In the News

1838 News Items found
Finding
Colorful illustration of people overlaid on a world map
Genetic Variations Help Explain Why Immunotherapy Works Differently in Different People
A new study reports a possible way to quantify how efficient the immune system is at detecting cancer, and therefore how likely it is that a person will respond to immunotherapy.
Feature
Pictured: Ashley Landay (left) and Ashley Pildis (right)
A Tale of Two Ashleys: Meet a Nurse and a Patient Teaming Up for the New York City Marathon
Read about Ashley Landay, a breast cancer patient at MSK, who will run the TCS New York City Marathon with her chemotherapy nurse, Ashley Pildis.
In the Lab
Illustration of how PU-PET localizes to tumors
Bull’s-Eye: Imaging Technology Could Confirm When a Drug Is Going to the Right Place
Collaborative team advances a new approach for imaging a drug that’s been developed to stop cancer growth.
In the Lab
a colorful dendritic cell
Newly Discovered Immune Cell Subtypes Could Shake Up Immunotherapy
Dendritic cells, the guards of the immune system, have a previously unrecognized division of labor.
MSK Kids Experts to Present Notable Research at the International Society of Paediatric Oncology’s 2019 Annual Meeting
Pediatric oncologists from around the world will gather in Lyon, France, from October 23 through 26, for the International Society of Paediatric Oncology’s annual meeting. Featuring new research and important discoveries — many led by MSK Kids researchers — the meeting will highlight the latest in the fields of pediatric oncology, including blood cancer, sarcoma, Wilms’ tumor, genomics, radiation oncology, and neuroblastoma.
Feature
Memorial Sloan Kettering breast cancer expert Mark Robson.
Who Should Be Tested for a BRCA Mutation? The Science Is Evolving
Though questions remain about how best to use genetic testing for cancer, the trend is toward more inclusive criteria.
Scott Lowe
Memorial Sloan Kettering’s Scott Lowe Elected to Prestigious National Academy of Medicine
Scott W. Lowe, PhD, Chair of the Cancer Biology and Genetics Program at the Sloan Kettering Institute (SKI), Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, and Chair of the Geoffrey Beene Cancer Research Center, has been elected to the National Academy of Medicine (NAM), one of the highest honors bestowed upon scientists worldwide.
Feature
Colorful representation of DNA sequence
3 Cancer Genes You've Never Heard Of
While BRCA genes garner most of the public's attention, they're not the only cancer-predisposition genes doctors test for.
Ask the Expert
Alicia Gould is a registered dietitian at MSK who specializes in helping people with cancer get the nutrition they need during treatment.
5 Tips If You’ve Completely Lost Your Appetite During Cancer Treatment
Get tips from a Memorial Sloan Kettering dietitian if you’ve completely lost your appetite during cancer treatment.
Announcement
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19 Undergraduates Complete the 2019 Summer Research Program at GSK
Learn about the 19 students who completed the 2019 Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP) at the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSK).