In the News

1877 News Items found
Scientific figure showing DNA replication stalled out at a G-quadruplex
MSK researchers shed new light on G-quadruplexes, a type of secondary DNA structure that has attracted attention as a potential therapeutic target in cancer.
MSK medical oncologist Michael Morris
Learn about MSK's specialty in treating neuroendocrine cancers.
A researcher working in an MSK lab
New MSK research identifies new cancer-specific targets for T cell receptor immunotherapy approaches; sheds light on a critical process in sexual reproduction; describes how regulatory T cells help prevent intestinal inflammation; and uncovers how the spleen helps natural killer immune cells adapt to new threats.
Rosario Costas-Muñiz is a psycho-oncologist focused on the needs of the Latino community.
Learn from an MSK specialist in cancer care for the Latino community about screening for colorectal cancer, to help prevent the disease.
woman getting vaccine from doctor
Learn from MSK experts what people over 26 should know about getting the HPV vaccine to protect themselves from several forms of cancer.
Colorectal Surgeon Dr. Julio Garcia-Aguilar seen in exam room with Nurse Kieran Kelleher
Learn how MSK uses the watch-and-wait approach to rectal cancer, which can preserve people's quality of life by successfully treating rectal cancer without removing the rectum.
MSK Biochemist and bioengineer Dr. Kayvan Keshari
In the Lab
Learn how engineering immune cells to metabolize fructose could supercharge them to fight cancer.
(Clockwise from upper left) Dr. Tal Cohen, Dr. Doris Ponce, Dr. Sandeep Raj, Dr. Jonathan Peled, Dr. Yeon Joo Lee, Dr. Sergio Giralt, and Winston Chang.
Physicians and scientists from MSK presented advances in transplantation and cellular therapies at the Tandem Meetings, a joint event hosted by the American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy and the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research.
Atomic force microscopy image of hepatitis B wrapped around human histones
In their effort to answer a decades-old biological question about how the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is able to establish infection of liver cells, research led by MSK, Weill Cornell Medicine, and The Rockefeller University identified a vulnerability that opens the door to new treatments.
Dr. William Tap
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved vimseltinib for adult patients with a rare condition called tenosynovial giant cell tumor, based on a trial led by an MSK researcher.