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- Fighting Fire with Fire: Can Malaria Fight Cancer?
- Lung Cancer and EGFR Mutations
- The Cellular Butterfly Effect
- Unlikely Allies: Fighting Cancer with Gut Bacteria
- Lipid Nanoparticles: Targeted Drug Delivery
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- Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC)
- Chemobrain
- Diagnosis on-the-go: Skin Cancer Detector
- Can Genome Instability by R-Loops Increase Risk of Cancer?
- From Cancer Cells to Fat Cells - Adipogenesis
- Drug in disguise: Special Anti-cancer Drugs
- Gold Treats Cancer?
- Transplant and Lymphoma? Who's the Real Santa?
- Ribonucleotide Reductase Inhibitors
- Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cell Therapy
- How Do Our Comics Get Made? (Part 2)
- What is AML Inhibitor Therapy?
- What is Sarcoma Immunotherapy?
Creator
Anticancer drugs dosages are limited by toxicity. One of the methods to make them more effective is to disguise the drugs. The cancer cells will be more receptive to the disguised drug and take them in faster than normal cells.
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