Try GOLD - Free
Gamechanger: Key lessons from cancer frontline
The Guardian
|June 07, 2025
Doctors, researchers and scientists shared new findings on ways to tackle cancer at the 2025 American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting, the world's largest cancer conference. The event in Chicago, attended by about 44,000 health professionals, featured more than 200 sessions on this year's theme, Driving Knowledge to Action: Building a Better Future. Here is a roundup of the key studies.
Immunotherapy An immunotherapy drug could help some patients live years longer without the cancer getting worse or returning, a trial found. Pembrolizumab, sold under the brand name Keytruda, kept head and neck cancers at bay for five years compared with 30 months with standard care. It also slashed the risk of the disease returning in another part of the body.
A second study showed patients with a deadly form of skin cancer could live longer with an innovative one-time immunotherapy. Almost one in five people with advanced melanoma survived for five years after receiving lifileucel, with tumors shrinking in the majority of cases, the trial found.
Car T-cell therapy This is a new form of immunotherapy where a patient's own T-cells - a type of white blood cell - are tweaked in a lab to target and kill cancer cells. The designer cells are then infused back into their bloodstream to fight the disease. One trial found cancer patients on Car T-cell therapy could live 40% longer.
The therapy has already proved successful in treating blood cancers. Now results from the world's first randomized controlled trial of Car T-cell therapy in solid tumors suggest it could be transformative in the fight against these cancers too. Solid tumors represent about 90% of all cancers, including breast, lung and pancreatic cancer. In the trial hailed as a "milestone" by experts, patients with advanced gastric or gastro-oesophageal junction cancer treated with Car T-cell therapy lived on average approximately 40% longer than patients who received standard care.
This story is from the June 07, 2025 edition of The Guardian.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Guardian
The Guardian
Albanese rules out link between gunmen and wider terrorist cell
Investigators in Australia have dismissed suggestions that two gunmen who opened fire on a crowd celebrating a Jewish festival in Sydney on Sunday, killing 15 people and injuring dozens, were part of a wider terror network.
4 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
'Show a bit of dog' Stokes makes rallying call as England strive to save Ashes
Ben Stokes has called on his England players to summon up the rage witnessed against India in the summer and show some \"dog\" as they look to keep their slim Ashes hopes alive.
2 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Doctors to strike after rejecting last-ditch offer
Hospitals are cancelling tens of thousands of appointments and operations after resident doctors voted overwhelmingly to reject a last-ditch offer to avoid this week's strike.
3 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Fright and delight from eye-popping illusions
Paranormal Activity
1 min
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Kendal is formidable in a fitting first epitaph to Stoppard
A fortnight after West End playhouses dimmed their lights in tribute to Sir Tom Stoppard, Hampstead theatre's stage lights rise on a revival of his 1995 play Indian Ink, originally intended to mark 30 years since the play's premiere.
2 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Jimmy Lai The rise and fall of Hong Kong's chief 'troublemaker'
Yesterday’s verdict convicting Jimmy Lai of national security offences was expected.
6 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
'A matter of conscience' Heroic bystander's family on why he risked his life
When Ahmed al-Ahmed tackled and wrested a gun from an alleged shooter at Bondi beach, he was simply thinking that he \"couldn't bear to see people dying\", his cousin says.
3 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Prem Rugby to seek investors if RFU backs franchise plan
Prem Rugby is planning to launch a tender process to secure external investment in the competition after it has received formal approval from the Rugby Football Union to become a closed franchise league, which it expects will happen next year.
2 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Tears, flowers and silence: Sydney unites in grief after Bondi horror
Defiant dawn gathering at site by beach where gunmen had opened fire
3 mins
December 16, 2025
The Guardian
Maresca’s silence only amplifies the Chelsea noise
If Enzo Maresca was interested in ending speculation that he has a problem with elements of Chelsea’s hierarchy then he would have done so yesterday.
3 mins
December 16, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
