Welcome!
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.
We are very excited to bring to you more information through our new program regarding supportive care in cancer treatment.
Arjun Gupta, MD, one of the GRACE Fellows Ambassador Program Winners for 2019 is the host of this video series, Supportive Care in Cancer Treatment. In this second video, Dr. Gupta's guest is Dr. Richard Dunne, with the University of Rochester Medical Center in NY. Their topic of discussion is cachexia during cancer treatment.
For more, please visit http://cancerGRACE.org/. To join the conversation, visit https://cancergrace.org/forum.
Please feel free to offer comments and raise questions in our
discussion forums.
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...
The prefix “oligo–” means few. Oligometastatic (at diagnosis) Oligoprogression (during treatment)
There will be a discussion, “Studies in Oligometastatic NSCLC: Current Data and Definitions,” which will focus on what we...
Radiation therapy is primarily a localized treatment, meaning it precisely targets a specific tumor or area of the body, unlike systemic treatments (like chemotherapy) that affect the whole body.
The...
Biomarkers are genetic mutations (like EGFR, ALK, KRAS, BRAF) or protein levels (like PD-L1) in tumor cells that help guide personalized treatment, especially NSCLC, directing patients to targeted therapies or immunotherapies...
Hi Stan! So good to hear from you. I'm sorry for the late response. I too have been out of town with family and missed your post, probably because I was...
It is so good to hear from you! And I am so happy to hear that your holidays have been good and that you are doing well. It sounds like your...
Welcome to the new CancerGRACE.org! Explore our fresh look and improved features—take a quick tour to see what’s new.
An antibody–drug conjugate (ADC) works a bit like a Trojan horse. It has three main components: