A new immune evasion pathway in cancer reveals statins as immunotherapy boosters
2026-01-28
Cancer immunotherapy has transformed modern oncology by harnessing body’s own immune system to combat malignant disease. Immune checkpoint inhibitors targeting the PD-1/PD-L1 pathway have produced durable responses in a subset of patients, raising hopes for long-term cancer control. However, for most patients, these therapies offer limited benefit, as tumors evolve mechanisms to evade immune surveillance. This limitation has shifted research focus toward the molecular basis of immune resistance, particularly strategies that suppress immune function beyond the local tumor microenvironment. ...
Understanding how smart polymer solutions transition to gels around body temperature
2026-01-28
In the world of modern medicine, most people focus on the active pharmaceutical ingredients, which are the chemicals that specifically fight a disease’s symptoms or causes. However, the unsung heroes of pharmacy are excipients—substances formulated alongside the active ingredients to ensure they reach the right part of the body at the right time. Simply put, excipients are as vital as the drugs themselves because they provide a controllable means of administration. A prominent example is thermoresponsive compounds that enable in situ gelling. These smart liquids, once administered to the body, transform into a solid gel in response to body heat, enabling the medication ...
Thermal transport modulation in YbN-alloyed ALN thin films to the glassy limit
2026-01-28
Discovering materials that exhibit completely insulating thermal behavior—or, conversely, extraordinarily high thermal conductivity—has long been a dream for researchers in materials physics. Traditionally, amorphous materials are known to possess very low thermal conductivity. This naturally leads to an important question: Can a crystalline material be engineered to achieve thermal conductivity close to that of an amorphous solid? Such a material would preserve the structural stability of a crystal while ...
Being a night owl may increase your heart risk
2026-01-28
Research Highlights:
Middle-aged and older adults — particularly women — who are naturally more active in the evenings may have worse cardiovascular health, as measured by the American Heart Association’s Life’s Essential 8 metric, in comparison to peers without a strong morning or evening preference.
Unhealthy behaviors among the night owls, such as poor diet quality, insufficient sleep and smoking, may account for their lower cardiovascular health profile, according to the analysis of data from the UK Biobank.
Helping ...
Parental firearm injury linked to increased mental health burden in children
2026-01-28
Each year, 20,000 children and adolescents across the U.S. lose a parent to gun violence, while an estimated 2-3 times more have a parent who has been injured due to a firearm. To better understand the mental health impact of parental firearm injury, investigators from Mass General Brigham analyzed records from a large health insurance database, finding that in the year following a parent’s injury, children had increases in psychiatric diagnoses and mental health visits, especially if the parent had suffered a severe injury. Findings are published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
“Firearm ...
Do men develop cardiovascular disease earlier than women?
2026-01-28
Historical data indicate that men develop coronary heart disease (CHD) 10 years before women. A recent study in the Journal of the American Heart Association indicates that this sex gap still remains.
Investigators analyzed data from the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study, in which US adults aged 18–30 years enrolled in 1985–1986 and were followed through August 2020.
Among 5,112 participants (54.5% female, 51.6% Black) with an average age of 24.8 years at enrollment and a median follow-up of 34.1 years, men had a significantly higher cumulative incidence of cardiovascular disease. They ...
Fecal microbiota transplantation improves response to immunotherapy in advanced kidney cancer: TACITO study published in Nature Medicine
2026-01-28
A new Italian study published in Nature Medicine provides compelling evidence that fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) can enhance the effectiveness of immunotherapy in patients with advanced metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC). The research was coordinated by Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore and Fondazione Policlinico Gemelli IRCCS and represents a significant step forward in understanding how the gut microbiota modulates cancer treatment outcomes.
Over the past 10–15 years, immunotherapy—drugs that reactivate the immune system against cancer—has revolutionized the treatment of many malignancies, including kidney cancer. However, a substantial proportion ...
Research Spotlight: a new “lab-on-a-disc” device paves the way for more automated liquid biopsies
2026-01-28
Hakho Lee, PhD, Director of the Biomedical Engineering Program at the Center for Systems Biology at Mass General Brigham, is the co-senior author of a paper published in Nature Biomedical Engineering, “Automated disc device for multiplexed extracellular vesicle isolation and labelling from liquid biopsies in cancer diagnostics.” Hyunkyung Woo, PhD, a research fellow also at the Center for Systems Biology, is a co-lead author.
Q: What challenges or unmet needs make this study important?
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are tiny particles shed by cells that carry important molecular “clues” about the cell’s identity ...
