Oncologists have discovered that lung cancer cells can change their identity to resist treatment. Research published in ...
Cancer scientists have discovered that lung cancer cells can change their identity to resist treatment. Research published today [27 May] in Molecular Oncology reveals how lung cancer cells can become ...
Lung cancer cells can change their identity to escape treatment. Researchers at the University of Southampton made the discovery while studying why some patients do not respond well to chemotherapy or ...
KRAS is one of the oncogenes most frequently altered in cancer, mutated in approximately one-third of lung adenocarcinomas.
A single blood test could help doctors predict how lung cancer patients will respond to treatment before therapy begins, ...
Scientists, funded by Cancer Research UK, have now passed another hurdle, bringing the test closer to patient use ...
Researchers have found that some particularly aggressive lung cancer cells can develop their own electric network, like that seen in the body's nervous system. Researchers from the Francis Crick ...
A SIMPLE urine test for lung cancer could be available for NHS use in as little as five years, scientists say. Spotting ...
Scientists at University of Cambridge say the NHS could roll out the urine test within five years to detect lung cancers a ...
Large cell carcinoma is aggressive, requiring early detection through imaging and biopsy for optimal treatment outcomes. Treatment strategies vary by stage, including surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, ...
SAN ANTONIO, May 27, 2026--bioAffinity Technologies receives notice of allowance for Mexican patent on methods of predicting the likelihood of lung cancer using flow cytometry.
The two main categories for lung cancer are small cell lung cancer (SCLC) and non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Large cell lung cancer (LCLC) is a type of NSCLC. While the conditions share some ...