
Rather than revisiting the ghosts of cancer treatments past, I’m focused on using what I’ve learned in three years of active treatment and maintenance for incurable, metastatic cancer.

Rather than revisiting the ghosts of cancer treatments past, I’m focused on using what I’ve learned in three years of active treatment and maintenance for incurable, metastatic cancer.

I often joke in training classes on aging that with every new candle on my birthday cake, a new medicine bottle shows up in my cabinet.

Breast cancer survivor shares the silver lining in her breast reconstruction fat-grafting experience.

Cancer survivorship is an important topic that patients and physicians must consider when planning their treatment.

The Raymond Foundation released the Cancer Caregiver Action Plan to help others with emotional support and information.

Winter can seem dreary sometimes, but there are benefits to the season, too.

In an interview with CURE, Filippo Milano, M.D., Ph.D., explains what cord blood transplantation is and why it is important for patients to learn more.

As we celebrate the holidays, wish lists are made for gifts. I have a wish list for cancer.

Next-generation sequencing and personalized approaches will continue to improve cancer outcomes. But there’s still much work to be done.

For young breast cancer survivors, the type of surgery they recieve to treat their disease can impact their quality of life, according to recent research.

Real resolutions to make 2019 feel like a year of finally putting away unachievable goals from the past.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Sprycel (dasatinib) plus chemotherapy for the treatment of pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia

An expert discusses the current landscape – as well as future prospects – for immunotherapy in lung cancer.

Making peace with radiation can be a challenge, even if high doses of targeted radiation can silence cancer cells. It took me almost two weeks to tame the beast of fear. What have you done to trick yourself into handling difficult situations during cancer treatment?

My journey as a reader and a cancer patient/survivor were both marked with highs and lows, but now are important parts of my daily life.

Here are the top 5 CURE stories for December 2018.

As cancer survivors, we know what we should do to help ourselves stay as healthy as possible, but how do we keep up our motivation to do it?

It's the approach we take when handling trauma in our life that can make all the difference.

Inhibiting the immune system could decrease cognitive decline after radiation treatment, according to research conducted in mouse models.

A male breast cancer survivor discovers a challenge even bigger than his disease.

As researchers recently discovered, outcomes for patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma are just as good when the number of chemotherapy cycles is reduced.

How to conquer the fear of your own body, one step at a time.

Blogging carries great responsibility, especially when the cancer community is concerned.

A web-based intervention may help reduce harmful UV exposure and skin cancer risk in young adults, according to recent research.

Could having a conversation with your employer about a flexible work schedule help with your work-life balance after a cancer diagnosis?

The FDA has approved Ultomiris (ravulizumab-cwvz) as an injection treatment of adult patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), a rare blood disorder that leads to hemolysis.

Whenever I thought about my brother and his death, I used to feel tremendous survivor's guilt. He never knew he had Lynch syndrome when he was diagnosed with colon cancer.

The investigational targeted drug zanubrutinib (BGB-3111) appeared to be highly active, inducing an overall response rate of 83.5 percent in patients with relapsed/refractory mantle cell lymphoma, who were treated in a single-arm, open-label, multicenter, phase 2 trial.

When bad things happen to friends we care about, we often stand in silence because we don't know what to say.

Cancer reminds this survivor that we are much more than our bodies.