Researchers are targeting dormant tumour cells that might explain why some cancers reappear long after successful treatment.
Morning Overview on MSN
Why cancer returns years later, and how we can stop it
Cancer’s cruelest trick is its ability to disappear, only to reappear years later in a new organ or a familiar scar. The fear ...
Scientists have found that preserving lymph nodes during cancer surgery could dramatically improve how patients respond to immunotherapy. The research shows that lymph nodes are essential for training ...
Every day, billions of damaged or unnecessary cells die and are swept away by the immune system’s cleanup crew—phagocytes. But when that clearance falters, dangerous cells can linger, fueling cancer ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Ocean sugars can trigger cancer cells to self-destruct, study suggests
From the deep sea to the shallow seafloor, researchers are uncovering unusual sugars that do something extraordinary to ...
For the first time, real-time imaging tracks what happens to cancer cells arriving in the brain, identifying a new strategy to prevent brain tumors. Metastasis occurs when cancer cells break away from ...
A study led by researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center found that normal cells surrounding a tumor, known as cancer-associated ...
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