NCI Cancer Bulletin: Top Feature Stories Since January

 

NCI Cancer Bulletin: A Trusted Source for Cancer Research News

August 23, 2011

Dear NCI Cancer Bulletin Subscribers,

The editors, writers, advisors, and technical staff of the NCI Cancer Bulletin would like to thank you for your continued interest in our newsletter. As you may know, we will not publish an issue today due to our summer production break, but we will resume biweekly publication on September 6.

In the meantime, we would like to share some of our favorite and most popular feature stories published in the NCI Cancer Bulletin so far this year:

§  Preserving Fertility While Battling Cancer (January 11)

 

§  Coming Home to Roost: The Self-Seeding Hypothesis of Tumor Growth (February 8)

 

§  The Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition in Cancer: A Potentially Fatal Transformation? (March 8)

 

§  Ovarian Cancer Study Raises Questions about Developing Markers for Early Detection (March 8)

 

§  Fertility Still Possible for Many Male Cancer Survivors, Study Finds (March 22)

 

§  For People with Rare Skin Cancer Syndrome, Drug Brings Relief and Hope (April 5)

 

§  Debunking Cancer Myths, One Phone Call at a Time (April 19)

 

§  Use and Acceptance of HPV Vaccine Still a Work in Progress (May 3)

 

§  Combining Targeted Cancer Therapies: Much Promise, Many Hurdles (May 17)

 

§  Lenalidomide and Radiation for Children with Brain Cancers (May 17)

 

§  Despite Early Skepticism, HPV Vaccines Prove Effective (May 31)

 

§  New Therapies Offer Much-Needed Options for Patients with Melanoma (June 14)

 

§  Imaging Boot Camp for Cancer Researchers (June 28)

 

§  AYAs Are Not Alone: Confronting Psychosocial Challenges of Cancer (July 26)

 


In addition to these features, we have produced a number of videos over the past year. You can access these videos through our YouTube channel.

 

Thank you again for your interest and support. We hope you'll continue to read each issue and encourage others to subscribe.  

 

We also appreciate your story ideas and feedback. Send your suggestions and comments to us by e-mail at ncicancerbulletin@mail.nih.gov.

 

Best regards,

The NCI Cancer Bulletin Team

 


 

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