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Triple-negative breast cancer can be difficult to treat, partly because immune cells may struggle to access the tumour. Researchers in Dr Oliver Pearce’s lab have found that modifying the tumour’s “sugar-coated” scaffold could help make it easier to treat. #medsky #oncosky 🧪 @qmul.bsky.social
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Researchers at Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London, have discovered a way in which the environment surrounding triple-negative breast cancer cells helps suppress our immune system,...
‘Sugar-coated’ tumour matrix may offer way to make triple-negative breast cancer easier to treat
Barts Cancer Institute (Queen Mary University of London)