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Researchers identify a compound that appears to eliminate tumor cells in a dish and in mice.
… Wednesday, June 19, 2019 Summary MSK researchers identified a new strategy for inhibiting RNA-binding proteins, which play a role in many cancers. Since 2012, Memorial Sloan Kettering cancer biologist Michael Kharas has focused on studying a family of proteins called Musashi. These proteins play a role
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The findings will lead to more accurate diagnoses and, potentially, to better treatments.
… Friday, July 20, 2018 Summary Experts say the findings about this type of tumor will lead to more accurate diagnoses and, potentially, to better treatments. In recent years, there have been many advances in treating children with cancer, but brain tumors remain a major challenge. For many pediatric brain
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News
Learn about how nutrition experts are helping people with cancer maintain a healthy diet both during and after treatment.
… Wednesday, March 28, 2018 Summary MSK researchers have shown the crucial role that a healthy diet plays in cancer recovery. They are now developing unique ways to help people who are having transplants maintain good nutrition. People who have stem cell and bone marrow transplants face many challenges
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An international team of researchers led by Howard Scher, MD, Co-Chair of the Center for Mechanism Based Therapy and Head of the Biomarker Development Initiative at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK), has validated a biomarker that can predict whether people with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC) may live longer if they are treated with a taxane-based chemotherapy instead of a second targeted androgen receptor–signaling inhibitor (ARSi).
… Thursday, June 28, 2018 Bottom Line: An international team of researchers led by Howard Scher, MD , Co-Chair of the Center for Mechanism Based Therapy and Head of the Biomarker Development Initiative at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK), has validated a biomarker that can predict whether people
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2023 Annual Report
Read about a first-of-its kind PhD program that enables aspiring scientists to tackle tough cancer problems.
… Monday, June 10, 2024 It’s the power of serendipity. In science, great ideas often come from chance encounters between two experts from different worlds. That’s what happened one afternoon a few years ago in the lobby of the Zuckerman Research Center , the 23-story home to lab researchers at Memorial
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News
Learn how one man's determination to be a doctor took him on an incredible journey from working at a car wash in the Bronx to becoming a physician at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, with the help of mentors and a world-class work ethic.
… Wednesday, November 3, 2021 Man in surgical scrubs looks at reader Aymar Borel Soh Fotso (Dr. Soh) is an anesthesiologist at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Scroll right for more photos » Borel Soh, Louis Voigt, and Kathryn Martin Dr. Soh (left) at a gala with two of his MSK mentors, Louis Voigt
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Gerstner Sloan Kettering student Jessica Rios-Esteves has been awarded the Chairman’s Prize for her first-author paper published in Cell Reports in 2013.
… Wednesday, August 13, 2014 Gerstner Sloan Kettering student Jessica Rios-Esteves has been awarded the Chairman’s Prize for her first-author paper Stearoyl CoA Desaturase Is Required to Produce Active, Lipid-Modified Wnt Proteins , published in Cell Reports in 2013. Jessica successfully defended her
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Learn more about how MSK helps international patients like Annabel Gutherz, a 25-year-old singer from Montreal who sought MSK's expertise in head and neck cancer and found comfort and support far from home.
… Monday, April 7, 2025 There are good reasons for optimism today when the diagnosis is thyroid cancer. At Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK), most thyroid cancer treatments — which can include surgery, drugs, or both — are successful, and the overall survival rates are more than 95%. But when
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Memorial Sloan Kettering researchers have discovered that the AR and PI3K disease pathways regulate each other through reciprocal negative feedback.
… Friday, July 1, 2011 Summary Memorial Sloan Kettering researchers have discovered that the AR and PI3K disease pathways regulate each other through reciprocal negative feedback. Prostate cancer is difficult to control once it spreads beyond the initial tumor to other parts of the body. The standard treatment
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Detecting a protein in a blood sample could help doctors make treatment decisions for prostate cancer patients.
… Friday, June 29, 2018 Summary A study shows that a blood test that detects a protein called AR-V7 in circulating tumor cells accurately predicts how well certain people with prostate cancer will respond to drugs called AR inhibitors. Doctors can use this test to make decisions about whether these patients