Recent News

521 News Items found
Petri dish with green mold on it
Science Byte
Learn how immune cells in the lungs trigger invasive fungal cells to self-destruct. The discovery could produce therapies to prevent infection in cancer patients.
Kenneth Offit and Vijai Joseph
Finding
An analysis of germline DNA in people with advanced cancer finds that inherited mutations may be more common than expected in this group.
Pediatric oncologist Kevin Curran with CAR T patient Esmeralda Pineda
Announcement
Children, teens, and young adults with leukemia that have stopped responding to chemotherapy are the first eligible to receive the new treatment.
A network of neurons
Finding
New findings from experiments done in mice suggest a surprising cause of common neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.
Every year, GSK awards fellowships to two third-year students and six second-year students based on academic excellence.
Gregory Mazo
Gregory Mazo has been awarded the Chairman’s Prize for his first-author paper Spatial Control of Primary Ciliogenesis by Subdistal Appendages Alters Sensation-Associated Properties of Cilia, published in Developmental Cell in 2016.
Surgeon in blue scrubs doing operation with two assisting.
In the Clinic
MSK head and neck surgeons are investigating novel imaging methods that enable them to detect and visualize cancer cells during an operation.
Rack of blood vials
Finding
MSK investigators find that the presence of certain gene mutations in patients’ blood may mean they are more likely to get a secondary leukemia.
Acute myeloid leukemia cells under a microscope
Announcement
A new treatment option for people with acute myeloid leukemia is available, and it works in an unconventional way.
Representative image of a dividing tumor cell showing the extrachromosomal location of duplicated BRAF genes
In the Lab
Scientists are learning how tumors develop resistance to drugs — and what can be done about it.