In the News

101 News Items found
Cartoon of a hand offering cigarettes and another hand declining them.
Feature
Learn from MSK experts about how to quit smoking if you have cancer. It starts with having honest conversations about smoking and nicotine addiction.
Gail Goode
An MSK clinical trial is helping Gail Goode overcome multiple myeloma and sheds new light on how cancer affects people of diverse ethnic backgrounds.
MSK physician scientist Piro Lito, MD, PhD
Q&A
Learn about insights that could lead to a new class of drugs against cancers caused by RAS gene mutations.
Dr. Alexander Drilon
The FDA has approved the targeted drug repotrectinib for patients 12 and older with tumors that carry gene changes called NTRK fusions. The trial that resulted in the approval was led by MSK investigators.
Giovanna Whitting
The FDA has granted full approval to the targeted therapy selpercatinib (Retevmo®) for treating thyroid cancers that have certain changes in a gene called RET. Learn about MSK’s role in the development of this drug and about how patients may benefit.
Illustration of a female doctor touching a strand of DNA
In the Clinic
Because cancer is more treatable when it’s caught early, MSK’s new Precision Interception and Prevention initiative focuses on early detection.
an illustration of a cigarette burning and smoke entering lungs
Feature
How Do Cigarettes Cause Cancer?
Everyone knows that cigarettes cause cancer. But what do we know about how they do it?
Learn how exercise can help many people live longer after they are diagnosed with cancer, according to a new study from MSK's Exercise-Oncology Service.
hand held up at pack of cigarettes
Support
Research has shown that quitting tobacco use immediately improves health and that tobacco treatment programs make it easier to quit than going it alone.
the Bridges team at dinner
Q&A
Learn more about Memorial Sloan Kettering’s newsletter for cancer survivors, which is celebrating its tenth year of publication.