Usually, cells follow an orderly process of growth, division, and death. Cancer can develop when cells grow and divide uncontrollably and do not die at the normal point in their life cycle.
Scientists discovered a molecular switch that may reverse cancer cells, stopping them from growing abnormally.
A new study reveals that modifying the CUL5 gene enhances CAR-T cell therapy for leukemia and lymphoma. This improves cell ...
Stanford Medicine researchers sifted through thousands of single nucleotide mutations in DNA to identify fewer than 400 that are functionally associated with inherited cancer risk.
Glioblastoma (GBM), an aggressive form of cancer that grows in the brain or spinal cord, occurs at an incidence rate of about 3/100,000 persons in the Unit | Cancer ...