Tag Directory / CANCERRESEARCH     showing 121–135 of 135   RSS



A liquid biopsy blood test may improve children's survival of cancer in Africa

medicalxpress - In a study published in Nature Medicine, researchers from the University of Oxford and the Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS) in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania have shown that a minimally invasive liquid biopsy test can diagnose Burkitt l…

AI Summary: A blood‑based liquid biopsy for EBV‑positive Burkitt’s lymphoma shows promise for earlier, less invasive diagnosis in endemic regions, potentially improving pediatric survival where tissue biopsies are scarce. Early data indicate actionable sensitivity and feasibility for low‑resource settings, offering a scalable path to faster treatment.

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Rob Winn Appointed Director of NCI-Designated Fox Chase Cancer Center

oncodaily - Fox Chase Cancer Center shared a post on LinkedIn: “Temple Health – Temple University Health System today announced the appointment of Dr. Rob Winn, MD, as the next Cancer Center […]

AI Summary: Rob Winn has been appointed director of the NCI‑designated Fox Chase Cancer Center, taking the reins of clinical, research and strategic operations. His role will focus on strengthening translational research, patient care integration and institutional partnerships to advance the center's mission — you know, the usual: cure more cancer, argue less in committee meetings.

3 months / oncodaily




New EPA rule could loosen limits on medical device sterilization gas emissions

medicalxpress - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to loosen limits on emissions of ethylene oxide, a gas used to sterilize many medical devices that is also linked to cancer.

AI Summary: The Environmental Protection Agency proposed easing limits on ethylene oxide — the gas hospitals use to sterilize medical devices — arguing the change protects the medical supply chain. Public‑health experts and community advocates warn long‑term exposure raises cancer risks and say rolling back 2024 safeguards could shift the burden onto nearby residents.

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Neoadjuvant GOLP Prolongs EFS Among Patients with Resectable High-Risk Intrahepatic Cholangiocarcinoma

esmo - Findings from the ZSAB-neoGOLP study

AI Summary: The ZSAB‑neoGOLP trial shows that giving a four‑drug neoadjuvant regimen—gemcitabine, oxaliplatin, lenvatinib and toripalimab—before surgery prolongs event‑free survival for patients with resectable, high‑risk intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. The finding suggests preoperative systemic therapy can downstage aggressive tumors and delay recurrence, potentially changing treatment sequencing for this challenging disease.

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NRG-LU005 Trial: Atezolizumab Plus Chemoradiotherapy in Limited-Stage Small Cell Lung Cancer

oncodaily - A major international clinical trial, NRG-LU005, has provided important new insight into how immunotherapy should be used in limited-stage small cell lung cancer (SCLC). While immune checkpoint inhibitors have significantly […]

AI Summary: A major international trial tested whether adding the PD‑L1 inhibitor atezolizumab to concurrent chemoradiotherapy for limited‑stage small‑cell lung cancer would boost outcomes. The study found no significant survival benefit, prompting clinicians to rethink the timing and role of immune checkpoint blockade in curative‑intent SCLC rather than assuming more drugs always means better results.

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A new triple negative breast cancer target: Why HORMAD1 could guide treatment choices

medicalxpress - A gene that is typically active only in reproductive cells may hold the key to new treatments for triple negative breast cancer, according to new research published in the journal Nature Communications. Scientists from the Breast Cancer Now Toby Robins Re…

AI Summary: Researchers have identified HORMAD1, a normally reproductive‑cell gene, as a vulnerability in some triple‑negative breast cancers. Preclinical work suggests exploiting this target could guide patient selection and novel therapies, opening a promising — if early‑stage — route for a tumor type that desperately needs smarter options.


HORMAD1: reproductive gene reveals vulnerability in triple‑negative breast cancer

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New insights into why aggressive breast cancers grow and spread

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OTHER: related cancer research and approvals outside this TNBC angle

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All Other Stories

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Roche’s big hope breast cancer drug fails in crucial first-line trial

Elizabeth Cairns / endpoints - Roche’s breast cancer pill, which the company recently said had the potential to become its biggest-ever selling drug, has failed in what is arguably its most important Phase 3 trial. The persevERA ...

AI Summary: Roche’s experimental breast cancer oral agent failed to meet its primary endpoint in a pivotal first‑line trial, dashing expectations that it would become a major new therapy. The negative readout forces a strategic rethink for the program and raises questions about near‑term prospects for what had been touted as a potential blockbuster.

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Fitch upgrades UCHealth’s rating to ‘AA+’

Andrew Cass / beckershospitalreview - Aurora, Colo.-based UCHealth’s credit rating was upgraded to “AA+” from “AA” by Fitch. The upgrade reflects the health system’s very strong financial profile, benefiting from its market position in a growing service area and a long track record of robust …

AI Summary: A large NHS evaluation found that an AI system can detect more invasive breast cancers than traditional reading alone, boosting detection by roughly 10%. The technology matched or rivaled radiologists in a major screening dataset, prompting debate about integration, workflow changes, and careful real-world rollout rather than unleashing bots in mammography rooms immediately.


