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coach wristlet purse rather than depending on symptoms, leads to better treatment."Breast cancer is a disease that takes seven years to come up," Finkielstein said. "It's not like you wake up one day and you have a lump. Early detection is a big deal in breast cancer."Unlike other cancers, there are no good animal models to study breast cancer. With the help of the Army of Women, a part of the Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation, women donate one gram of breast tissue at the Susan G. Komen for the Cure Tissue Bank at Indiana University. The tissue is then sent to Tech.The study does not just involve women who have had breast cancer; many volunteers are healthy woman who just want to contribute."It's not trivial," Finkielstein said. "I owe those volunteers everything because we use that tissue for our studies trying to pinpoint those genes."Finkielstein's research in the lab has seen her receive a myriad of awards: a Minority Scholar Award from the American Association for Cancer Research, a $1.1 million Faculty Early Career Development Award from the National Science Foundation, and private funding from the Avon Corporation and the Susan G. Komen Foundation.However, her work extends beyond test tubes. She also serves on the board of directors for the Virginia Breast Cancer Foundation as well as spends time educating women throughout Appalachia about the importance of regular mammograms."You'd think everyone would do it, but Montgomery County has the largest number of cases of breast cancer in all of Virginia," Finkielstein said. "We need to do a lot of work, not only at the bench."At the end of the interview,