Cancer cells transfer mitochondria through nanotubes to healthy neighboring cells, turning them into tumor-supporting accomplices, a new study shows.
The Brighterside of News on MSN
Scientists re-engineer a patient’s own T cells to target and destroy cancer cells
Hodgkin lymphoma and other malignancies that express the CD30 protein have been the scourge of oncologists for decades. For ...
Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive and hardest forms of breast cancer to treat, but a new study led by Weill Cornell Medicine suggests a surprising way to stop it from ...
T cell therapy, which uses a patient's own immune cells to fight cancer, has emerged as a powerful way to treat lymphoma and ...
When cancer cells are physically squeezed, they mount an instant, high-energy defense by rushing mitochondria to the cell ...
A protein notorious for its role in Alzheimer’s disease may hold the key to supercharging the aging immune system, according ...
New research shows that cancer cells don’t just grow; they adapt when stressed. When squeezed inside tissues, they transform ...
News Medical on MSN
Johns Hopkins Researchers Show Novel Immune System Boost Helps Fight Cancer Cells
In experiments with mouse models of breast, pancreatic, and muscle cancers, researchers at Johns Hopkins All Children’s ...
Ten-year STARS trial data show stereotactic ablative radiotherapy provides survival outcomes comparable to surgery in ...
Circulating tumor cells allow researchers to detect cancer early, provide an accurate prognosis, monitor progression, and ...
HPV, a very common virus, is found to hijack the body's cells to directly drive skin cancer growth, even after surgeries and ...
6don MSN
Cancer cells' stress shield cracked by compound that binds in one place, inhibits in another
Cancer cells are pretty bold and clever—they hijack cellular survival and healing processes in order to fuel their growth, ...
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