In the News

39 News Items found
Doctors Nancy Lee, Alan Ho, and Richard Wong are seen discussing a medical image.
Learn how MSK's world-class Head and Neck cancer specialists help people facing throat cancer, using the latest therapies and innovations.
MSK radiation oncologist Nancy Lee
In the Clinic
Learn how HPV-related head and neck cancer can be treated with a sharply reduced radiation dose to prevent side effects, sometimes without surgery.
Dr. Nancy Lee, Dr. Alan Ho, and Dr. Richard Wong review scans on a computer
ASTRO 2025 Highlights From MSK
Learn about some of the exciting research that MSK doctors and scientists presented at the 2025 Annual Meeting of the American Society for Radiation Oncology.
Steve and Sara Harrold smiling and holding hands on a couch in Hope Lodge
Learn how MSK Direct — one of the nation's largest employer cancer benefits programs — made it easier for Steve Harrold to travel from Massachusetts to MSK for treatment days after a throat cancer diagnosis.
Young girl
Learn why MSK recommends that children be vaccinated against HPV.
Headshot of MSK clinical social worker Victoria Lassen
An MSK expert gives advice on how to talk to family and friends about a cancer diagnosis linked to HPV, which some people find particularly challenging.
Nurse bandaging patient after vaccination
Q&A
Learn more about HPV and cancer risk in the Hispanic community, which has more cancers linked to the disease than any other group in the United States.
Amy Speck
Learn about some of the most important advances in cancer treatment and clinical trials at MSK in 2024.
Family photo of a man in his 40s with wife and young son smiling in a tropical location.
Article
Learn how a new MSK treatment approach preserves patients' noses while effectively treating nasal cavity cancer.
A nurse gives a girl a vaccination.
Q&A
Cancers linked to HPV are on the rise. But only a little over half of all adolescents in the U.S. got the full series of vaccinations. In this Q&A, Chrisann Kyi talks about why it's so important for young people to get vaccinated.