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News Center
This protein fuels triple-negative breast cancer
Over recent months, Medical News Today have covered many studies related to breast cancer and how it can be treated.
One such study, for example, found that a single injection of a small amount of two agents could successfully eliminate cancer in mice.
Another study suggested that starving cancer cells of vitamin B-2 could prevent their spread.
Now, scientists at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute in Ohio claim that they have identified a new stem cell pathway that promotes highly aggressive triple-negative breast cancer.
In the study — which is published in the journal Nature Communications — the researchers outline a survival pathway that had not yet been described in previous breast cancer studies, and which may provide a potential new target for future therapies.






