09

  • AI predicts cancer treatment outcomes

    A new artificial intelligence tool developed at Stanford Medicine combines data from medical images with text to predict cancer prognoses and treatment responses.

  • Predicting Type 2 diabetes with AI

    Stanford Medicine researchers are using artificial intelligence to help identify the underlying biology behind Type 2 diabetes.

  • Kendric Smith dies at 98

    Smith, who founded the American Society of Photobiology, was an expert in radiation-induced damage of DNA and cellular repair pathways.

  • Toward a longer-lasting vaccine response

    A surprising class of blood cell not typically associated with immunity plays a role in shaping the durability of immunity to vaccination, new research suggests.

  • Terence Ketter dies at 74

    The Stanford Medicine psychiatrist ran the university’s bipolar disorder clinic and studied associations between mental illness and creativity.

  • Using AI for medical chart review

    Stanford Medicine researchers trained a large language model to read medical charts, looking for signs that kids with ADHD received the right follow-up care when using new medications.

  • New, improved flu-vaccine construct

    Stitching together four molecules found in the standard flu vaccine ensures an immune response to all of them, Stanford Medicine scientists have shown.

  • Top scientific advancements

    Looking back on 2024, science writers at the Office of Communications picked some of the most significant scientific achievements at Stanford Medicine.

  • Skin bacterium becomes a topical vaccine

    Stanford University scientists’ findings in mice could translate into a radical, needle-free vaccination approach that would also eliminate reactions including fever, swelling and pain.

  • Jay Bhattacharya, MD, PhD, nominated as director of National Institutes of Health

    Stanford Medicine congratulates Stanford professor Jay Bhattacharya, MD, PhD, on his nomination to lead the National Institutes of Health.