AI model can help determine where a patient’s cancer arose
Predictions from the OncoNPC model could enable doctors to choose targeted treatments for difficult-to-treat tumors.
Predictions from the OncoNPC model could enable doctors to choose targeted treatments for difficult-to-treat tumors.
MIT PhD student Kathrin Kajderowicz is studying how hibernation-like states could pave the way for new hypothermic therapies.
In addition to turning on genes involved in cell defense, the STING protein also acts as an ion channel, allowing it to control a wide variety of immune responses.
Biologist Nicole De Nisco ’07, PhD ’13 draws on her love of problem-solving and interdisciplinary skills honed as a student at MIT.
The new device, which can be incorporated into a bra, could allow more frequent monitoring of patients at high risk for breast cancer.
MIT researchers find timing and dosage of DNA-damaging drugs are key to whether a cancer cell dies or enters senescence.
In her latest book, “We’ve Got You Covered,” Amy Finkelstein prescribes a complete overhaul of our health insurance system.
A pilot-scale system, enabled by an $82 million award from the FDA, aims to accelerate the development and production of mRNA technologies.
“FrameDiff” is a computational tool that uses generative AI to craft new protein structures, with the aim of accelerating drug development and improving gene therapy.
The new strategy may enable engineered T cells to eradicate solid tumors such as glioblastoma.
MIT alumnus’ platform taps the wisdom of crowds to label medical data for AI companies.
SMART researchers combine rifaximin and clarithromycin to effectively restore the latter drug's efficacy.
US Navy officer and recent MechE alumna who served on a nuclear aircraft carrier researches radiation detection.
A new Jell-O-like material could replace metals as electrical interfaces for pacemakers, cochlear implants, and other electronic implants.
Tactile stimulation improved motor performance, reduced phosphorylated tau, preserved neurons and synapses, and reduced DNA damage, a new study shows.