Study: Evaluating chatbot accuracy in the fast-changing blood cancer field
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Updates every hour. Last Updated: 3-Sep-2025 06:11 ET (3-Sep-2025 10:11 GMT/UTC)
A team of scientists at Kyoto University’s Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences (iCeMS) has created a protein-based therapeutic tool that could change the way we treat diseases caused by harmful or unnecessary cells. The new tool, published in Nature Biomedical Engineering, involves a synthetic protein called Crunch, short for Connector for Removal of Unwanted Cell Habitat. Crunch uses the body’s natural waste removal system to clear out specific target cells, offering hope for improved treatments for cancer, autoimmune diseases, and other diseases where harmful cells cause damage.
Researchers at MUSC Hollings Cancer Center are developing a promising new drug to combat aggressive head and neck cancers. The drug works by targeting cancer cells’ mitochondria – their energy source – by boosting levels of a fat molecule called C18-ceramide. C18-ceramide triggers the destruction of mitochondria and starves cancer cells. It also blocks fumarate, a key energy molecule, creating a dual attack on cancer metabolism while largely sparing healthy cells.
In mouse models and patient-derived tumors, the drug significantly slowed tumor growth and caused cancer cells to collapse energetically. Because reduced ceramide is a hallmark of many cancers, this approach could one day lead to a new class of targeted therapies that are safer and more effective than chemotherapy or radiation. Although still in preclinical stages, the researchers are optimistic about advancing the drug to clinical trials as a potential lifeline for patients with treatment-resistant cancers.
Researchers working independently at the University of Hawaii Cancer Center and the National Cancer Institute have discovered, and validated, a new variant of mesothelioma that may lead to more successful treatments. The studies have been published in the Journal of Thoracic Oncology, the official journal of the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer.
Researchers find that zeaxanthin, best known for protecting vision, can also strengthen the cancer-fighting activity of immune cells.
Researchers observed positive interactions, in which one disease favours the onset of another, such as between asthma and Parkinson's disease; and negative interactions, in which some groups of patients with one disease may be protected from developing others, such as between cancer and Huntington's disease.
BSC has developed a publicly accessible interactive platform that visualises the network of connections between diseases and proposes previously undescribed interactions, such as those between Down syndrome and lupus, thus opening the door to new therapeutic strategies.