In the News

1855 News Items found
Allison Betof Warner uses a pipette in the lab
Using patients’ own immune systems to fight cancer has been one of the most exciting advances in cancer treatment over the past decade. Now, a new immunotherapy could take this approach to the next level.
Radiation oncologist Josh Yamada
Learn how radiation oncologists at Memorial Sloan Kettering are making radiation therapy for metastatic cancer more effective, with fewer side effects, including a new advance called ECHO.
Dandelion
MSK researchers are learning more about how cancer cells can survive undetected for years only to return in new places. These insights will guide future therapies.
Elizabeth McCormick, Senior Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer was given a surprise retirement celebration by MSK staff.
After 21 years of dedicated service, Elizabeth McCormick, MSN, RN, CENP, Senior Vice President, Chief Nursing Officer and Enid A. Haupt Chair, Department of Nursing, will retire from MSK at the end of 2021. During her tenure, Ms. McCormick transformed and ultimately redefined the role of nursing at MSK.
David wearing an orange t-shirt and David posing with his daughter, in a cap and gown
Meet David, a patient representative at MSK, who makes his voice heard is as a member of MSK’s LGBTQ Clinical Advisory Committee. Founded in 2017, the committee advises MSK staff on the clinical care of LGBTQ patients and provides strategic direction for the advancement of care for LGBTQ populations.
Quincey and Vikki
Vikki Mills: Leading with Her Heart
Meet Victoria “Vikki” Mills, Associate Director of Research Administration Operations at Memorial Sloan Kettering, who is deeply satisfied with her work and delighted with her family, which will soon expand — Vikki is expecting her second child in August with her fiancée, Shauna.
person donating blood
Find out how you can help Memorial Sloan Kettering through the national blood shortage.
Physician-scientist Omar Abdel-Wahab
In the Lab
In mice, drugs that change the way proteins are assembled appear to make checkpoint inhibitor drugs work better.
Ben, Kyle, Charles, and Gloria on a picnic blanket
Meet Ben Hegel, a senior program coordinator in the Sloan Kettering Institute. “My introduction to Pride in college was through a celebratory lens,” says Ben. “But my relationship to Pride has changed.” He still celebrates, but he points out that the Pride March is just that — a march, not a parade. “It was started by marginalized people who were marching for their rights.”
MSK computational biologist Sohrab Shah
With the help of machine learning, computational biologists are learning to predict how cancers will evolve.