Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Ending Cancer | Supportive Care for Young People | Pancreatic Cancer Research, 12/18/2024

National Cancer Institute

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Cancer Information Highlights
From the National Cancer Institute
Updating you about cancer causes, prevention, screening, treatment, coping, and more
 
New from NCI
Supporting Research to End Cancer as We Know It
Silhouette of 10 people with different ages, backgrounds, and abilities in front of a centrally illuminated blue and red background.   NCI's support of cancer research is helping reduce the burden of cancer by improving cancer risk assessment, prevention, detection, diagnosis, treatment, and survivorship. In this section of the NCI Fiscal Year 2026 Annual Plan and Professional Judgment Budget Proposal, learn more about the cancer research continuum and how sustained support for NCI's work is needed to end cancer as we know it for all.

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Tool Improves Supportive Care in Young People with Cancer
young person with head scarf sits on a bed with their dog   Results from two clinical trials have shown that younger people with cancer who filled out surveys about their symptoms ended up having fewer cancer-related symptoms than those who did not complete the surveys. The findings show that patient-reported outcome (PRO) surveys for children can give an accurate picture of how a child is feeling during the stress of treatment.

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Advances in Pancreatic Research
pancreatic cancer cells as seen under a microscope   Find out what's new in pancreatic cancer research on this updated page. Topics include current progress in treatment with stroma-modifying drugs and immunotherapy. It also describes selected NCI-supported programs that address pancreatic cancer.

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Engineered E. coli Shrink Tumors in Mice

Two research teams engineered a probiotic strain of E. coli called Nissle 1917 so it can help the immune system attack tumors. Although the E. coli were altered in different ways, resulting in two different immune-based treatment strategies, both were effective in mice.

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Treatment May Target Tumors Driven by Free-Floating DNA

Researchers have found that cancer cells containing extrachromosomal DNAs (free-floating chunks of DNA) have a weakness that can be exploited by a drug that targets the CHK1 protein. In mice, combining the drug with another targeted therapy kept cancer at bay for long periods.

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PSA Test

This updated page explains the PSA (prostate specific antigen) test and how it is used. Learn about prostate screening guidelines, what happens if a PSA test shows an abnormal result, and how the test is used in people who have been treated for prostate cancer.

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Durvalumab for Small Cell Lung Cancer

The Food and Drug Administration expanded the approval of durvalumab (Imfinzi) to include limited-stage small cell lung cancer that didn't get worse after treatment with platinum-based chemotherapy given at the same time as radiation therapy. Durvalumab was previously approved for use with chemotherapy to treat extensive-stage disease.

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Contact Us
Cancer Information Specialist talks on a headset   Information specialists at NCI's Cancer Information Service (CIS), NCI's contact center, are available to help answer your cancer-related questions in English and Spanish. This page tells you how to reach us by phone, chat, or email.

 

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