Rosetrees Frontiers Of Medicine

Auteur(s): Rosetrees Frontiers of Medicine Podcast
  • Résumé

  • Immunotherapy is the great hope for personalised treatment for cancer. Professor Alan Melcher, from the Institute of Cancer Research, explains how immunotherapy is already being used successfully to treat melanoma, lung, head and neck cancer and has potential to become a standard NHS treatment for a wide range of cancers in the not-to-distance future.
    Rosetrees Frontiers of Medicine Podcast
    Voir plus Voir moins
Épisodes
  • Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia: New genetic links revealed
    Dec 13 2023

    Rosetrees co-funded researchers at the University of Oxford have been investigating whether variations in DNA can provide predictive tools and potentially treatment for enlargement of the prostate gland.

    Benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH, affects around a third of men over the age of 50, many of whom need medication or, in severe cases, surgery, when going for a pee becomes a serious problem. Surgery is both invasive and expensive, avoid surgery or delaying the need for surgery, is a really clinical is an important unmet clinical need as there are around 25,000 performed every year in England, at huge cost.

    The Oxford team has been studying population variation within the DNA of people with BPH and comparing them to controls. Using huge population databases, they have identified 17 areas of the genome that are implicated in BPH progression. This information can be used to provide a 'polygenic risk score' to predict which men should be monitored by their healthcare professionals as well as providing potential new routes for treatment.



    Voir plus Voir moins
    13 min
  • Fighting Cancer with Immunotherapy
    Dec 13 2023

    Alan Melcher, Professor of Translational Immunotherapy at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, reveals how immunotherapy promises to create a revolution in cancer treatment, including the potential use of vaccines.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    18 min
  • Rescuing lost brain connections in Alzheimer's Disease
    Dec 12 2023

    Brain cells communicate through small connection points (‘synapses’), the loss of which causes memory impairments in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). A balance between excitatory (boosting electrical signals) and inhibitory (suppressing signals) synapses is crucial in the healthy brain. Dr Sam Barnes, from the UK Dementia Research Institute, explains we are now beginning to get an insight into the importance of this electrical balance is in our brains, opening up potential new treatment strategies.



    Voir plus Voir moins
    9 min

Ce que les auditeurs disent de Rosetrees Frontiers Of Medicine

Moyenne des évaluations de clients

Évaluations – Cliquez sur les onglets pour changer la source des évaluations.