

Cover Story
Free
By Matthew Bin Han Ong
Women who were subjected to minimally invasive surgery for early-stage cervical cancer were four times more likely to die from that disease within three years, three times more likely to have a recurrence within three years, and had shorter overall survival, compared to women who underwent open surgery, according to two groundbreaking studies published in The New England Journal of Medicine Oct. 31.
In Brief


Funding Opportunities
Clinical Roundup
Drugs & Targets


NCI Trials


NCI Trials for November
The National Cancer Institute Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program approved the following clinical research studies last month.
Trending Stories
- The faces of RIF: Staff members of NCI’s dissolved communications team gather for a farewell group photo
- Unlocking the future of precision medicine:
The untapped power of RNA - Biden’s diagnosis is unfortunate but—statistically—not surprising
Of the 384 men serving in Congress, 48 are likely to be diagnosed with prostate cancer in their lifetime - A new AI tool enables speedy use of ASCO guidelines, eliminating typical errors
- An opportunity for Trump: Position U.S. cancer science to lead the world
- NIH eliminates the NCI Board of Scientific Advisors
Over its 28 year history, BSA shaped NCI-funded extramural science