Reading time: 4 minutes Jordan E. Rogers, Andrew C. Griggs, Elizabeth H. Lazzara Research Engineering and Applied Collaborations in Healthcare (REACH) Lab Cancer is a prevalent disease that manifests drastically differently across individuals due to the interplay of multiple factors. Due to the disease’s multifaceted nature, the provision of safe, quality care within cancer is... Continue Reading →
Cancer Cell Metabolism: A Potential Therapeutic Target
Reading time: 5 minutes Aishwarya Subramanian The life cycle of cells is a key piece of our understanding of cancer; as cells grow, they divide and produce two new “daughter” cells. For the cells to divide, grow and survive, it requires energy which they gain by metabolising glucose. However, every healthy cell that divides has... Continue Reading →
Mitochondria: the Canary in the Coal Mine
Reading time: 3 minutes Alex S. Woodell The tale of the canary in the coal mine dates back to 1911, when British miners began carrying caged canaries with them underground as a means of detecting toxic gases. The idea of using canaries as an early indicator is credited to John Scott Haldane, a Scottish physiologist... Continue Reading →
How can we study cancer more accurately?
Reading time: 3 minutes Rachel Cherney If you have read other articles on Oncobites, you know that cancer is a collection of many diseases, and these diseases are complex. Cancer cells don’t live on their own; rather, they live among the normal tissue cells, immune cells, and bacteria in your body. Additionally, cancer cells can... Continue Reading →
The Power of Timing in Immunotherapy
Reading time: 3 minutes Natasha Vinod In 2018, the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to the inventors of immune checkpoint blockade therapy, a “game-changing” technology that initiated a paradigm shift in cancer management. Checkpoint blockade therapy works by unleashing the immune surveillance against cancer by blocking the “natural brakes” (checkpoints) in the... Continue Reading →
Words Matter
Reading time: 5 minutes Patty Spears When talking to, or about patients, words matter. Words can hurt and make patients feel blame or guilt about having cancer. It’s not usually done on purpose, so with increased awareness of what words mean to patients, everyone can be a bit more conscientious about what they say and... Continue Reading →
Cisplatin: a journey to a solution for triple-negative breast cancer
Tushar Date Estimated Reading time: 4 minutes Cisplatin is an old, platinum based anticancer drug that kills cancer cells by damaging their DNA. Its cytotoxic (cell-killing) properties were discovered by accident in the 1960s, when Barnett Rosenberg was performing experiments to analyse the effect of electric field on bacterial growth. He observed that bacterial proliferation... Continue Reading →
Bacterial Infection Is a Significant Cancer Risk Factor
Kedar Puvar Reading time: 3 minutes Much of the time, when scientists think of cancer-causing agents, they think of DNA damage. Indeed, some of the most infamous causes of cancer, such as excessive sunlight, tobacco smoke, or environmental pollutants, act by inducing mutations in key regions of our genes which can lead to effects such... Continue Reading →