In the News

1855 News Items found
Andrea Barrio (right) and fellow Shirin Muhsen focus on surgery for breast cancer.
In the Clinic
Experts from Memorial Sloan Kettering presented some of the latest research on this challenging complication of many cancer surgeries.
ASH meeting signage
Roundup
Learn more about the work of MSK researchers being presented at the 2018 meeting of the American Society of Hematology.
Experts from all specialties of breast cancer treatment will attend the 2018 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium from December 4 through 8. It is the largest annual meeting devoted solely to the latest in breast cancer advances. The meeting will highlight emerging research and also tackle some of the larger issues facing people with breast cancer and the doctors who treat them.
Jonathan Peled speaks during a press conference
Finding
For the first time, researchers have found an association between the makeup of the microorganisms in the body before a bone marrow transplant and a patient’s survival afterward.
Ethics Committee Chair Louis Voigt
Q&A
Learn about Louis Voigt, a critical care medicine specialist who is Chair of MSK's Ethics Committee.
scientific image
In the Clinic
Overcoming resistance to drug treatment for lung cancer is a critical challenge.
A tube of blood superimposed on a lung and a DNA helix
In the Clinic
The initial results of an ongoing study show that a liquid biopsy has advantages over a tissue biopsy for people with lung cancer.
MSK medical oncologist Alexander Drilon
Feature
Learn about larotrectinib, the first cancer drug to be FDA approved for adult and pediatric patients at the same time.
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the drug larotrectinib for cancers caused by a genetic mutation called a TRK fusion. Today’s decision marks a transformation in the field of precision medicine as this is the first time that an entirely new treatment has received a tumor-agnostic indication at its initial approval, meaning that the drug was approved based on mutation type rather than on where in the body the tumor originated.
An illustration shows Helios, the ancient Greek sun god, unwinding DNA
In the Lab
MSK researchers have found that a protein that contributes to one type of leukemia when it’s missing can lead to the formation of a different leukemia type when it’s present.