In the News

75 News Items found
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.
See Dr. Deb Schrag standing in a hallway. She led a clinical trial involving rectal cancer at Memorial Sloan Kettering.
Learn about a clinical trial at Memorial Sloan Kettering that gives people with rectal cancer a new option to be treated without radiation. The research shows that a well-known chemotherapy regimen used alone can be just as effective as chemotherapy given with radiation before surgery. The new method may reduce side effects associated with radiation such as loss of fertility and impaired bladder and sexual function.
doctor and patients
In the Clinic
Discover how a watch-and-wait approach to treating rectal cancer can help people avoid surgery and preserve normal body functions.
MSK colorectal surgeon Maria Widmar, MD, seen smiling.
Find answers about rectal bleeding, including hemorrhoids and cancer, from an MSK specialist.
Four people who were successfully treated for rectal cancer in a clinical trial at Memorial Sloan Kettering are seen posing outdoors with the trial’s two principal investigators.
Rectal cancer patients saw their tumors disappear in a clinical trial involving immunotherapy at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center—without surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy.
MSK Doctors Andrea Cercek and Michael Foote are seen smiling.
Learn how rectal cancer patients with HER2 driven tumors benefited from an early stage clinical trial at MSK.
Kelly Spill is seen outdoors holding her newborn and talking with Dr. Andrea Cercek of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
Learn how a heralded clinical trial that made rectal cancer disappear for every participant is being expanded at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. The trial uses only immunotherapy that targets a rare mutation — without the need for surgery, chemotherapy, or radiation.
Blue cells on a black background
In the Lab
Scientists at Memorial Sloan Kettering have created a model of rectal cancer using human-tumor-derived organoids.
MSK patient Kara Kenny hugging medical oncologist Diane Reidy Lagunes
Feature
Learn how MSK is helping a young mother cope with rectal cancer through the Center for Young Onset Colorectal Cancer, the first program in the country devoted to younger adults with this disease.
Man with wife and three sons.
In the Clinic
MSK performs the highest number of robot-assisted surgeries for colorectal cancer in the United States, enabling more patients to have a shorter hospital stay and a faster recovery.