Most women get uterine fibroids. This researcher wants to know why

Painful experience has taught Erika Moore that benign doesn’t always mean harmless. Moore, a biomedical engineer at the University of Maryland in College Park, lives with noncancerous tumors in the uterus called uterine fibroids. “That’s what drew me in to wanting to understand these diseases and try to make not only my life better, but the lives of my loved ones better too,” she says.

Uterine fibroids can cause anemia, pain, reproductive issues and heavy or irregular menstrual bleeding. An estimated 70 percent of white women and 80 percent of Black women in the United States will develop uterine fibroids by age 50. Moore is dedicated to finding the

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