Metastatic Cancer Research
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Immune-Cell Traps May Aid Cancer MetastasisPosted: December 6, 2016
Cancer cells may exploit a normal function of neutrophils, the most common form of white blood cell, to help form metastatic tumors, a new study suggests.
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Trial of Pembrolizumab for HIV-Positive Patients with Recurrent or Refractory CancerPosted: May 19, 2016
In this phase I clinical trial, HIV-positive patients receiving combination antiretroviral therapy who have cancer that has recurred after or has not responded to previous treatment will receive the immune checkpoint inhibitor pembrolizumab.
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Whole Brain Radiation for Some Patients with Brain Metastases Worsens Cognitive DeclinePosted: June 2, 2015
In some patients with cancer that has spread to the brain, whole brain radiation following radiosurgery causes more severe cognitive decline and does not improve survival compared with radiosurgery alone, a new study has found.
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NCI-Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH) TrialUpdated: January 18, 2017
Information about the NCI-Molecular Analysis for Therapy Choice (NCI-MATCH) precision medicine trial, in which researchers will examine tumor tissue from patients with advanced solid tumors and lymphomas that have stopped responding to treatment and assign patients to treatment arms based on the molecular profiles of their disease.
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Genetically Engineered Immunotherapy for Advanced CancerPosted: August 7, 2012
In this trial, doctors will collect T lymphocytes from the blood of patients with advanced mesothelin-expressing cancer and genetically engineer these cells to recognize mesothelin. The gene-engineered cells will then be multiplied and infused into the patients to fight their cancer.
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Comparing Postoperative Radiation Therapies for Brain MetastasesPosted: December 13, 2011
In this clinical trial, patients with one to four brain metastases who have had at least one of the metastatic tumors removed surgically will be randomly assigned to undergo whole-brain radiation therapy or stereotactic radiosurgery.
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Matters of the Heart: Why Are Cardiac Tumors So Rare?Posted: February 10, 2009
Cardiac tumors that originate in the heart itself are extremely rare. The highly specialized and most abundant cell in the heart may explain why the organ is such an inhospitable host to cancer.