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Cancer,
Science & Research

Medicine is in His DNA: A Conversation with Dennis Slamon

Plenty of children are afraid to go to the doctor. Dennis Slamon used to look forward to it.
June 3, 2011   |  
9 min read
Radiology technician
Cancer,
Science & Research

Cancer Researcher Receives the American College of Radiology's Gold Medal

Dr. Lawrence W. Bassett has been chosen to receive the Gold Medal by the American College of Radiology (ACR), the organization’s highest honor given for distinguished and extraordinary service in the field of radiology.
May 13, 2011   |  
3 min read
Nanotechnology grid
Cancer,
Science & Research

Scientists Discover New Way to Wake up Immune System Using Nanoparticle Vaults to Deliver Drugs

UCLA scientists have discovered a way to wake up the immune system to fight cancer by delivering an immune system-stimulating protein in a nanoscale container called a vault directly into lung cancer tumors, harnessing the body’s natural defenses to fight disease growth.
May 3, 2011   |  
6 min read
Microscopy image of immune cells communicating with genes.
Cancer,
Science & Research

UCLA's cancer 'roadmap' could help combat resistance to targeted drug therapies

New drugs that specifically target the mutated genes responsible for cancer growth have shown great success in extending the lives of patients, with far fewer side effects than conventional anti-cancer therapies.
March 24, 2011   |  
5 min read
Image
Cancer,
Science & Research

Program Providing Care to Uninsured Prostate Cancer Patients Receives $9.3 Million from State

A California program that provides treatment to low-income, uninsured men with prostate cancer who have no other way to get health care has received a three-year state contract for $9.3 million that will allow for hundreds of additional patients to be treated.
March 10, 2011   |  
3 min read
Robert Damoiseaux heads the Molecular Screening Shared Resource at the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
Cancer,
Science & Research

Playing the cancer lottery and hoping for a payoff

January 21, 2011   |  
8 min read
Dr. Michael Teitell
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers Discover New Signaling Pathway that Controls Cell Development and Cancer

Researchers at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center have discovered a new cell signaling pathway that controls cell growth and development, a pathway that when defective helps promote the formation of several major forms of human cancer including lymphoma and leukemia.
December 23, 2010   |  
4 min read
Edward De Robertis
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers Uncover New Biological Mechanism that Regulates Protein Stability in Cells

The cell signaling pathway known as Wnt, commonly activated in cancers, causes internal membranes within a healthy cell to imprison an enzyme that is vital in degrading proteins.
December 23, 2010   |  
3 min read
Dr. Patricia Ganz
Cancer,
Science & Research

Dr. Patricia Ganz Awarded the American Cancer Society's Medal of Honor

Dr. Patricia Ganz was awarded the American Cancer Society’s Medal of Honor today, the highest honor bestowed by the organization.
November 5, 2010   |  
3 min read
A close-up of nanoparticles.
Cancer,
Science & Research

Microfluidics-imaging platform detects cancer growth signaling in minute biopsy samples

Inappropriate growth and survival signaling, which leads to the aberrant growth of cancer cells, is a driving force behind tumors.
November 1, 2010   |  
4 min read
Dr. Michael Teitell
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers Discover New Signaling Pathway that Controls Cell Development and Cancer

UCLA researchers have discovered a new cell signaling pathway that controls cell growth and development, a pathway that when defective helps promote the formation of several major forms of human cancer including lymphoma and leukemia.
September 23, 2010   |  
4 min read
Doctor checking aging skin
News about UCLA Health,
Science & Research

UCLA conference to address technology's impact on successful aging Oct. 29

While aging impacts everyday living in many ways, the latest technologies in the medical, consumer and lifestyle fields have the potential to help older adults live better for longer.
September 17, 2010   |  
6 min read
Illlustration of mitochondriai
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers Discover Protein that Shuttles RNA into Cell Mitochondria

UCLA researchers have uncovered a role for an essential cell protein in shuttling RNA into the mitochondria, the energy-producing “power plant” of the cell.
August 6, 2010   |  
4 min read
prostate cancer
Cancer,
Science & Research

UCLA Scientists for the First Time Identify Cell of Origin for Human Prostate Cancer

UCLA scientists have identified for the first time a cell-of-origin for human prostate cancer, a discovery that could result in better predictive and diagnostics tools and the development of more effective targeted treatments for the disease.
July 29, 2010   |  
5 min read
ped doctor and child
Cancer,
Science & Research

Adult Survivors of Childhood Cancer Four Times More Likely to Develop Post-traumatic Stress Disorder

Young adult survivors of childhood cancers are four times more likely to develop Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) than their control group siblings, a Childhood Cancer Survivors Study has found.
May 3, 2010   |  
4 min read
Image
Cancer,
Science & Research

Study Provides Proof in Humans of RNA Interference Using Targeted Nanoparticles

A team of researchers and clinicians from the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) has published the first proof that a targeted nanoparticle can navigate into tumors.
March 25, 2010   |  
5 min read
Image
Cancer,
Science & Research

Colon cancer treatment for older patients often less aggressive than recommended, study finds

New results from a major initiative on the quality of cancer care in the United States show that patients with a common type of colon cancer, especially older patients, often do not receive the aggressive treatment with chemotherapy that research shows is associated with better survival.
March 18, 2010   |  
6 min read
For patients with advanced pancreatic cancer, a four-drug chemotherapy regimen resulted in greater longevity than a two-drug protocol in a global clinical trial led by a UCLA Health oncologist.
Cancer,
Science & Research

Combination of Herceptin and Tykerb Effective Against Subset of Gastric Cancers

A combination of two targeted therapies already shown to be effective in breast cancer packs an effective one-two punch against a subset of gastric cancers that have a specific genetic mutation, a study at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has found.
March 4, 2010   |  
4 min read
HIV-infected H9 t-cell
Science & Research

Gene-based stem cell therapy specifically removes cell receptor that attracts HIV

UCLA AIDS Institute researchers successfully removed CCR5 — a cell receptor to which HIV-1 binds for infection but which the human body does not need from human cells. Individuals who naturally lack the CCR5 receptor have been found to be essentially resistant to HIV.
February 25, 2010   |  
2 min read