Latest News from: UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

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Released: 24-Apr-2019 1:05 PM EDT
'Super-Hero' Stem Cells Survive Radiation to Regrow Muscles
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco researchers have discovered a new type of stem cell in mouse muscles that is resistant to radiation and other forms of cellular stress. The findings have implications for improving recovery for cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy and could even lead to treatments to protect future astronauts from the ravages of deep-space radiation.

Released: 18-Apr-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Three Faculty Elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco cancer biologist Alan Ashworth, PhD, structural biologist Yifan Cheng, PhD, and molecular physiologist Holly Ingraham, PhD, have been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Released: 18-Apr-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Researchers Identify a New Therapeutic Target for Glioblastoma and Other Cancers
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UCSF researchers have discovered that STAG2 – a gene commonly mutated in several human cancers – plays an essential role in DNA replication, revealing potential mechanisms for therapeutically targeting glioblastoma and other cancers.

Released: 15-Apr-2019 8:05 PM EDT
UCSF Study Aims to Increase Diversity in Cancer Clinical Trials
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco is collaborating with the nonprofit Lazarex Cancer Foundation on a three-year study to identify ways to improve cancer clinical trial participation among medically underserved populations, including low-income individuals and racial and ethnic minorities.

Released: 12-Apr-2019 8:05 PM EDT
Medicaid Could Save $2.6 Billion Within a Year if Just 1 Percent of Recipients Quit Smoking
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Reducing smoking, and its associated health effects, among Medicaid recipients in each state by just 1 percent would result in $2.6 billion in total Medicaid savings the following year, according to new research by UC San Francisco.

Released: 12-Apr-2019 5:05 PM EDT
Cancer-Killing Combination Therapies Unveiled with New Drug-Screening Tool
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco scientists have designed a large-scale screen that efficiently identifies drugs that are potent cancer-killers when combined, but only weakly effective when used alone. Using this technique, the researchers eradicated a devastating blood cancer and certain solid tumor cells by jointly administering drugs that are only partially effective when used as single-agent therapies.

Released: 5-Apr-2019 4:00 AM EDT
Cancer Exports Molecular 'Saboteurs' to Remotely Disarm Immune System
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco researchers have identified a surprising phenomenon that may explain why many cancers don’t respond to certain immunotherapy drugs, and hints at new strategies to unleash the immune system against disease.

Released: 25-Mar-2019 12:15 PM EDT
UCSF Oncologist Answers Pancreas Cancer FAQs on Facebook Live
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Following the self-disclosure of Jeopardy's Alex Trebek that he is battling pancreas cancer, ABC7 News sat down with UCSF's Dr. Andrew Ko at our Mission Bay campus to discuss common questions about the disease.

Released: 3-Jan-2019 12:05 PM EST
Landmark Mammography Study Highlights the Importance of Breast Cancer Screening
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

A landmark mammography study has found that women who receive annual breast cancer screenings will have a lower mortality rate and will benefit more from therapy upon diagnosis of breast cancer.

Released: 18-Dec-2018 2:05 PM EST
Prostate Cancer Disparities Greatest in Low-Risk Disease
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

A new study investigating prostate cancer deaths by race has found that African American men have twice the chance of dying from low-risk prostate cancer than men of other racial and ethnic groups, even after adjusting for socioeconomic status.

Released: 24-Oct-2018 2:05 PM EDT
Heated Tobacco Product Claims by Tobacco Industry Scrutinized by UCSF Researchers, Others in Independent Data Review
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Claims by the tobacco industry that heated tobacco products (HTPs) are safer than conventional cigarettes are not supported by the industry’s own data and are likely to be misunderstood by consumers, according to research published in a special issue of Tobacco Control.

Released: 12-Jul-2018 10:55 AM EDT
Deadly Form of Advanced Prostate Cancer Is Common, Calls for Distinct Treatment
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

A new study of prostate cancer in 202 men, whose cancers had spread and were resistant to standard treatment, found that a surprisingly large number of these cancers – about 17 percent – belong to a deadlier subtype of metastatic prostate cancer.

Released: 14-May-2018 12:45 PM EDT
Research Finds 'Achilles Heel' for Aggressive Prostate Cancer
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

UC San Francisco researchers have discovered a promising new line of attack against lethal, treatment-resistant prostate cancer. Analysis of hundreds of human prostate tumors revealed that the most aggressive cancers depend on a built-in cellular stress response to put a brake on their own hot-wired physiology.

Released: 14-Mar-2018 3:50 PM EDT
E-Cigarette Use Exposes Teens to Toxic Chemicals
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Adolescents who smoke e-cigarettes are exposed to significant levels of potentially cancer-causing chemicals also found in tobacco cigarettes, even when the e-cigarettes do not contain nicotine, according to a study by UC San Francisco researchers.

Released: 15-Jan-2018 12:30 PM EST
Youth Using Alternative Tobacco Products Are More Likely to Smoke 1 Year Later
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Nonsmoking adolescents who use e-cigarettes, smokeless tobacco or tobacco water pipes are more likely to start smoking conventional cigarettes within a year, according to new research by UC San Francisco.

Released: 14-Nov-2017 1:05 PM EST
Deadly Lung Cancers Are Driven by Multiple Genetic Changes
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

A new UC San Francisco–led study challenges the dogma in oncology that most cancers are caused by one dominant “driver” mutation that can be treated in isolation with a single targeted drug.

Released: 14-Sep-2017 9:45 AM EDT
Breast Cancer Patients Who Freeze Their Eggs See No Delay for Chemotherapy
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Women who receive a breast cancer diagnosis while they are still young enough to bear children can take time to freeze their eggs and embryos without fear of delaying their cancer treatment, according to research by UC San Francisco scientists who have helped develop a faster fertility preservation technique that can achieve in two weeks what used to take a month or longer.

Released: 14-Sep-2017 9:45 AM EDT
University of California Cancer Consortium Takes on California’s $14 Billion Killer
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

The University of California’s five academic cancer centers, home to some of the world’s leading scientists and physicians, have formed a consortium to better address California’s most pressing cancer-related problems and opportunities, UC President Janet Napolitano and Dr. John Stobo, executive vice president of UC Health, announced today.

Released: 13-Jul-2017 4:05 PM EDT
Big-Data Analysis Points Toward New Drug Discovery Method
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

A research team led by scientists at UC San Francisco has developed a computational method to systematically probe massive amounts of open-access data to discover new ways to use drugs, including some that have already been approved for other uses.

17-May-2017 5:00 PM EDT
Eating Right and Exercising Could Reduce the Risk of Colon Cancer Recurrence
UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

Colon cancer patients who have a healthy body weight, exercise regularly and eat a diet high in whole grains, fruits and vegetables have a significantly lower risk of cancer recurrence or death, according to a research team led by UC San Francisco investigators. This finding represents an analysis of data collected on patients participating in a national study for people with stage III colon cancer.



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