The stones are Rogel Cancer Center’s way of thanking front line staff; from our custodians to doctors, respiratory therapists to nurses and everyone who comes in every day to help our patients. Learn more
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A portion of all sales will help Michigan Medicine in securing much needed PPE, support services for employees, faster testing and other COVID-19 research.
The University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center has named two new assistant directors, Elena Stoffel, M.D., M.P.H. and Lawrence An, M.D., to help facilitate and enhance its community outreach and engagement efforts.
A team of scientists affiliated with the led by the University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center and School of Dentistry, identified a mechanism by which head and neck cancer cells subvert adjacent normal tissue, allowing small clusters of cancer cells to burrow beneath the healthy tissue.
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are known to play important roles in cancer, but very little is known about their roles in the context of the immune system’s response to cancer.
National Cancer Institute-designated cancer centers and leading cancer organizations issued a joint statement urging the nation’s physicians, parents and young adults to get back on track with the human papillomavirus, or HPV, vaccination.
The protein made by the ASH1L gene plays a key role in the development of acute leukemia, along with other diseases. A team from the University of Michigan has developed first-in-class small molecules to inhibit ASH1L’s SET domain.
Research suggests stopping the interaction between KRAS and the protein AGO2 slowed tumor growth in mouse models and lead to better treatment for non-small cell lung cancer.
Oropharyngeal cancer, which occurs in the throat, tonsils, and back of the tongue, has now surpassed cervical cancer as the leading cancer caused by HPV — and 80% of those diagnosed with it are men.
This research emphasizes the harms of making colorectal cancer screening independent from cervical cancer screening instead of linking them together as part of important preventative care.
The stones are Rogel Cancer Center’s way of thanking front line staff; from our custodians to doctors, respiratory therapists to nurses and everyone who comes in every day to help our patients. Learn more
Get Rogel gear
A portion of all sales will help Michigan Medicine in securing much needed PPE, support services for employees, faster testing and other COVID-19 research.