Announcements

  • two people representing an early-career researcher and their mentor

    Nature Reviews Cancer is committed to facilitating training in peer review and to ensuring that everyone involved in our peer-review process is recognised. We have therefore joined an initiative to allow and encourage established referees to involve one early-career researcher in our peer-review process.

  • "crab" symbol formed from individual cancer cells

    These Milestones celebrate two decades of breakthroughs in basic, translational and clinical research which have revolutionized our understanding and management of cancer.

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    • In this Expert Recommendation, Faupel-Badger and colleagues present a conceptual framework to define precancer and advance our understanding of the earliest changes that occur in the progression to overt cancer, providing novel opportunities to intervene to prevent or treat their emergence.

      • Jessica Faupel-Badger
      • Indu Kohaar
      • Sudhir Srivastava
      Expert Recommendation
    • Metabolic disorders, such as obesity, metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) and type 2 diabetes, are increasingly recognized as significant contributors to cancer development. Here, Taranto, Kloosterman and Akkari explore the influence of metabolic disorders on tumour progression through the metabolic interactions of macrophages and T cells to alter immune function and cancer outcomes.

      • Daniel Taranto
      • Daan J. Kloosterman
      • Leila Akkari
      Review Article
    • Efficient clinical trials are crucial for advancing cancer care. In this Perspective, the authors propose a platform that leverages circulating tumour DNA to identify patients with early-stage cancer at high risk of recurrence and enrol them onto therapeutic clinical trials. This approach would enable faster, smaller trials and streamline evaluation of drugs aimed at preventing disease recurrence and increasing cure.

      • Arielle J. Medford
      • Ariel B. Carmeli
      • Aparna Parikh
      Perspective
    • Clonal evolution is now a central theoretical framework in cancer research. In this Perspective, Laplane and Maley identify challenges to that theory such that some non-evolutionary phenomena in cancer cannot be captured by the theory. They also outline how other challenges, including non-genetic heredity, phenotypic plasticity, reticulate evolution and clone diversity, can be included in an expanded cancer evolutionary theory.

      • Lucie Laplane
      • Carlo C. Maley
      Perspective
    • In this Review, Arpinati et al. summarize how the extracellular matrix, produced primarily by cancer-associated fibroblasts, impacts tumour progression, metastasis and therapy response through modulation of T cell-mediated antitumour immunity and propose routes to target these mechanisms therapeutically.

      • Ludovica Arpinati
      • Giulia Carradori
      • Ruth Scherz-Shouval
      Review Article
  • Ciwinska et al. asked whether natural tissue remodelling can drive mutant cell expansion and identified three protective mechanisms in the healthy mouse mammary gland that constrain the ability of mutant cells to transform and give rise to cancer.

    • Anna Dart
    Research Highlight
  • CRISPR screens in cell cultures reveal cancer dependencies yet often miss the metabolic nuances of tissues. In this Comment, Zuber and Palm highlight how modelling tumour-specific metabolic conditions can enhance our understanding of cancer biology and improve therapeutic discovery.

    • Johannes Zuber
    • Wilhelm Palm
    Comment
  • In this Tools of the Trade article, Xinwen Liu describes the development of VIBRANT, a vibrational spectroscopy method for high-content phenotypic profiling, and highlights its use to predict drug mechanisms of action or identify potential drug candidates.

    • Xinwen Liu
    Tools of the Trade
  • The World Trade Center (WTC) disaster exposed individuals to carcinogens, leading to elevated cancer rates. Responders who received care through the WTC Health Program have higher survival rates. Twenty-three years post-disaster, we summarize cancer incidence and outcome studies in this population and highlight the importance of a dedicated health programme response.

    • Rachel Zeig-Owens
    • David J. Prezant
    Comment
Six human body silhouettes, the three on the left are male-shaped, the three on the right female.

Sex differences in cancer

Sex differences begin at fertilization and affect nearly all body systems during development.
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