Tiny silica particles wiped out aggressive prostate cancer in mice
Tiny silica nanoparticles engineered to seek out prostate cancer caused tumor cells to self-destruct and supercharged the immune system in preclinical mouse studies. Combined with immunotherapy, the…
Read the full articleYou might also wanna read
Lipid nanoparticle platform delivers chemo drug and RNA to boost immune response against lung cancer
Researchers at the University of Arizona R. Ken Coit College of Pharmacy have developed a new strategy that helps the immune system recogniz
Magnetic algae microrobots boost chemotherapy delivery to bladder tumors in mouse study
Tiny algae-based microrobots guided by magnets could improve bladder cancer treatment by boosting delivery of chemotherapy drugs into tumors
Oregon State University Researchers Develop Iron Nanomaterial That Selectively Destroys Cancer Cells
Scientists at Oregon State University have engineered a powerful new nanomaterial that zeroes in on cancer cells and destroys them from the
Experimental mRNA cancer vaccine shows tumor-fighting promise in mouse study
A breakthrough mRNA cancer vaccine has shown the ability to supercharge the effects of immunotherapy in mice, sparking hope for a universal
UCLA study: Creatine supplementation boosts dendritic cells, slows tumor growth in mice
UCLA study finds creatine supplementation significantly slowed tumor growth in mice
Engineered immunotherapy drug eliminates aggressive metastatic cancers in clinical trial
The researchers demonstrate that an engineered antibody improves a class of drugs that has struggled to make good on its early promise.

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.