Fast-growing trees are taking over the forests of the future and putting biodiversity and climate resilience under pressure
2026-01-28
Trees play a central role in life on Earth. They store CO₂, provide habitats for animals, fungi, and insects, stabilize soils, regulate water cycles, and supply resources that humans rely on – from timber and food to recreation and shade on a hot day.
But the world’s forests are entering a new era, characterized by homogenization, biodiversity loss, and weakened ecosystems. This is shown by a comprehensive international study recently published in the leading journal Nature Plants.
The researchers analyzed more ...
Stroke prevention and treatment during and after pregnancy are key to women’s health
2026-01-28
Statement Highlights:
A new scientific statement from the American Heart Association and endorsed by the American College of Obstetricians & Gynecologists details risk factors for pregnancy-related stroke and offers suggestions for stroke prevention, rapid diagnosis, timely treatment and recovery during pregnancy and postpartum.
Stroke prevention strategies during pregnancy and postpartum include risk factor modification through healthy lifestyle behaviors, managing high blood pressure and anti-clotting medications, if needed.
Supporting emotional ...
New Alzheimer Europe report projects 64% increase in dementia across Europe by 2050
2026-01-28
The objective of “The Prevalence of Dementia in Europe 2025” report is to provide updated figures for the number of people living with dementia both for Europe as a whole, as well as the countries within.
It builds upon the work undertaken in the “Dementia in Europe Yearbook 2019”, in which Alzheimer Europe previously calculated the prevalence of dementia in Europe.
It applies prevalence estimates across 5-year age bands to UN World Population Prospects data 2024, for the years 2025 and 2050.
For 2025, there ...
How does TikTok shape young peoples' dietary preferences?
2026-01-28
Research in the International Journal of Consumer Studies reveals that TikTok functions as a powerful tool for shaping consumers' food preferences and behaviors through the use of algorithmic mechanisms, social influence, and users' emotional engagement.
The study, which was based on an online survey conducted in 2025 among 406 active TikTok users, found that the platform affects dietary preferences through various channels of influence.
"Nowadays, young people are aligning most of their dietary habits with the content they might see in social media,” said corresponding ...
Novel laser therapy device generates promising results in prostate cancer clinical trial
2026-01-28
Because treatment of the whole prostate can lead to long-term side effects in patients with prostate cancer, interest in minimally invasive, focal treatment options has been growing for certain patients. A clinical trial published in BJU International generated promising results for a type of focal therapy, which directly targets the cancer and spares the remainder of the unaffected prostate gland.
The ProFocal Laser Therapy for Prostate Tissue Ablation (PFLT-PC) trial is the first pivotal trial of ProFocal®, a novel, cooled laser focal therapy device for prostate cancer treatment.
In the 100-participant trial, 84% of patients had no clinically significant prostate cancer on their ...
Does screen time affect teens’ sleep and lifestyle habits?
2026-01-28
New research in Brain & Behavior found a link between screen time and adolescents’ sleep quality and beliefs about healthy lifestyles.
In the study of 700 teens attending 2 high schools in the Black Sea region of Turkey, questionnaire responses revealed that participants who spent more time exposed to screens tended to have lower sleep quality. These adolescents were also less likely to have beliefs supporting the importance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle.
Screen exposure appeared to play a mediating role in the relationship between sleep quality ...
How do native and non-native plants affect endangered plant species in cities?
2026-01-28
Research in the Journal of Applied Ecology has identified threats to endangered plants in an urban area, generating information that can be used to guide effective conservation strategies across major cities.
For the study, investigators in Germany analyzed data on 1,231 populations of 201 endangered plant species within Berlin’s Flora Protection Program. Threats were categorized and their relative importance was quantified at both population and species levels, and across habitat types.
Biological threats—especially ...
Men’s heart attack risk climbs by mid-30s, years before women
2026-01-28
Men reached 5% cardiovascular disease risk about seven years earlier than women
Coronary heart disease drove most of the gap
Risk started diverging around age 35
Earlier risk in men suggests factors beyond smoking, hypertension and diabetes alone
CHICAGO --- Men begin developing coronary heart disease — which can lead to heart attacks — years earlier than women, with differences emerging as early as the mid-30s, according to a large, long-term study led by Northwestern Medicine.
The findings, based on more than three decades of patient follow-up, suggest that heart disease prevention and screening ...
New study signals major advance in the future of precision cancer care
2026-01-28
A new paper in Biology Methods and Protocols, published by Oxford University Press, indicates that a new computational method may help researchers identify effective precision treatments for cancer more quickly and efficiently.
