Probing proteins' 3-D structures suggests existing drugs may work for many cancers
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- Category: Research
Examining databases of proteins' 3-D shapes, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified more than 850 DNA mutations that appear to be linked to cancer. The information may expand the number of cancer patients who can benefit from existing drugs.
Personalized medicine leads to better outcomes for patients with cancer
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- Category: Research
In a meta-analysis of hundreds of clinical trials involving thousands of patients, researchers at University of California San Diego School of Medicine report that therapeutic approaches using precision medicine, which emphasizes the use of individual genetics to refine cancer treatment, showed improved response and longer periods of disease remission, even in phase I trials.
Promising treatment prospects for invasive breast cancer
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- Category: Research
In Switzerland alone, more than 5,700 women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year, and almost 1,400 of those affected die of the disease. In many very invasive forms of breast cancer, the cells have too much of the receptor HER2 on their surface. This leads to uncontrolled growth of the cells.
Nature publication describes first example of a clinically applicable and systemic mRNA cancer immunotherapy vaccine
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- Category: Development
BioNTech AG, a fully integrated biotechnology company developing individualized cancer immunotherapies, together with its translational research partner institute TRON, announces a publication in the internationally renowned scientific journal Nature, describing the first example worldwide of a clinically relevant and systemic mRNA cancer immunotherapy.
New insights into muscular dystrophy point to potential treatment avenues
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- Category: Research
The average healthy man is 54 percent muscle by mass, but people with muscular dystrophy, an incurable, genetic condition, have almost no muscle at terminal stages of the disease. New research from The Rockefeller University provides insights about what causes patients' muscles to degenerate and offers potential avenues for drug development.
New class of protein could treat cancer and other diseases
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- Category: Research
A protein designed by researchers at Georgia State University can effectively target a cell surface receptor linked to a number of diseases, showing potential as a therapeutic treatment for an array of illnesses, including cancer, according to the research team.
Exercise, future anticancer therapy?
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- Category: Development
Several studies have demonstrated the benefits of exercise to improve the quality of life of people with cancer. But Dr. Fred Saad, urologist-oncologist and researcher at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM), goes further. He believes that physical exercise has a direct effect on cancer, as effective as drugs, for treating patients with prostate cancer, even in advanced stages of the disease.
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