Latest National Cancer Institute News | Page 3

Genetic risk factors identified for prostate cancer
Web resources bring new insight into COVID-19
UNSW academic awarded $1.5m grant for treatment of malignant melanoma
Novel PROTAC enhances its intracellular accumulation and protein knockdown
Baylor recruiting for study to observe COVID-19 in cancer patients
Tumour gene test could help to predict ovarian cancer prognosis
Ludwig Cancer Research study finds reprogramming of immune cells enhances effects of radiotherapy
Steep rise in skin cancer since 1960s
Typhoid’s relative may be key to curing disease
Ocean virus hijacks carbon-storing bacteria
Testing tuberculosis vaccine for COVID-19
Scientists double understanding of genetic risk of melanoma
Game theory suggests more efficient cancer therapy
Dawn-to-sunset fasting associated with anti-cancer proteins
Brain tumors trigger silencing of neuronal activity
Listening to your gut: A powerful new tool on microbiome and cell metabolism
Physics tool helps track cancer cell diversity
Study Reveals How Too Much Fluoride Causes Defects in Tooth Enamel
Molecular roadmap boosts fight against endometrial cancer
Cancer Council NSW awards $3.75M for research aiming to transform way ovarian cancer is treated
Lights Out Cancer gala raises more than $1 million for research
Study takes on e-cigarette warning ‘paradox’
Discoveries detail role of stem cell in deadly gastric cancer
Oracle Health Sciences Participates in TOP Tech Sprint
Cancer associated with a more than doubled risk of dying from stroke
Factors linked to poor treatment outcomes in ALL
$7.6 million funds center to fight cancer disparities in Missouri, Illinois
$3.7 million supports crowdsourced database of cancer genomics
Scientists have first 3D view of life’s processes in liquid
Brown School researchers begin low-income smoker study
Papillomaviruses may be able to be spread by blood
$5 million grant endows research to advance blood disorder therapies
$15 million supports quest for personalized leukemia therapies
P53 mutations in cancer patients shed light on gene’s function