UC Davis Cancer Center News
Synthesis
Adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer patients – those between ages 15 and 39 – have shown little or no improvement in cancer survival rates for several decades, even while other age groups have shown marked improvement. WeCARE! Peer Navigator Program helps address disparities.
Adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer patients – those between ages 15 and 39 – have shown little or no improvement in cancer survival rates for several decades, even while other age groups have shown marked improvement. WeCARE! Peer Navigator Program helps address disparities.
Greater than the sum of its parts, about a dozen university cancer centers search for better cancer treatments.
A new decision-making tool developed by a team led by UC Davis Cancer Center surgical oncologist Robert Canter allows physicians to calculate patient-specific risk of dying due to complications from the surgery, based on variables associated with their disease.
Whether stress contributes to the onset or progression of cancer is a question many eminent cancer researchers have dismissed, pointing to a body of epidemiological studies as proof of its invalidity.
When Marlene von Friederichs-Fitzwater was diagnosed with cervical cancer as a young adult, she felt afraid about how the illness might affect her life. But there was more.
Welcome to this special issue of Synthesis, in which we focus on a population that deserves increased attention when it comes to cancer diagnosis, treatment and survivorship: adolescents and young adults (AYA). Read more
The online version of
Synthesis magazine, a
publication of UC Davis
Health System.
Ask Ralph deVere White what he does for a living, and he’ll offer a prompt – and perhaps surprising – reply: "I run a cancer center, and I try to raise money." His most critical mission at the moment: raising money to complete the 46,000-square-foot Cancer Center expansion. Read more