In the News

1853 News Items found
Jorge Lopez, Jr.
Lopez was recognized for his positive impact on New York City through his professional, communal, and philanthropic achievements.
Craig Melvin
NBC News anchor Craig Melvin led MSK experts in a discussion about racial and age trends in colorectal cancer and when people should start screening for the disease.
A doctor showing a textured and smooth implant to their patient
Learn what you need to know about safety requirements for breast implants.
A healthcare provider comforts a patient by resting their hands on a patient's arm.
Feature
Nearly 400 adults and children have received umbilical cord blood transplants at MSK. These transplants offer the best chance of a cure for blood cancer in patients who are unable to find a matched donor, often due to their non-European ancestry.
genitourinary medical oncologist Robert Motzer
Q&A
Immunotherapy drugs called checkpoint inhibitors are effective against many cancers, including kidney cancer. Learn how these drugs are used to treat both early- and late-stage disease.
Mini Kamboj, MSK's Chief Medical Epidemiologist
Polio in NY: What You Should Know
Learn what detection of the polio virus in New York State means for you.
MSK medical oncologist Jonathan Rosenberg, who treats bladder cancer.
Antibody-drug conjugates and checkpoint inhibitors show promise as new therapies for bladder cancer.
Paige Arnold working in a lab
Paige Arnold, who will graduate from the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSK) next spring, has been awarded the 2022 Chairman’s Prize. The competitive award is presented annually and was established by GSK’s Board of Trustees Chair Emeritus Louis V. Gerstner, Jr., for whom the school is named.
MSK Kids patient Rihanna Plaza
Learn about MSK Kids patient Rihanna, who was born with a cancer caused by an NTRK gene mutation and received the targeted therapy larotrectinib.
MSK physician-scientist Charles Sawyers and SKI computational biologist Dana Pe’er
Researchers learn how prostate cancer cells change their type to survive treatment.