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With the exception of a few hereditary cancers, there is currently no accurate method to predict whether someone is going to get cancer.
Dr Andrew Teschendorff from the Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health, in collaboration with Dr Chen Wu from the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, has created a computational method called CancerStemID that could help calculate a patient’s risk of cancer by analysing a vast amount of RNA data from precancerous cells.
Read the original research: doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-22-0668
By ResearchPod4.5
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With the exception of a few hereditary cancers, there is currently no accurate method to predict whether someone is going to get cancer.
Dr Andrew Teschendorff from the Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health, in collaboration with Dr Chen Wu from the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, has created a computational method called CancerStemID that could help calculate a patient’s risk of cancer by analysing a vast amount of RNA data from precancerous cells.
Read the original research: doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.can-22-0668

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