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Create a Figure of Hope

The Figures of Hope Project was developed to encourage cancer patients to express themselves during the COVID pandemic

View the Figure of Hope Gallery

We're no longer accepting Figures of Hope submissions.

We are leaving the templates for you to download and invite you to create your own art.

Cancer Rehabilitation Neuropsychology

Cancer and cancer treatments can have an impact on more than physical health. People with cancer or a history of cancer sometimes notice problems with thinking, behavior, and emotions during and after treatment. Cancer Rehabilitation Neuropsychology can help.

How does cancer impact thinking/behavior/emotions?

Cancer Treatment in the Time of COVID-19

Going through treatment for cancer can be scary on its own. Now, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, patients at the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center -- and cancer centers across the country -- are facing additional challenges.

Hormone Therapy with Radiation May Harm Men with Low PSA Levels

Antiandrogen treatment, however, is associated with heart and neurological problems and didn’t increase survival for men with low PSA levels, a University of Michigan study finds.

U-M Research Suggests Studies of the Tumor Suppressor Protein PP2A Need a Second Look

More than 100 studies worldwide involving an abnormal modification in the tumor suppressor protein PP2A likely need a second look, research led by the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center has found. That’s because a new study suggests that commercially available antibodies used to investigate the modification aren’t fully reliable.

Managing Prostate Cancer Patients During the COVID-19 Pandemic

A new framework from an international team of experts aims to help protect patients and providers, and conserve protective equipment for frontline health care workers.

Starving Pancreatic Cancer of Cysteine Kills Tumor Cells, Collaborative Study Finds

A new, collaborative study between the Rogel Cancer Center and researchers from the Columbia University Irving Medical Center and the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center suggests a compound in development for a rare kidney stone disease may have potential against pancreatic cancer.

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