Welcome!
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.
During the Targeted Therapies in Lung Cancer Patient Forum, many of our fantastic and loved attendees shared with us what they are grateful for. For our third video in this month of gratitude, Don Fredal shared with GRACE.
Don't forget to check out our social media – GRACE's Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram feeds – and be sure to follow us on at least one of those platforms, where we hope you'll also share your own photos or thoughts on gratitude.
Keep checking in to see the newest information about lung cancer treatments. We encourage you to share GRACE with the lung cancer patients and caregivers in your life so that they can benefit as well.
We would like to thank Keith Singer at Catch It in Time, who produced the videos, to Gilles Frydman and Laya Dogmetchi who took the portraits you will see throughout the month, to the patients and caregivers who stepped in front of our cameras with open and grateful hearts, and to you, the people who visit the GRACE website and read our materials on a regular basis. Thank you for appreciating our work.
And thanks to the following companies for their support of our LCAM 2016 program




Please feel free to offer comments and raise questions in our
discussion forums.
A Brief Tornado. I love the analogy Dr. Antonoff gave us to describe her presentation. I felt it earlier too and am looking forward to going back for deeper dive.
Dr. Singhi's reprise on appropriate treatment, "Right patient, right time, right team".
While Dr. Ryckman described radiation oncology as "the perfect blend of nerd skills and empathy".
I hope any...
My understanding of ADCs is very basic. I plan to study Dr. Rous’ discussion to broaden that understanding.
Here's the webinar on YouTube. It begins with the agenda. Note the link is a playlist, which will be populated with shorts from the webinar on specific topics
An antibody–drug conjugate (ADC) works a bit like a Trojan horse. It has three main components:
Bispecifics, or bispecific antibodies, are advanced immunotherapy drugs engineered to have two binding sites, allowing them to latch onto two different targets simultaneously, like a cancer cell and a T-cell, effectively...
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.
Hi app.92, Welcome to Grace. I'm sorry this is late getting to you. And more sorry your mum is going through this. It's possible this isn't a pancoast tumor even though...