Prostate cancer hijacks the normal prostate's growth regulation program to release the brakes and grow freely, according to Weill Cornell Medicine researchers. The discovery, published Dec. 13 in ...
Non-cancerous cells called stromal cells, which are found in and around prostate tumors, may be useful in assessing these tumors' potential to spread, and may even be targets for future prostate ...
Scientists have revealed how certain immune cells may be quietly helping prostate cancer grow - and how blocking them could help the body fight back. The study, published July 2 as the cover story in ...
Researchers at the University of Illinois Chicago have developed an anti-cancer therapy inspired by bacteria found in cancer ...
Targeted cancer therapies are an expanding field of effective therapeutic approaches. While previous chemotherapy agents indiscriminately killed rapidly proliferating cells, newer “precision medicine” ...
The image shows prostate cancer cells in which KLF4 (red) and the CD44 protein (green) on the cell membrane are stained. There is a challenge related to prostate and many other cancers that cancer ...
Research assistant Hong Wang retrieves a small, clear, plastic tray from a stainless-steel incubator and places it carefully on the laboratory bench at Monash University’s Prostate Cancer Research ...
A major international study has uncovered a new vulnerability in prostate cancer cells that could help improve treatment for one of the most common cancers affecting men. The research, published in ...
Staging means finding out how far prostate cancer has spread in your body. Physicians group prostate cancers into stages I (1) through IV (4), with stage I being the least advanced and stage IV being ...