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The Cancer Breakthrough Boom

Engineered immune cells. Supercharged scans. Drug implants. Gene manipulators. Blood biopsies. Read how these breakthroughs are transforming cancer care.

Illustration of dark, ominous cells, with a person breaking through with growing flowers.

Two UCSF Researchers Win Pew Awards for Biomedical Science

Two UCSF scientists – James Gardner, MD, PhD, and Rebeca de Pavia Fróes Rocha, PhD – have received Pew awards for their work in immunology as part of a program that supports promising early-career investigators.

James Gardner (left) and Rebeca de Paiva Fróes Rocha (right).

Doctors Test Chest Pain Medication to Treat Hot Flashes

UCSF researchers tested nitroglycerin patches, an treatment for chest pain from coronary artery disease, for menopausal hot flashes. Short-term benefits were seen, but not long-term as some side effects occurred.

A Caucasian woman airs herself with a stack of papers and holds up her hair in order to cool down.

Scientists Discover a Deadly Brain Cancer’s Hidden Weakness

UCSF scientists have found that brain cancer glioblastoma can cause cognitive decline by affecting neural connections, but the epilepsy drug gabapentin shows promise in blocking this activity, offering hope for new treatments.

Microscopy of white connections between blue glioblastoma cells.

Does Your Vaccine Type Matter in the Battle Against COVID?

COVID vaccine efficacy varied by age, BMI, sex, and smoking status, with levels changing over six months in a UCSF-led study. Pfizer and Moderna had higher antibody responses than Johnson & Johnson at one month, but Johnson & Johnson overtook them at six months.

A health professional wearing a blue latex gloves delivers a COVID-19 vaccine in to a patient's shoulder.