Mixed trial findings: AI triage not always noninferior.


NHS trial: AI boosts breast cancer detection by ~10%.

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OTHER: AI in broader cardiac, hematology, imaging, and finance news.

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Researchers and conferences push AI discussion in breast imaging.

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Antonio Calles: RECITE Trial Findings on Romiplostim for Chemotherapy-Induced Thrombocytopenia

oncodaily - Antonio Calles, Medical Oncologist at Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón and faculty member of the Lung and Other Thoracic Tumours faculty group of the ESMO, shared a post by NEJM, […]

AI Summary: A global phase 3 trial shows romiplostim markedly reduces chemotherapy‑induced thrombocytopenia, cutting severe low‑platelet events and helping patients stay on planned treatment schedules. The finding promises to lower bleeding risk and avoid dose delays, a relief for clinicians and patients alike — and for anyone tired of rescheduled infusions.

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Personalized Support Program Improves Smoking Cessation for Cervical Cancer Survivors – UCLA Health

oncodaily - UCLA study shows program doubles quit rates for women and offers a cost-effective approach A new study led by UCLA researchers suggests that a personalized counseling program can significantly help […]

AI Summary: A UCLA-led trial found that a tailored support program for women treated for cervical precancer significantly doubled smoking-cessation rates versus usual care. The intervention combined individualized counseling, follow-up, and survivor-focused resources, proving both clinically impactful and cost-effective — because apparently telling people to “just quit” still isn’t working.

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Grail names new CEO as Bob Ragusa retires

Jared Whitlock / endpoints - Grail on Thursday announced that its CEO, Bob Ragusa, will retire and is handing the reins to its current president Josh Ofman. The cancer screening company said the move was the culmination of long-term succession ...

AI Summary: Grail announced a leadership transition as long‑time chief executive Bob Ragusa retires and hands operational control to current president Josh Ofman. The move marks a new chapter for the cancer‑screening company as stakeholders watch for strategic shifts and commentary about the company’s unusual corporate journey and future direction.

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Ipsen pulls cancer drug Tazverik from market over safety risks

Nicole DeFeudis / endpoints - Ipsen is pulling its cancer drug Tazverik from the market after an independent data monitoring committee found safety concerns in a confirmatory trial. The committee reported cases of secondary cancers that begin in blood-forming tissue ...

AI Summary: Ipsen has removed its EZH2 inhibitor Tazverik (tazemetostat) from the U.S. market after safety issues flagged by an independent monitoring review. The withdrawal forces clinicians to pivot to alternative therapies and triggers regulatory and clinical re‑examination of the drug’s benefit‑risk profile for patients previously depending on it.




Severe COVID or Severe Flu May Raise Risk of Lung Cancer, But Vaccines Helped in Animal Tests

discovermagazine - Learn how severe respiratory illness leaves the lungs vulnerable to cancer, and how vaccines could prevent these vulnerabilities.

AI Summary: New animal and observational evidence suggests severe respiratory infections—including serious COVID‑19 and influenza—can prime lung tissue and accelerate cancer development months to years later. Vaccination appeared to blunt those effects in experimental models, highlighting prevention as a potential cancer‑risk reduction strategy and urging clinicians to watch survivors of severe infections more closely.

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Engineering CAR T cells to secrete VEGF-neutralizing scFvs enhances antitumor activity against solid tumors

Torahito A. Gao, Ryan M. Shih, Justin D. Clubb, Shao-Hsi Hung, Tanya Singh, Laura B. James-Allan, Ga / science - Science Translational Medicine, Volume 18, Issue 839, March 2026.

AI Summary: Researchers engineered CAR‑T cells to secrete VEGF‑neutralizing single‑chain antibodies, improving infiltration and antitumor activity against solid tumors in preclinical models. By locally neutralizing VEGF, the approach remodels the tumor microenvironment and enhances CAR‑T efficacy, offering a plausible strategy to overcome the long‑standing barrier of poor CAR‑T performance in solid cancers.

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Elizabeth McKenna: New Cancer Grand Challenges Teams Announced

oncodaily - Elizabeth McKenna, Executive Editor of Cancer Discovery, shared a post on X: “The new Cancer Grand Challenges teams have just been announced! Read about the teams tackling cancer avoidance, mechanisms […]

AI Summary: Global funders announced new Cancer Grand Challenges awards, backing five international teams with large, high‑risk grants to pursue transformative cancer science. The initiative aims to accelerate unconventional, high‑reward projects and foster cross‑disciplinary collaboration — essentially underwriting audacity in hopes that at least one risky bet pays off.

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