Morning Overview on MSN
Ocean sugars can trigger cancer cells to self-destruct, study suggests
From the deep sea to the shallow seafloor, researchers are uncovering unusual sugars that do something extraordinary to ...
Researchers found in mice that multiple nutrients and cancer cell characteristics work together to control the spread of ...
A study led by researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center found that normal cells surrounding a tumor, known as cancer-associated ...
Researchers have unlocked a way to grow the immune system’s “conductors” from stem cells, bringing ready-made cancer-fighting therapies a big step closer. For the first time, scientists at the Univers ...
Tumours have developed many strategies and tricks to gain advantages in the body. Led by cell biology professor Sabine Werner, researchers at ETH Zurich have now discovered another surprising trick ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Why cancer returns years later, and how we can stop it
Cancer’s cruelest trick is its ability to disappear, only to reappear years later in a new organ or a familiar scar. The fear ...
Scientists are looking for answers about how these confounding trips, known as metastases, occur throughout the human body Illustration of a human cancer cell Amber Dance, Knowable Magazine Back in ...
Researchers are targeting dormant tumour cells that might explain why some cancers reappear long after successful treatment.
Subcutaneous immunotherapy injections work the same way as their intravenous counterparts — by changing or enhancing a person’s immune responses to cancer. Immunotherapy for cancer is a broad category ...
Cancer cells can brainwash their neighbors. Like the CIA deploying secret agents to turn an enemy, tumors use a similar strategy to manipulate nearby cells. The tumors’ agents are mitochondria, the ...
Breast cancer can spread—or metastasize—to many different parts of the body, but it's not well understood why tumors grow ...
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