For many women who thought they had beaten breast cancer, the news that it has roared back years later comes
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Is your melanoma hot enough for immunotherapy?
Melanomas tend to be “hot” or “cold” — if they’re hot, immunotherapy lights melanoma tumors like beacons for elimination by
Antibody therapy training phagocytes to destroy tumors now tested on patients
Developed by researchers at the University of Turku in Finland, an immunotherapeutic antibody therapy re-educates macrophages to activate passivated cytotoxic
How breast tissue stiffening promotes breast cancer development
A study provides new insight into how the stiffening of breast tissue plays a role in breast cancer development. By
Cancer comparison across species highlights new drug targets
Cancer genes in mucosal melanoma, a rare and poorly understood subtype of melanoma, have been compared in humans, dogs and
Sitting, watching TV linked to colorectal cancer risk before age 50, new study shows
A new study in JNCI Cancer Spectrum has identified a connection between prolonged time spent sitting while watching TV and
Researchers develop prostate cancer prediction tool that has unmatched accuracy
A team of researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and Keck School of Medicine at the
Mapping esophageal cancer genes leads to new drug targets
Mutations that cause esophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) have been mapped in unprecedented detail — unveiling that more than half could be
Opposite effect: Protein widely known to fight tumors also boosts cancer growth: Researchers find evidence that genome ‘guardian’ can stimulate cancer
Search for a description of “p53” and it becomes clear that this human protein is widely known for its cancer-fighting
New 3D imaging technique reveals how pancreatic cancers start
A new technique to study tissue samples in 3D has revealed that pancreatic cancers can start and grow in two