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In honor of his extraordinary contributions to improving the diagnosis and treatment of childhood cancer, Richard O’Reilly, Chairman of the Department of Pediatrics and Director of the Bone Marrow Transplantation Program at MSK, will receive the first Society of Memorial Sloan Kettering Prize.
Researchers discover how immune cells called macrophages regulate whether fat is stored or burned.
The reason certain patients with follicular lymphoma do worse than others may come down to a missing gene.
MSK researchers learn that some cancers may respond to checkpoint inhibitor drugs because of changes called gene fusions.
A member of the Sloan Kettering Institute's Immunology Program and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator, Alexander Rudensky is fascinated by how a specific type of white blood cells called regulatory T cells regulates our immune system.
The initial results of an ongoing study show that a liquid biopsy has advantages over a tissue biopsy for people with lung cancer.
Annually, Gerstner Sloan Kettering recognizes student research through fellowship awards with the Grayer Fellowships, the Catell Fellowship, the Olayan Fellowship, the Palestin Fellowship, and the Geoffrey Beene Graduate Student Fellowship.
A study reveals unexpected insights into how cells prepare broken DNA strands to be rejoined, preventing mutations that can cause cancer.
In an eagerly awaited study, Memorial Sloan Kettering researchers report on the molecular structure of mTOR, a protein commonly mutated in cancer.
A new study led by MSK investigators reveals how some cancer cells become resistant to targeted treatment and suggests what might be done to stop that from happening.