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Mashup Score: 1WHO Survey Determines Increased Cancer Burden Over Next 25 Years - 2 month(s) ago
A 77% increase in the risk of developing cancer by 2050 was determined by the World Health Organization in a recent survey.
Source: www.cancernetwork.comCategories: General Medicine News, Onc News and JournalsTweet
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Mashup Score: 2For World Cancer Day, get your first 3 months of STAT+ for $20 - 2 month(s) ago
Subscribe to STAT+ and stay up-to-date on the latest trends and ground breaking discoveries in cancer research.
Source: marketing.statnews.comCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1
Kyrell thinks life feels amazing – especially after finishing treatment for leukemia at Advocate Children’s Hospital, where his care team went above and beyo…
Source: www.youtube.comCategories: General Medicine News, PediatricsTweet
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Mashup Score: 55How the body's nerves become accomplices in the spread of cancer - 2 month(s) ago
An emerging relationship between the nervous system and tumor growth suggests new therapies
Source: www.science.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
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Mashup Score: 17Cancer Researcher Becomes Cancer Survivor - 2 month(s) ago
Dr. Brown is researching how the gut microbiome metabolizes foods in ways that can cause or prevent cancer.
Source: my.clevelandclinic.orgCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1336Substitution mutational signatures in whole-genome–sequenced cancers in the UK population - 2 month(s) ago
A large whole-genome sequenced cancer effort advances the understanding of common and rare mutational signatures and their analysis.
Source: www.science.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet-
A large-scale, whole-genome analysis in Science of over 12,000 cancers reveals previously unreported mutational signatures, including tumor-specific rare signatures. The findings may enhance personalized cancer treatments and diagnoses. #WorldCancerDay https://t.co/yNmFO8EcTN https://t.co/hTBwa9VpHs
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Mashup Score: 14We Can Help - 2 month(s) ago
If you are a cancer patient, caregiver or health care provider, we’ve tailored resources and tools specifically for your needs and wants.
Source: www.livestrong.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Onc News and JournalsTweet
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Mashup Score: 4Clouds across the new dawn for clinical, diagnostic and biological data: accelerating the development, delivery and uptake of personalized medicine - 2 month(s) ago
Growing awareness of the genetic basis of disease is transforming the opportunities for improving patient care by accelerating the development, delivery and uptake of personalised medicine and diseases diagnostics. This can mean more precise treatments reaching the right patients at the right time at the right cost. But it will be possible only with a coherent European Union (EU) approach to regulation. For clinical and biological data, on which the EU is now legislating with its planned European Health Data Space (EHDS), it is crucial that the design of this new system respects the constraints also implicit in the testing which generates data. The current EHDS proposal may fail to meet this requirement. It risks being over-ambitious, while taking insufficient account of the demanding realities of data access in daily practice and current economics/business models. It is marred by imprecision and ambiguity, by overlaps with other EU legislation, and by lack of clarity on funding. This
Source: www.degruyter.comCategories: General Medicine News, Hem/OncsTweet
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Mashup Score: 2World Cancer Day 2024 - 2 month(s) ago
By Ashwin Oommen Philips, Soumya Surath Panda, Sunu Cyriac, Lalatendu Moharana, Sindhu Kilaru, Spoorty Kolluri, Krishnakumar Rathnam, S.V. Saju, Honey Susan Raju, Smita Kayal, Dubashi Biswajit, Amit Sehrawat, Deepak Sundriyal, Anil T. Jose, Sreeja Raju, Preethi Paul, Prasanth Ganesan The integration of next-generation sequencing (NGS) in guiding personalized therapy for oncology faces the…
Source: news5.thieme.deCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 142New generation of cancer-preventing vaccines could wipe out tumors before they form - 2 month(s) ago
Shots enter early clinical trials for healthy people at high risk for disease
Source: www.science.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Future of MedicineTweet
By 2050, over 35 million cancer diagnoses are expected, which is a 77%. The increase in cancer burden is occurring from increased risk factors such as socioeconomic development, tobacco and alcohol use, and obesity. #WorldCancerDay | @WHO https://t.co/qEZxB4UgDJ https://t.co/OCHPyCLK95