In the News

1859 News Items found
Leptomeningeal metastasis, cancer that has spread to the areas surrounding the brain and spinal cord, has long been a formidable clinical challenge for oncologists. Researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center have identified the molecular basis of this increasingly prevalent complication of cancer. With the help of a mouse model, researchers have identified a drug strategy that may combat this virtually untreatable condition. This research by Joan Massagué, PhD, Adrienne Boire, MD, PhD, and colleagues, was published in the March 9, 2017 issue of Cell. For more information on this work and to speak with the study authors, contact [email protected].
Molecular biologist John Petrini of the Sloan Kettering Institute.
Feature
Scientists know that cancer can result from mistakes in DNA repair. But understanding what controls the repair process itself has been a hard nut to crack.
Andrea Cercek, a medical oncologist in MSK’s Gastrointestinal Service, speaking to a patient.
Feature
Learn more from Andrea Cercek about a new study showing that colorectal cancer rates are increasing in younger people.
CAR T cells attacking cancer
In the Lab
What do you get when you combine two of the hottest areas of biotechnology? A new paper from MSK researchers explains.
Medical illustration of nanoparticle spheres attacking cancer cell, which is beginning to disintegrate.
In the Lab
Researchers devised a novel method to ferry drugs to head and neck cancers using nanoparticles that naturally stick to a protein in tumor blood vessels.
Histology images of stem cells and AML cells
In the Lab
A new laboratory tool will allow researchers to study the progression from normal cells to myelodysplastic syndromes to an aggressive type of leukemia.
Pancreatic beta cells
In the Lab
Researchers are using pluripotent stem cells to create models of diabetes and pancreatic cancer.
Lymphedema can produce uncomfortable swelling in the arms or legs in the months and years following cancer treatment.
In the Lab
By blocking a source of inflammation in the skin, it may be possible to prevent or treat lymphedema, a common and debilitating cancer complication.
MSK scientists Charles Rudin and John Poirier
In the Lab
An epigenetic mechanism may make small cell lung cancer vulnerable to a new kind of attack.
Pathology slide showing DCIS and invasive cancer
In the Lab
Analysis of long-preserved single cells on pathology slides aims to provide new clues about the genes that make breast cancer more aggressive.