Scientists have successfully used real-time MRI to demonstrate that swallowing causes minimal motion of the larynx, known as the voice box, in people undergoing a radiotherapy session for cancer in ...
A new study has shown that non-cancerous cells positioned close to tumours can affect how cancer responds to treatment. Factoring in the effects of these cells could improve drug development, which ...
Dr Gabriela Kramer-Marek’s group uses cutting-edge biomedical imaging techniques to gain information about the way particular genes drive cancer progression. Our group’s long-term goal is to develop ...
Scientists have successfully used a form of artificial intelligence (AI) to develop a new imaging approach that makes it easier for radiologists to assess the extent of bone disease in people with ...
Ovarian cancer is the sixth most common cancer in the UK, with around 7,500 new cases annually, and globally more than 300,000 women are diagnosed each year. This cancer is particularly difficult to ...
Doctors could soon be able to better predict an individual patient’s chances of getting cancer and offer them personalised detection and prevention strategies, thanks to a new research project co-led ...
Our group's aim is to improve the treatment and survival of children with neuroblastoma, medulloblastoma and rhabdomyosarcoma. The goal of our laboratory is to improve the treatment and survival of ...
Ovarian cancer is often diagnosed late, making it difficult to treat. But innovative research at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, is changing how we think about managing this complex and hard ...