Scientists have found a new way to stop cancer growth without damaging healthy cells. Researchers from the Francis Crick Institute and Vividion Therapeutics discovered a compound that blocks the ...
Researchers found that triple-negative breast cancer cells are “addicted” to lipids, a feature tied to obesity. By studying ...
News Medical on MSN
Researchers engineer a tool to dismantle cancer's RNA-built growth hubs
In a city, coworking hubs bring people and ideas together. Inside cancer cells, similar hubs form-but instead of fueling progress, they supercharge disease. That's what researchers at the Texas A&M ...
A targeted cancer drug niraparib, used in combination with hormone therapy, was found to reduce the risk of prostate tumor ...
Cancer cases and deaths are projected to surge in the coming decades with low and middle-income countries expected to bear a ...
Scientists have developed compounds that selectively block a crucial interaction between RAS and the enzyme PI3K, a driver of tumor growth. Scientists from the Francis Crick Institute and Vividion The ...
Early studies on mice suggest these diets may hinder some people with obesity fighting triple-negative breast cancer.
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Acidic tumor environment promotes survival and growth of pancreatic cancer cells, study shows
Tumors are not a comfortable place to live: oxygen deficiency, nutrient scarcity, and the accumulation of sometimes harmful ...
News-Medical.Net on MSN
Fatty acids found to be a primary driver of triple-negative tumor growth
A team from Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah (the U) has found that triple-negative breast cancer is ...
Researchers have identified how to encourage tumors to build their own immune hubs—structures that look and function like lymph nodes—deep in the middle of cancer. Such immune hubs, known as tertiary ...
The Brighterside of News on MSN
New drug combination stops prostate cancer growth in phase 3 clinical trial
An international study reports that the combination of two drugs could significantly retard the development of a dangerous ...
Cancer cells are known to reawaken embryonic genes to grow. A new study reveals the disease also hijacks the proteins, or "editors," that control how those genes are read.
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