Pancreatic cancer uses a sugar-coated disguise to evade the immune system, helping explain why it’s so hard to treat.
Survival rarely comes easy when pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma strikes. Most people learn of it only after it has spread, and only a small fraction reach the five-year mark. Treatments that succeed ...
Stories of wolves disguising themselves as Little Red Riding Hood’s grandmother—or predators hiding in sheep’s clothing—are reminders of how deception can mask danger. Cancer, too, can be a master of ...
DelveInsight's Macrophage Activation Syndrome Market Insights report includes a comprehensive understanding of current treatment practices, macrophage activation syndrome emerging drugs, market share ...
Nancy Klauber-DeMore, M.D., led an MUSC team that developed a highly targeted antibody therapy that, by blocking a cancer-driving protein, slowed tumor growth, reduced metastasis and re-energized the ...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive and treatment-resistant forms of breast cancer. It grows quickly, spreads early and lacks the hormone receptors that make other ...
A new study explains how pancreatic tumors use a sugar coating to hide from the immune system and shows that a newly ...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive and treatment-resistant forms of breast cancer. It grows quickly, spreads early and lacks the hormone receptors that make other ...