Lung Cancer, Non-Small Cell : Related News

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Pictured: David Jones & Charles Rudin
New Leaders in Memorial Sloan-Kettering Thoracic Surgery and Oncology

Thoracic surgeon David Jones and medical oncologist Charles Rudin, internationally recognized leaders in their fields, to head the Thoracic Surgical Service and the Thoracic Oncology Service, respectively.

September 30, 2013
Pictured: Mark Kris, Andreas Rimner, Nabil Pierre Rizk & Max Gomez
Watch Our Experts Discuss the Latest in Lung Cancer Management and Research

In a recent CancerSmart talk focused on lung cancer, three Memorial Sloan-Kettering experts described advances in diagnosis and treatment.

September 3, 2013
Pictured: Micropapillary Morphology
Pattern in Lung Cancer Pathology May Predict Cancer Recurrence after Surgery

A Memorial Sloan-Kettering study shows that an abnormal cell pattern found in the tumor tissue of some lung cancer patients may help to predict which tumors are more likely to recur after surgery.

August 9, 2013
Pictured: Peter Bach
New Online Tool Helps People Decide Whether to Be Screened for Lung Cancer

A new online decision tool can help current or former smokers determine whether they would benefit from lung cancer screening.

July 30, 2013
Pictured: Low-dose chest CT scan
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Offers New Type of Lung Cancer Screening for Smokers

Memorial Sloan-Kettering now offers low-dose CT screening for certain smokers at high risk for lung cancer.

June 17, 2013
Pictured: Marc Ladanyi & Snjezana Dogan
Study Suggests Women Are More Susceptible to Smoking-Related Lung Cancers

A genetic analysis of tumors suggests women are more susceptible than men to the most common form of lung cancer.

November 9, 2012
Pictured: Manjit Bains
Latest Information about Lung Cancer Care at Memorial Sloan-Kettering

In our recently updated guides to non-small cell and small-cell lung cancers, you can learn about diagnosis, treatment, follow-up care, lung cancer experts, and clinical trials at Memorial Sloan-Kettering.

June 6, 2012
Pictured: Peter Bach
Pulmonary Specialist Peter Bach Discusses New Findings on Benefits of CT Screening for Lung Cancer

In an interview, Dr. Bach talks about research showing that CT screening may prevent one in five cancer deaths for people at a very high risk of developing lung cancer.

May 21, 2012
Pictured: Paul Paik
Testing for Mutations Identified in Squamous Cell Lung Cancer Tumors Helps Personalize Treatment

Memorial Sloan-Kettering was one of the first centers to use this type of genetic testing for lung cancer patients and is currently one of the only centers testing for mutations in squamous cell carcinomas of the lung.

May 17, 2012
Pictured: Jedd Wolchok & Paul Chapman
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Physician-Scientists Present Significant Clinical Cancer Research Advances at ASCO Annual Meeting

In an extraordinary demonstration of excellence, five Memorial Sloan-Kettering physician-scientists were selected to participate in the press program at the 2011 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting, held June 3-7 in Chicago.

July 1, 2011
New Technology Will Improve Molecular Testing of Tumors for Patients

Memorial Sloan-Kettering has made an important step forward in efficiently diagnosing gene mutations in patients’ cancers on an individual basis.

June 1, 2010

Related Media Coverage

Discovery May Help Pinpoint Risk of Lung Cancer Returning after Surgery

A study led by thoracic surgeon Prasad Adusumilli found that an abnormal cell pattern identified in the tumor tissue of some lung cancer patients may help to predict which tumors are more likely to recur after surgery.

August 7, 2013
New Drug May Help Fight Certain Advanced Lung Cancers

Medical oncologist Marjorie Zauderer commented on a study that found that adding a new drug to standard chemotherapy can boost survival in some patients with lung cancer.

June 3, 2013
Mark Kris
Tumors In Majority Of Patients With Advanced Lung Cancer Found To Have Genetic Mutations That Can Be Treated With Targeted Therapies

A new study detected one of ten such mutations in 54 percent of the 516 lung cancer patients tested at diagnosis. The results enabled doctors to select the most appropriate drug designed to block the identified mutation and choose other treatment options for those patients whose tumors did not have a mutation.

June 4, 2011
Research Reveals What Drives Lung Cancer's Spread

A new study by researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center reveals the genetic underpinnings of what causes lung cancer to quickly metastasize, or spread, to the brain and the bone - the two most prominent sites of lung cancer relapse.

July 2, 2009