All posts tagged: cancer prognosis

Virginia Tech researchers find that some cancers are worse than others

Virginia Tech researchers find that some cancers are worse than others

Whole-genome-doubled cancer cells carry extra DNA, but their size may matter as much as their genetics. Virginia Tech researchers found that smaller tetraploid cells often grow more aggressively and, in some human cancers, are linked to poorer survival. Tumors do not all grow under the same rules, even when they share one of cancer’s most common genetic changes. At Virginia Tech, researchers studying cells with doubled genomes found that some of the most dangerous ones were not the biggest or most obviously distorted. They were smaller. That finding grew out of years of close work in the lab, where graduate student Megan Sweet slices mouse-grown tumors into thin, nearly translucent sections, stains them, and studies their structure under a microscope. Those repeated steps helped reveal a pattern that could sharpen how researchers think about cancer progression. The work, published in Cancer Research, focused on what happens after whole-genome doubling, an event in which a cell ends up with four complete sets of chromosomes instead of the usual two. Such cells are known as tetraploid cells, …

AI tool tracks facial aging, and helps doctors gauge cancer risk

AI tool tracks facial aging, and helps doctors gauge cancer risk

A camera used for patient ID does not usually look like a medical test. Yet in a new cancer study, routine facial photos taken months or years apart appeared to capture something deeper: how quickly a person was biologically aging while going through treatment, and how that change tracked with survival. Researchers at Mass General Brigham say this shifting measure, called Face Aging Rate, or FAR, may offer a new way to read a patient’s health over time without a blood draw, scan, or biopsy. Writing in Nature Communications, the team reports that cancer patients whose facial age rose faster than expected were more likely to die sooner than those whose facial aging stayed slower or steadier. The work builds on earlier research behind FaceAge, an artificial intelligence tool that estimates biological age from a single face photo. Last year, the same group reported that cancer patients often appeared about five years older than their actual age, and that older FaceAge estimates tracked with poorer survival after treatment. This time, the question was not how …