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Breast cancer survivors sitting together
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health,
Science & Research

Innovative University of California Collaboration Targets Breast Cancer

UCLA is taking part in an unprecedented statewide University of California collaboration to revolutionize care for breast cancer patients by designing and testing, system-wide, new approaches to research, technology and health care delivery.
September 29, 2009   |  
7 min read
Dr. Cloughesy
Cancer,
Science & Research

Avastin Dramatically Increases Response, Survival in Recurrent Brain Cancers

The targeted therapy Avastin, alone and in combination with the chemotherapy drug CPT-11, significantly increased response rates, progression-free survival times and survival rates in patients with a deadly form of brain cancer that had recurred.
September 3, 2009   |  
4 min read
Cancer,
Science & Research

Crystal ball for brain cancer?

UCLA scientists have devised a new way to image brain tumors and predict which ones are most likely to benefit from the drug Avastin — before the patient ever takes a single dose.
August 3, 2009   |  
4 min read
UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation Taste for a Cure logo
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health

Entertainment Industry Executives to Head Foundation Board

Entertainment industry executives Randall M. Katz and Jay Sures have been named chair and vice chair of the board of directors for the Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation (JCCF), the fundraising arm of UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center.
July 28, 2009   |  
3 min read
Woman drawing a geometric shape
Cancer,
Behavioral Health,
News about UCLA Health

New Center Providing Integrative Oncology Care Opens

A new center providing leading-edge integrated care to cancer patients and their families launched today at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, offering such services as art therapy and QiGong, one-on-one and group counseling and advice on nutritional, spiritual and complementary approaches to healing.
June 27, 2009   |  
6 min read
Lung cancer image
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers Develop Model that May Help Identify Lung Cancer Stem Cells

Researchers at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, on a quest to find lung cancer stem cells, have developed a unique model to allow further investigation into the cells that many believe may be at the root of all lung cancers.
June 16, 2009   |  
5 min read
Mark Litwin, MD 2020
Cancer,
Science & Research

Study Details Quality of Life for Prostate Cancer Patients Four Years Out From Treatment

A long-term study by researchers at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center found that the three most common treatments for localized prostate cancer had significant impacts on patients’ quality of life, a finding that could help guide doctors and patients in making treatment decisions.
June 9, 2009   |  
4 min read
Robert Schiestl
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers for the First Time Link Intestinal Inflammation to Systemic Chromosome Damage

UCLA scientists have linked for the first time intestinal inflammation with systemic chromosome damage in mice, a finding that may lead to the early identification and treatment of human inflammatory disorders, some of which increase risk for several types of cancer.
June 2, 2009   |  
4 min read
Virtual clinical trials
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health,
Science & Research

Leading-Edge Research Management System Launched

In an effort to improve and streamline management of clinical trials, UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has acquired and recently launched Velos eResearch software that allows for better use of information systems and clinical databases in medical research.
April 29, 2009   |  
4 min read
Fritz C. Eilber, MD
Cancer,
Science & Research

Using PET/CT Imaging, Researchers Can Tell in a Single Treatment if Chemotherapy is Working

Oncologists often have to wait months before they can determine whether a treatment is working.
April 15, 2009   |  
3 min read
Michael L. Steinberg, MD
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health,
Science & Research

UCLA Acquires Tool That Delivers Higher Doses of Radiation in Less Time

UCLA has added a new tool to its cancer-fighting arsenal, a state-of-the-art image-guided device that provides more accurate, concentrated doses of radiation, allowing patients to be treated in fewer visits and suffer from fewer side effects.
March 30, 2009   |  
5 min read
Arie Belldegrun
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health,
Science & Research

UCLA Launches Urologic Oncology Institute to Develop Leading-Edge Therapies

UCLA has launched a first-of-its-kind, patient-centered institute dedicated to developing leading-edge therapies for the treatment of kidney, bladder, testicular and prostate cancers.
March 3, 2009   |  
4 min read
Arie Belldegrun
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health,
Science & Research

UCLA launches new Institute of Urologic Oncology

UCLA has launched a first-of-its-kind, patient-centered institute dedicated to developing leading-edge therapies for the treatment of kidney, bladder, testicular and prostate cancers.
March 3, 2009   |  
3 min read
William Aronson
Cancer,
Science & Research

Low-Income Men More Likely to be Diagnosed with Advanced Prostate Cancers

Low-income men are more likely to present with advanced prostate cancers, most likely because they don’t receive screening services shown to reduce the diagnosis of later-stage cancers, a UCLA study found.
December 16, 2008   |  
3 min read
Luisa Iruela-Arispe, PhD
Cancer,
Science & Research

Scientists Prove Endothelial Cells Give Rise to Blood Stem Cells During Embryonic Development

Stem cell researchers at UCLA have proven definitively that blood stem cells are made during mid-gestational embryonic development by endothelial cells, the cells that line the inside of blood vessels.
December 3, 2008   |  
4 min read
Cancer cells
Cancer,
Science & Research

Scientists Discover Signaling Pathway Driving a Deadly Sub-type of Breast Cancer

An intracellular pathway not previously linked to breast cancer is driving a sub-type of the disease that is highly lethal and disproportionately over-represented in African American women.
November 17, 2008   |  
3 min read
Matthew Rettig
Cancer,
Science & Research

HPV Virus Helps Cervical and Head and Neck Cancers Grow and Spread

The human papillomavirus (HPV) allows infected cervical and head and neck cancer cells to maintain internal molecular conditions that make the cancers resistant to therapy and more likely to grow and spread.
November 4, 2008   |  
4 min read
UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center receives Avon Walk check presentation 2008
Cancer,
News about UCLA Health

$1.35 Million Grant Will Fund Program to Help Poor, Uninsured

The sixth annual Avon Walk Los Angeles raised $1.35 million for a program at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center that helps poor and uninsured women navigate their way through breast cancer detection, diagnosis, treatment and survivorship.
September 17, 2008   |  
2 min read
Prostate cancer cells
Cancer,
Science & Research

Researchers Locate and Image Prostate Cancer as it Spreads

Using an engineered common cold virus, UCLA researchers delivered a genetic payload to prostate cancer cells that allowed them, using Positron Emission Tomography (PET), to locate the diseased cells as they spread to the lymph nodes.
July 11, 2008   |  
4 min read
Image
Cancer,
Healthy Lifestyle,
Science & Research

Fruits, Vegetables and Teas May Protect Smokers from Lung Cance

Tobacco smokers who eat three servings of fruits and vegetables per day and drink green or black tea may be protecting themselves from lung cancer, according to a first-of-its-kind study by UCLA cancer researchers.
May 29, 2008   |  
3 min read