Recent News

567 News Items found
Justin Perry
A new laboratory study from MSK is shedding light on the mechanisms by which high fructose consumption early in life may directly impact brain development and increase the risk of anxiety disorders later on.
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine
A team of researchers from MSK and Weill Cornell Medicine is expanding the understanding of how a decades-old treatment for bladder cancer works — an understanding that could help improve the effectiveness of immunotherapies more broadly.
A researcher working in an MSK lab
New MSK research uncovers new details of the immune response against leptomeningeal metastasis; develops a grading system to assess the risk of developing thrombocytopenia after CAR T cell therapy; and outlines a method for scientists to estimate metabolic characteristics from challenging clinical samples.
A lab coat with an MSK logo hangs on a hook
Fourteen young scientists are poised to receive their PhD degrees from the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. Their years of dedication and training will be recognized on May 14, 2025, as part of Memorial Sloan Kettering’s 46th annual academic convocation.
photo of sugary foods like candy, donuts, and cupcakes
Learn more about from MSK experts about what the latest research on the connection between eating sugar and cancer risk.
Alexandra Joyner
Developmental biologist Dr. Alexandra Joyner reflects on her career and talks about the new passions she looks forward to pursuing in retirement.
The recipients of the 2025 Marie-Josée Kravis WISE initiative awards, from left: Hina Shah, Lydia Paraskevi Tsamouri, Dr. Adriana Mujal, and Dr. Almudena Chaves-Pérez (not pictured)
Feature
MSK is proud to announce that four Sloan Kettering Institute (SKI) researchers have been named 2025 Kravis WISE fellowship grant recipients.
A researcher working in an MSK lab
New MSK research identifies new cancer-specific targets for T cell receptor immunotherapy approaches; sheds light on a critical process in sexual reproduction; describes how regulatory T cells help prevent intestinal inflammation; and uncovers how the spleen helps natural killer immune cells adapt to new threats.
Atomic force microscopy image of hepatitis B wrapped around human histones
In their effort to answer a decades-old biological question about how the hepatitis B virus (HBV) is able to establish infection of liver cells, research led by MSK, Weill Cornell Medicine, and The Rockefeller University identified a vulnerability that opens the door to new treatments.
An immunofluorescence image of an aged mouse liver
Top Cancer Research Advances at MSK in 2024
MSK researchers continued to make strides against cancer in 2024. Learn about some of their top discoveries.