AACR IO 2026 Keynote Highlights: Cancer Vaccines Are Here, and Upgrading T Cells To Thrive in the Tumor Microenvironment
Elizabeth M. Jaffee and Philip D. Greenberg opened AACR IO 2026 with a look at cancer vaccines and the...
Elizabeth M. Jaffee and Philip D. Greenberg opened AACR IO 2026 with a look at cancer vaccines and the...
The American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) last week led a contingent of 140 organizations, cancer centers, and other...
Disparities in health care are among the most significant forms of inequality and injustice. In the United States, racial...
As infections from SARS-CoV-2 began to rapidly spread across the United States in early 2020, many nonessential medical procedures, including cancer screenings, were...
On December 31, 2019, the first cases of “a pneumonia of unknown cause”—now known to be COVID-19—were reported in China, and the initial confirmed...
The first AACR virtual meeting of 2021, held Jan. 11-12, focused on the tumor microenvironment, the complex framework of...
Last fall, amid calls to diversify the scientific research community as part of a comprehensive effort to end cancer...
Editor’s note: This post was written by Nicholas Warren, PhD, science policy program administrator in the AACR’s Office of...
Racial/ethnic inequities in cancer are well documented. Not only are Black Americans more likely to die of cancer than white Americans, but Black and Hispanic individuals are...
Editor’s note: Thursday, Feb. 4, marks World Cancer Day, an annual initiative led by the Union for International Cancer...
The new year has already ushered in some changes, but one thing stays the same. Each month, we’ll continue to feature the “must read” articles handpicked by the editors...