AACR Annual Meeting 2024: A Global View on Cancer 
Cancer Research Catalyst
by AACR Global Affairs
52m ago
With more than 23,200 registrants, the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024 not only set a record number of registrants but witnessed the highest international participation to date.   As the world’s largest professional organization dedicated to advancing cancer research, the AACR has members in 141 countries and territories around the world and offers numerous opportunities to help investigators in the international community.  In fact, 62 out of 67 grants at the AACR are open globally including the AACR Scholar-in-Training Awards, the Global Sc ..read more
Visit website
NCI Director Introduces New Era of Cancer Research
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Andrew Matthius
53m ago
Like Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour, Kimryn Rathmell, MD, PhD, began her tenure as the director of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) in December 2023 following a “Cruel Summer” that saw Congress pass legislation to raise the debt ceiling but cut funding for scientific research—among other things—and put a freeze on increases until after 2025. Despite that challenge, Rathmell is “…Ready for It,” taking a position she could only imagine in her “Wildest Dreams”; prepared to help other physician-scientists overcome obstacles she knows “All Too Well (Two Decades Version)”; excited to explore the “Blan ..read more
Visit website
Editors’ Picks, April 2024: Targeting Metabolism, KRAS, and More 
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Cancer Research Catalyst Staff
1w ago
As April showers bring May flowers, the editors of the 10 American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) journals shower us with their picks of this month’s most blossoming studies.   For April, the editors selected two studies about metabolic interventions for acute myeloid leukemia, an analysis of how serum microRNAs (miRNAs) used for ovarian cancer screening might differ by race, a new inhibitor that acts upstream of KRAS, and more. The abstract of each highlighted study is included below, and each article is freely available for a limited time.  Journal: Blood Cancer Disco ..read more
Visit website
From Metastatic Seeds to Lineage Trees: How Tumor Evolution Shapes Metastasis
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Calley Jones, PhD
1w ago
When the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting featured a plenary session focused on metastasis in 2010, our understanding of the complex process was far different than it is today.  “Back then, our textbook understanding of metastasis was … a linear process of obligate steps,” said Cyrus M. Ghajar, PhD, of Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, who chaired a new metastasis-focused plenary session at the AACR Annual Meeting 2024, held in San Diego April 5-10.   Cyrus M. Ghajar, PhD. Photo by © AACR/Phil McCarten 2024. Ghajar explained that our understanding has ..read more
Visit website
Cutting-edge Approaches to Understand Tumor Ecosystems 
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Neha J. Pancholi, PhD
2w ago
Cancer is a highly complex disease, in part because of the ecosystems (or microenvironments) in which tumors reside. With a multitude of cell types and microorganisms, the tumor microenvironment can influence how cancer forms, whether it spreads, and how it responds to treatment. Making progress against cancer, therefore, will require a thorough understanding of the intricate relationships that exist between cancers and their microenvironments.  Fortunately, recent technological advances have enabled researchers to study the tumor microenvironment in unprecedented detail and decipher man ..read more
Visit website
How to Effectively Reach People with Your Science?
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Srivani Ravoori, PhD
2w ago
If you are a cancer researcher, what is your first reaction when someone asks you, “What are you researching on?”  Do you easily explain your work in simple language, sprinkling in analogies and fun facts? Or do you pause, wondering where to start and what to say?  As brilliant as researchers are, many find it daunting to communicate their science in an easily understood form, thus often shutting themselves and their discoveries off from the public and instead sharing them only among their peers.   It is crucial, however, that the public understands the latest scientific a ..read more
Visit website
Opening Plenary Showcases Molecular Advances Leading to Big Revolutions in Cancer Research 
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Calley Jones, PhD
3w ago
Groundbreaking clinical developments begin with fundamental research at the lab bench. Bench research depends on technological advances to allow scientists to reconceptualize problems and find new solutions for patients. The full spectrum of cancer research encompasses all of these facets working together as a well-oiled machine.  It’s a paradigm that the program chairs of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024, held April 5-10 in San Diego, wanted at the foundation of the meeting.  “[We made] a concerted effort to weave technology into the scientifi ..read more
Visit website
Dispelling Myths About Prostate Cancer in Black Communities
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Andrew Matthius
3w ago
“The great enemy of truth is very often not the lie—deliberate, contrived, and dishonest, but the myth—persistent, persuasive, and unrealistic.” When John F. Kennedy delivered that remark, he wasn’t referring to prostate cancer, but his lesson applies nonetheless. It is a fact that the incidence of prostate cancer is 60% higher in Black men compared to white men in the United States. But a common myth that if you feel fine then you don’t need a prostate exam may prevent people from getting screened. It is a fact that Black men are 2.2 times more likely to die from prostate cancer than white m ..read more
Visit website
Cancer Discovery Commentaries Discuss Emerging Topics, Challenge Existing Paradigms, Reflect Annual Meeting Theme
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Calley Jones, PhD
3w ago
Inspiring science. Fueling progress. Revolutionizing care.  The theme of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2024, held in San Diego April 5-10, encompasses the gamut of cancer research—from improving the way science is conducted to making cutting-edge discoveries in the laboratory to translating those discoveries to cancer patients.  Cancer Discovery, a journal of the AACR, similarly strives to publish the most groundbreaking science happening across the vast scope of cancer research.  In fall 2023, Cancer Discovery editors-in-chief Luis A. Diaz ..read more
Visit website
Personalized Neoantigen Vaccines Boost Progress Against Aggressive Cancers 
Cancer Research Catalyst
by Neha J. Pancholi, PhD
1M ago
In 1796, Edward Jenner inoculated a young boy with cowpox to protect him from smallpox, an early example of vaccination.  Fast forward 200+ years: smallpox has been eradicated, and the cowpox virus (now known as vaccinia virus) is being used to develop an entirely different type of vaccine—one that treats cancer.  Unlike preventive vaccines, such as those that protect against COVID-19 and the flu, therapeutic cancer vaccines are designed to treat existing cancers by training the patient’s immune system to recognize and destroy cancer cells.   At the American Association fo ..read more
Visit website

Follow Cancer Research Catalyst on FeedSpot

Continue with Google
Continue with Apple
OR