tamoxifen and Fibromyalgia 22 Replies Thu, Apr 16, 2026 chevron-right See more discussions Related Associated Procedures Breast biopsy Breast cancer supportive therapy and survivorship Breast cancer surgery Breast MRI Lumpectomy Mastectomy MRI Needle biopsy Nipple-sparing mastectomy Radiation therapy Radiation therapy for breast cancer Ultrasound Show more associated procedures Products & Services A Book: Beyond Breast Cancer A Book: Mayo Clinic Family Health Book Newsletter: Mayo Clinic Health Letter — Digital Edition Show more products and services from Mayo Clinic Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)Symptoms&causesDiagnosis&treatmentDoctors&departments Research: It's all about patients Show transcript for video Research: It's all about patients [MUSIC PLAYING] Joseph Sirven, M.D., Professor of Neurology, Mayo Clinic: Mayo's mission is about the patient. The patient comes first. So the mission and research here is to advance how we can best help the patient, how to make sure the patient comes first in care. So in many ways, it's a cycle. It can start with as simple as an idea worked on in a laboratory, brought to the patient bedside, and if everything goes right — and let's say it's helpful or beneficial — then brought on as a standard approach. And I think that is one of the unique characteristics of Mayo's approach to research — that patient-centeredness — that really helps to put it in its own spotlight. CON-20371874 Diseases & Conditions Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS)