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MIT study answers why some cancer treatments fail. Most tumours have active backdoor pathways
Some cancer treatments fail not because the drugs were ineffective, but because tumours design a network to evade them.
Across rural China, entire communities began reporting unusually high cancer rates. Investigations throughout the 2000s linked many of these illnesses to severe industrial pollution, contaminated ...
PIM-1 kinase inhibitors in myelofibrosis offer new targets to overcome relapsed and refractory disease. In recent years, the landscape of myelofibrosis treatment has evolved significantly, with 4 JAK ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Multiple myeloma is a common blood cancer affecting plasma ...
Newco ALTx Therapeutics Ltd. has launched with a £12.55 million (US$17.1 million) seed round to develop inhibitors of the alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) pathway, by which 10% to 15% of ...
Scientists have created a complete map showing how hundreds of possible mutations in a key cancer gene influence tumor growth. The study focused on CTNNB1, a gene that produces the protein β-catenin, ...
New research co-led by Indiana University School of Medicine scientists has exposed a vulnerability in acute myeloid leukemia by identifying the blood cancer's reliance on a specific signaling pathway ...
In this episode of eSpeaks, Jennifer Margles, Director of Product Management at BMC Software, discusses the transition from traditional job scheduling to the era of the autonomous enterprise. eSpeaks’ ...
Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) are complex structures released by activated neutrophils and composed by double-stranded DNA associated with histones and an arsenal of proteases and proteins.
Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Global cancer diagnoses are expected to rise by more than 60 percent over the next 25 years, with experts warning that ...
What if the sugar we consume, or even the sugar our own bodies produce, could increase the risk of cancer? That’s the question driving groundbreaking research by Hyeyoung Nam, Ph.D., instructor in the ...
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