A Fox Chase Cancer Center study found that outpatient observation cut hospital stays dramatically, with no adverse safety events reported. It also freed up inpatient beds and cut healthcare costs.
A Fox Chase Cancer Center study found that measuring a patient’s absolute lymphocyte count can predict how well they’ll respond to the therapy for non-Hodgkin lymphoma. It could offer a practical tool for guiding treatment decisions.
Using the first-ever prostate cancer cell line from an Afro-Caribbean patient, investigators at Fox Chase Cancer Center and other members of the African Caribbean Cancer Consortium uncovered significant differences in how cancer drugs work across ancestries. These differences may help explain why, despite advances in treatment, Black men die from prostate cancer at twice the rate of White men.
For more than a decade, a class of drugs called spliceosome inhibitors has been studied as a strategy for killing cancer cells. Now, new research by Fox Chase Cancer Center scientists suggests that these drugs may be more effective as a tool to supercharge immunotherapy, drugs that harness the power of the body’s immune system, in small cell lung cancer.
Unlike conventional radiation therapy systems, adaptive radiotherapy creates a new plan for each treatment session, allowing clinicians to deliver larger doses of radiation to tumors more safely.
Fox Chase Cancer Center’s Namrata ‘Neena’ Vijayvergia, MD, an expert in gastrointestinal cancers and rare neuroendocrine tumors, was recently recognized by two neuroendocrine tumor advocacy groups for her contributions to the field.
Most oncologists still rely on clinical trial data when making treatment decisions, overlooking insights from real-world evidence, a Fox Chase Cancer Center study found.