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Can COVID-19 help the body fight cancer? Shocking new study links virus to shrinking tumors
Scientists have discovered a surprising silver lining of COVID-19 infection. A new study by researchers at Northwestern Medicine Canning Thoracic Institute, published in the Journal of
COVID-19's silver lining? Researchers find the virus has ability to fight cancer
"It's incredible, and a big surprise, that the same infection that caused so much devastation can help create a cancer-fighting cell," said Dr. Ankit Bharat, chief of thoracic surgery and director of the Canning Thoracic Institute.
Severe COVID-19 may shrink cancer tumors, early data suggest
Immune cells produced during severe COVID-19 infection may shrink tumors. The unexpected mechanism offers a new therapeutic possibility for advanced and treatment-resistant cancers.
Northwestern study links COVID-19 RNA to cancer-fighting cells
So, researchers at Northwestern started their journey to figure out why this might be happening. They discovered when someone gets badly infected with COVID, the virus can actually enter the bloodstream, shedding its RNA. That gets circulated and becomes a very common immune cell called monocytes.
COVID-19's Surprising Effect on Cancer
Researchers found that the COVID-19 virus triggers immune changes that may one day be harnessed to help fight cancer.
New study shows severe COVID-19 may shrink cancer cells
New research from Northwestern Medicine shows that in some cases of severe COVID, the immune response actually killed cancer cells. Researchers are trying to harness that immune power into new cancer therapies.
Northwestern Medicine researches find way to use COVID-19 to fight cancer
Director of Northwestern’s Canning Thoracic Institute Dr. Ankit Bharat said he and other researchers found when our immune systems attack the COVID virus, the RNA molecule inside triggers our white blood cells.
39m
on MSN
COVID-19 May Cure Cancer! No, You Didn't Read That Wrong; Here's How
In a breakthrough development, scientists from the US have found that cells activated by severe COVID-19 infection can be ...
Cronkite News
10h
COVID-19 winter surge expected to hit marginalized communities hardest, experts warn
Experts warn of an expected winter COVID-19 surge, potentially impacting marginalized communities that have faced disproportionate effects since the pandemic began. Health advocates emphasize the need ...
3d
Fact Check: Rising cancer rates in Britain unrelated to COVID-19 vaccines, not declared health crisis
An article alleging that thousands of Britons vaccinated against the COVID-19 virus are diagnosed with cancer every day is ...
Medpage Today on MSN
4d
An Update on Therapeutics for COVID-19
However, new research into COVID prophylaxis and therapeutics offers some hope that novel treatments may be on the horizon.
cbs12.com
12h
Florida man pleads guilty to $1 million COVID-19 relief fraud scheme
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (CBS12) — A 24-year-old man pled guilty on Monday to bank fraud and identity theft in a scheme to ...
The Associated Press on MSN
10d
Don’t wait for a holiday surge. Now is a good time to get your flu and COVID-19 vaccines
Health officials say it's important to get flu and COVID-19 vaccines ahead of the holidays when respiratory bugs tend to ...
8d
Infection Aftershock: COVID-19’s Long-Term Impact on Your Heart
New research indicates that people who contracted COVID-19 early in the pandemic faced a significantly elevated risk of heart ...
4d
on MSN
A woman who refused a COVID-19 vaccine was awarded nearly $13 million
A Catholic woman who refused to comply with her employer’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for religious reasons has been awarded ...
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