Recent News

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Three women standing next to each other in a lobby
The in-person event featured scientific talks from leading women in science, including winners of this year’s Kravis WISE fellowships.
MSK molecular imaging specialist Jan Grimm
In the Clinic
A new imaging approach relying on Cerenkov light could sometimes substitute for PET scans and improve diagnostic services in underserved areas.
An illustration of a fish fin touching a human finger
Sloan Kettering Institute scientists are using zebrafish to understand human skin cancer that attacks the hands and feet.
Dirk Remus and Richard Hite
The results of this collaborative project overturn some conventional wisdom about how the DNA repair process works.
A colorful pigeon standing in an urban setting.
With the resurgence of interest in cancer metabolism, researchers are coming to realize that there is more to a cell’s biochemistry than once thought.
Memorial Sloan Kettering MERIT Sawyers Fellowship recipient Chris Bourne
Chris Bourne is the first recipient of the MERIT Sawyers Fellowship.
colorful picture of cancer cells
Data from 25,000 patients is helping scientists answer this and many other important questions.
Lab worker dressed in “bunny suit” working with machine.
A new type of engineered immune cell could be a potent treatment for cancers that have escaped other immunotherapies.
Luis Parada in his lab
In the Lab
In a new study, MSK researchers looked at why glioblastoma brain tumors usually come back after treatment. Their findings suggest that a subset of cells — cancer stem cells — are able to evade current treatments because they are not actively dividing, and that these cells later form new tumors.
Separate headshots of three researchers — Diana Mandelker, Jorge Reis-Filho, and Fresia Pareja
Feature
MSK researchers have found mutations that arise in embryos can convey a risk of cancer that’s similar to what’s seen in people with inherited cancer mutations.