Precision oncology is the promising, recently developed, approach to cancer treatment in which providers shape therapies to the unique molecular profile of a patient’s tumor. Current cancer therapy depends increasingly on matching the right drug to the right patient. Large-scale studies evaluate thousands of drugs on hundreds of cancer cell lines to find genetic biological markers to predict a drug’s effectiveness. In practice, however, this data is incredibly ...
Long COVID brain fog far more common in US than India, other nations
2026-01-28
Study of 3,100 patients is first to compare long COVID brain symptoms across continents
Brain fog affected 86% of non-hospitalized U.S. patients, compared with 15% in India
Symptom patterns clustered by income level, not geography
Disparities likely reflect culture and healthcare access, not a different virus
CHICAGO --- Patients with long COVID-19 in the U.S. report far higher rates of brain fog, depression and cognitive symptoms than patients in countries such as India and Nigeria, according to a large international study led ...
International differences exist in knowledge gaps and most common perimenopause symptoms
2026-01-28
CLEVELAND, Ohio (Jan 28, 2026)—Although perimenopause is experienced by all women regardless of race or nationality, it is not always experienced similarly. Studies comparing perimenopause symptoms across diverse cultures and geographic settings are lacking. A new study based on data from Flo, an international mobile health application, demonstrated inconsistency between perimenopause knowledge and actual symptoms experienced across diverse global populations. Study results are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause ...
Investigational blood biomarker panel may improve detection of pancreatic cancer
2026-01-28
Bottom Line: A four-biomarker blood panel of aminopeptidase N (ANPEP), polymeric immunoglobulin receptor (PIGR), CA19-9, and thrombospondin-2 (THBS2) enhanced the detection of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) compared to measuring CA19-9 levels alone.
Journal in Which the Study was Published: Clinical Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR).
Author: Kenneth S. Zaret, PhD, professor at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.
Background: ...
AAVLINK: Potent DNA-recombination method for large cargo delivery in gene therapy
2026-01-28
Delivery of therapeutic genes is essential for gene therapy. Adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are a prime vector for carrying gene cargoes because of their superior gene segmentation flexibility and robust gene reconstitution efficiency. However, their limited packaging capacity is a major challenge for large gene transduction.
In a study published in Cell on Jan. 27, Prof. LU Zhonghua's team from the Shenzhen Institutes of Advanced Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and collaborators from Peking University First ...
Treatment initiation is possible with a positive liquid biopsy in primary central nervous lymphoma patients with difficult-to-access lesions
2026-01-28
Niigata, Japan – A group led by the Department of Neurosurgery at the Brain Research Institute, Niigata University, has successfully diagnosed ten primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) patients who had difficult-to-access lesions in or around the brainstem, or were too frail to receive surgical biopsies. Hotspot MYD88 L265P mutations were detected from circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) collected from lumbar taps in all patients.
A team led by Dr. Manabu Natsumeda successfully treated the patients after diagnosis by ...
Artificial nighttime lighting is suppressing moth activity
2026-01-28
Moths move significantly less when exposed to artificial nighttime light, new research shows.
Moths’ attraction to artificial light, such as streetlights, is common knowledge and has been much studied. But, as many people will have observed, moths may also remain still if they land near a light, apparently “trapped”.
To understand this behaviour, University of Exeter researchers caught more than 800 moths from 23 species and exposed them to LED lights (of various colours and brightness) or to natural night conditions.
Moths were collected with light traps and butterfly nets on the Penryn ...
What causes chronic pain? New study identifies key culprit in the brain
2026-01-28
A neural circuit hidden in an understudied region of the brain plays a critical role in turning temporary pain into pain that can last months or years, according to new University of Colorado Boulder research.
The animal study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, found that silencing this pathway, known as the caudal granular insular cortex (CGIC), can prevent or halt chronic pain.
“Our paper used a variety of state-of-the art methods to define the specific brain circuit crucial for deciding ...
Counting the carbon cost of E-waste
2026-01-28
As the world upgrades to the latest gadgets, our old smartphones, refrigerators, and televisions are fueling the fastest-growing waste stream on the planet: E-waste. While recycling is often seen as a purely "green" endeavor, a groundbreaking study published in Carbon Research reveals that the process of dismantling these electronics carries its own significant carbon price tag.
Led by Dr. Mo Zhang from Nankai University, the research team provides the first comprehensive look at the carbon footprint of China’s E-waste dismantling industry. By meticulously tracking ...
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