World Cancer Day: closing the care gap
To mark World Cancer Day (February 4th) Oncology Central has compiled resources from across our site and our affiliated journals in an effort to make cancer research more accessible, to ...
Read moreTo mark World Cancer Day (February 4th) Oncology Central has compiled resources from across our site and our affiliated journals in an effort to make cancer research more accessible, to ...
Read moreThe clinical trial landscape has evolved immensely over the last decade, however, despite many advances, oncology trials often fail in their early stages. There are many hurdles that ...
Read moreThe field of immuno-oncology is continuing to evolve at a fast rate. Our latest Spotlight takes a look at advances in the immuno-oncology field. Topics covered in this Spotlight will ...
Read moreAs the field of oncology continues to evolve, a major focus has become prevention and screening. Join us over the coming weeks on Oncology central as we take a look at the latest ...
Read moreOver the last decade, precision medicine has taken leaps forward, with projects such as the Precision Medicine Initiative, All of Us and the Human Cancer Models Initiative driving the ...
Read moreWe have witnessed great advancements for cancer over the past few years, namely immunotherapy. Despite this success, the use of these drugs remains imprecise, with a limited ability to ...
Read moreOver the coming weeks on Oncology Central we will be carrying out a Spotlight event exploring the field of biosimilars in oncology. Join us as we look further into their development, ...
Read moreMuch of the available literature discussing the topic defines interventional oncology as the fourth pillar of cancer therapy, where it stands alongside medical, surgical and radiation ...
Read moreCancer immunotherapy is arguably one of the biggest developments and one of hottest topic within oncology. This Spotlight reviews the intricacies of how cancer cells and immune cells ...
Read moreAs has been proven, cancer does not simply consist of one type of cell; rather tumors can be made up of a heterogeneous collection of cells with varying phenotypes. It has been proposed ...
Read moreAs has been proven, cancer does not simply consist of one type of cell; rather tumors can be made up of a heterogeneous collection of cells with varying phenotypes. It has been proposed ...
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