miércoles, 21 de agosto de 2013

Sugar helps scientists find and assess prostate tumors - National Cancer Institute

Sugar helps scientists find and assess prostate tumors - National Cancer Institute

National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health
NCI Cancer Center News

Sugar helps scientists find and assess prostate tumors

A natural form of sugar could offer a new, noninvasive way to precisely image tumors and potentially see whether cancer medication is effective, by means of a new imaging technology developed at UC San Francisco (home of the UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center) in collaboration with GE Healthcare. The technology uses a compound called pyruvate, which is created when glucose breaks down in the body and which normally supplies energy to cells.
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NCI comprehensive cancer centers logoAmong the research institutions NCI funds across the United States, it currently designates 67 as Cancer Centers. Largely based in research universities, these facilities are home to many of the NCI-supported scientists who conduct a wide range of intense, laboratory research into cancer’s origins and development. The Cancer Centers Program also focuses on trans-disciplinary research, including population science and clinical research. The centers’ research results are often at the forefront of studies in the cancer field.

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