2023

  • Colon cancer screening options

    Blood tests for colorectal cancer are an option for patients who would otherwise not be screened, but they are not as effective as colonoscopies or stool tests, a Stanford Medicine-led study found.

  • $70 million NIH grant

    The goal of the Clinical and Translational Science Award is to convert new treatments into care more rapidly.

  • Driving cancer cells to self-destruct

    Stanford researchers hope new technique will flip lymphoma protein’s normal action — from preventing cell death to triggering it.

  • National Academy of Medicine members

    Konstantina Stankovic and David Studdert join the distinguished society of scientists.

  • Hospital mental health screening

    Some patients hospitalized for an emergency illness or injury will develop mental health problems months after the experience. A new screening tool can anticipate who’s most at risk.

  • Grant for mental health

    The Center for Dissemination and Implementation will receive $37 million to improve access to effective mental health services, including underserved populations.

  • Genomic variants linked to mental disorders

    Stanford Medicine researchers, after creating an AI-based algorithm to find complex structural variants in the human genome, learned those variants likely contribute to psychiatric disease.

  • Liver cancer stem cells spark recurrence

    A Stanford Medicine-led study found that residual liver cancer cells interact with neighboring macrophages to prompt the disease to reappear.

  • Leaders highlight cancer and AI

    Lloyd Minor, David Entwistle and Paul King outline key strategic priorities — innovation in artificial intelligence and cancer research and care — at the State of Stanford Medicine address.

  • Benefits of prepping ERs to care for kids

    About 80% of emergency departments aren’t fully prepared to care for kids. Upgrading them would be a highly cost-effective way to save lives, a study found.