News

City of Hope researchers demonstrate proof of concept for a novel targeted therapy for pancreatic cancer, exploiting transcription-replication conflicts to combat treatment resistance.
Last year City of Hope received a historic $150 million gift to fund pancreatic cancer research from two entrepreneur-philanthropists: A. Emmet Stephenson Jr. and his daughter, Tessa Stephenson Brand.
In October she went to the doctor to get checked out for difficulty swallowing and he ordered an endoscopy. He also ...
Dr. Fong has focused on gene therapy for over two decades, engineering viruses and immune cells to kill cancer. His City of Hope team developed CF33, a cancer-fighting virus that has been shown to ...
Tripp Razor highlights the disproportionately high pancreatic cancer risk among Black Americans and the systemic disparities ...
City of Hope ®, one of the largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States with ...
City of Hope’s Beckman Research Institute researchers will also test new biomarker-guided therapies in near real time NSCLC, ...
“Alcohol consumption is a known carcinogen, but until now, the evidence linking it specifically to pancreatic cancer has been considered inconclusive,” said Pietro Ferrari, senior author of the study ...
Two recent studies from Dr. Sita Kugel’s lab at Fred Hutch Cancer Center identify a key biological signature that not only ...
Researchers at City of Hope have identified a new molecular target for treating pancreatic cancer, reports a Gastroenterology study. Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is one of the deadliest ...
Last year City of Hope received a historic $150 million gift to fund pancreatic cancer research from two entrepreneur-philanthropists: A. Emmet Stephenson Jr. and his daughter, Tessa Stephenson Brand.