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.
As cancer grows, it evolves. Individual cells become more aggressive, break away to flow through the body and spread to distant areas. What if there were a way to find those early aggressors? How are they different from the rest of the cells? And more importantly: Is there a way to stop them before they spread?
Cancer cells obtained from a blood test may be able to predict how early-stage lung cancer patients will fare, a team from the University of Michigan has shown. This information could be used to determine which patients are most likely to benefit from additional therapies to head off the spread of the cancer to other areas of the body.
Individual acupressure points linked to specific centers in the brain can offer targeted relief for breast cancer patients with persistent fatigue, according to a new neuroimaging study.
Reuters reports on a study published in European Urology that shows that black men in America with medium- and high-risk prostate tumors are less likely to get aggressive treatment than white men are.
An experimental drug combined with the traditional chemotherapy drug cisplatin, when used in mice, destroyed a rare form of salivary gland tumor and prevented a recurrence within 300 days, a University of Michigan study found.
Ranked No. 1 in Michigan and No. 12 in the country, The University of Michigan Rogel Cancer Center was recognized as among the best in the nation by U.S. News & World Report for 2017-2018.
A new study shows just how complex metastatic cancer is and offers some clues to attacking it. The study represents one of the largest and most comprehensive efforts to examine the genetic and molecular landscape of advanced cancer.
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.