The Good News About Cancer Podcast Por Charles Ryan MD Alicia Morgans MD MPH arte de portada

The Good News About Cancer

The Good News About Cancer

De: Charles Ryan MD Alicia Morgans MD MPH
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Did you know that “good news” and “cancer” could go together? The truth is, patients and their families have never had more reasons for hope and optimism than they do right now. A decade of transformational breakthroughs in treatment and prevention have saved millions of lives, and that’s just the beginning. In every episode of The Good News About Cancer, Dr. Charles Ryan and Dr. Alicia Morgans speak to the doctors, researchers, and advocates who are improving outcomes and charting new paths forward all around the world. Now that’s good news!Copyright 2026 Charles Ryan MD, Alicia Morgans MD MPH Ciencia Higiene y Vida Saludable
Episodios
  • Taking CAR T cell Immunotherapy to the Next Level
    Apr 14 2026

    More than a decade ago, doctors at the University of Pennsylvania treated a patient with her own T cells, which had been engineered to recognize and target the cancer cells in her body. The treatment, which is called CAR T cell immunotherapy, is now widely used for patients with leukemia, lymphoma, and myeloma. Today, scientists like Saul Priceman are working to take this therapy to the next level, making it effective against as many cancer types as possible. He talked with Chuck and Alicia about what his lab is doing to improve CAR T cell immunotherapy.

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    21 m
  • You Are What You Eat: Good News About Cancer Edition
    Apr 7 2026

    New research is helping us to better understand the connections between nutrition and cancer risk. Alicia and Chuck talked with Mathilde Touvier, one of the global researchers studying this issue. She’s a nutritional epidemiologist based in France, and her lab is looking at the effects certain food additives have on our risk of developing cancer.

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    21 m
  • Bridging the Gap in Treating Childhood Cancers Worldwide
    Mar 31 2026

    Huge strides have been made in diagnosing and treating childhood cancers, but most of those benefits are seen in the wealthiest countries in the world. This leaves hundreds of thousands of children in need of adequate cancer care. Dr. André Ilbawi with the World Health Organization tells us about their initiative that aims to bridge this gap, and deliver services to children in low and middle resourced countries with the goal of saving one million children by 2030.

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    25 m
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