By masking ketamine from placebo for the first time, researchers reveal the importance of accounting for expectancy in trials testing psychoactive drugs.
Cancer anywhere in the body can change brain activity, and brain activity can drive cancer growth. These surprising discoveries are leading to new treatments.
Understanding the complex three-way communication between immune cells, the gut microbiome, and cancer sheds light on why immunotherapies fail in some patients but succeed in others.
Currently, the only cure for alpha thalassemia is a bone marrow transplant, but the success of gene therapies for related conditions points to a potential new cure.
Researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered that lowering levels of a cancer signal under a specific threshold—much like a light dimmer switch—reverses tumor development in mice, according to a study published in the July 1 issue of Cancer Research.
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