A UVA Health study finds severe viral infections can prime the lungs for cancer, but vaccination appears to reduce that risk.
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease's development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research from UVA Health's Beirne ...
Learn how severe respiratory illness leaves the lungs vulnerable to cancer, and how vaccines could prevent these vulnerabilities.
Severe COVID-19 raises lung cancer risk by 24%, study of 76 million Americans finds In A Nutshell People hospitalized with severe COVID-19 had roughly a 24 percent higher risk of developing lung ...
Severe COVID or flu may quietly raise lung cancer risk—but vaccines appear to stop the damage before it starts.
Researchers at Ohio University have discovered what may be a new way to fight lung cancer that is resistant to other ...
A new study is shining a light on a potential way to make treatments work better for one of the deadliest forms of cancer. Researchers at Ohio University have identified a protein that could be a ...
Scientists at the University of Minnesota's Hormel Institute in Austin recently published a study that looked at a drug that activates the body's dopamine receptors and how it can slow tumor growth.
A team of researchers at VCU Massey Comprehensive Cancer Center has identified a new pathway through which mutations in the tumor suppressor p53 gene—found very frequently in human tumors—hijack DNA ...
In a new study, researchers found that being hospitalized for flu or COVID-19 was linked to a 24 percent increase in later lung cancer risk. Learn how to protect yourself.
Severe COVID-19 and influenza infections prime the lungs for cancer and can accelerate the disease’s development, but vaccination heads off those harmful effects, new research indicates.