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Mashup Score: 36 Things to Eat to Reduce Your Cancer Risk - 2 month(s) ago
A healthy diet can cut your risk for cancer and other chronic diseases. But where should you start?
Source: TIME.comCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 36 Things to Eat to Reduce Your Cancer Risk - 3 month(s) ago
A healthy diet can cut your risk for cancer and other chronic diseases. But where should you start?
Source: TIME.comCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 4Feel Great About Giving Back - 3 month(s) ago
When you create a gift annuity at the American Institute for Cancer Research, you not only receive payments but you feel great about making a difference and giving back.
Source: planmygift.aicr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 1INSPIRE Research Challenge | WCRF International - 3 month(s) ago
The INSPIRE Research Challenge is a grant call for early career Investigators to submit projects with the potential for rapid advances in cancer research
Source: www.wcrf.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 5AICR Virtual Town Hall: Let's Talk About Cancer - 3 month(s) ago
Join us for a discussion as Dr. Nigel Brockton (PhD; AICR), Dr. Etan Orgel (MD, MS; Children’s Hospital Los Angeles), and Dr. Dawn Mussallem (DO; Mayo Clinic…
Source: www.youtube.comCategories: General Medicine News, Onc News and JournalsTweet
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Mashup Score: 2AICR’s Guide to a Plant-Based Diet (Pack of 25) - 4 month(s) ago
The AICR guide to a Plant-Based Diet is a handy health aid describing how you can eat for lower cancer risk and better health. Each pack contains 25 brochures.
Source: store.aicr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 3
Background The majority of women with epithelial ovarian cancer (OvCa) are diagnosed with metastatic disease, resulting in a poor 5-year survival of 31%. Obesity is a recognized non-infectious pandemic that increases OvCa incidence, enhances metastatic success and reduces survival. We have previously demonstrated a link between obesity and OvCa metastatic success in a diet-induced obesity mouse model wherein a significantly enhanced tumor burden was associated with a decreased M1/M2 tumor-associated macrophage ratio (Liu Y et al. Can, Res. 2015; 75:5046–57). Methods The objective of this study was to use pre-clinical murine models of diet-induced obesity to evaluate the effect of a high fat diet (HFD) on response to standard of care chemotherapy and to assess obesity-associated changes in the tumor microenvironment. Archived tumor tissues from ovarian cancer patients of defined body mass index (BMI) were also evaluated using multiplexed immunofluorescence analysis of immune markers. Re
Source: jeccr.biomedcentral.comCategories: General Medicine News, Onc News and JournalsTweet
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Mashup Score: 4Feel Great About Giving Back - 5 month(s) ago
When you create a gift annuity at the American Institute for Cancer Research, you not only receive payments but you feel great about making a difference and giving back.
Source: planmygift.aicr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet
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Mashup Score: 6Essentials of Clinical Nutrition in Healthcare | AccessMedicine | McGraw Hill Medical - 6 month(s) ago
Read Essentials of Clinical Nutrition in Healthcare online now, exclusively on AccessMedicine. AccessMedicine is a subscription-based resource from McGraw Hill that features trusted medical content from the best minds in medicine.
Source: accessmedicine.mhmedical.comCategories: General Medicine News, Oncologists1Tweet-
Hot off the press! AICR is proud to share that Nigel Brockton (VP of Research) has co-written the chapter on cancer in the nutrition textbook Essentials of Clinical Nutrition in Healthcare with Dr. Amy Comander and dietitian Carol Sullivan. Congrats, Nigel https://t.co/xMnyFdAAl3 https://t.co/Xn0XFSEvjg
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Mashup Score: 6Exercise and cancer: be physically active - 7 month(s) ago
Regular physical activity carries massive cancer prevention benefits. Find out more about the relationship between cancer and exercise.
Source: www.aicr.orgCategories: General Medicine News, Onc News and JournalsTweet-
Exercise can help cancer patients and survivors reduce fatigue, improve quality of life and provide overall health benefits. If you're a cancer survivor, remember that any activity is better than no activity! Start slowly, perhaps with a 5-minute walk. https://t.co/sNB8kFXyrd https://t.co/nodfGAhQHq
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Check out "6 Things to Eat to Reduce Your Cancer Risk" by Matt Fuchs, published in Time Magazine. It features an interview with AICR's Nigel Brockton, PhD, VP of Research, and covers essential dietary guidance to reduce cancer risk. Read it here: https://t.co/G7N5D7xpGa