Skip NavigationSkip to Content
NCI HeaderNational Cancer InstituteU.S. National Institutes of Healthwww.cancer.gov
CCR - For Our Staff| Home |
BringingHope_NewsRB.869.jpg
PoloLikeKinase1Inhibitors_NewsRB.14.jpg
WebBasedTools_NewsRB.336.png
EradicatingMultiMyeloma_NewsRB.127.jpg
NCI_PartOpp_News_RB.842.jpg
Previous Button Next Button
Journals Header

Read short, plain-language summaries of significant research papers that CCR scientists and their collaborators have contributed to the oncology research community. Go

Connections Header

Vol. 6, No. 1, 2012 - Bringing Hope Through Discovery. CCR clinicians know there is something worse than being told you have cancer. It is being told that your cancer is incurable, and there is no known treatment for you. This bleak situation was unacceptable to Shivaani Kummar, M.D., even before she arrived at CCR in 2004. Go

Press Header

View the media coverage that results from seminal discoveries made by CCR's translational research teams. Go

Multimedia Header

Cancer has eluded us for centuries, but the researchers at NCI's Center for Cancer Research (CCR) remain undaunted. They are bringing real hope, real progress. Our camera will bring you into their labs and clinics to see this progress for yourself. Go

Our Discoveries

Our Scientists @ Work

  • Article Thumbnail

    Delving More Than Skin Deep
    There are several schools of thought on cancer. One claims it’s a basic knowledge problem. A lot of things can be done, but we still don’t have a complete understanding of the process. Vincent Hearing, Ph.D., Deputy Chief of CCR’s Laboratory of Cell Biology, belongs to this school. He has spent 42 years at the bench characterizing a single cell type called a melanocyte. For him, this groundwork is necessary in order to target the abnormal melanocytes that often result in the deadly skin cancer—melanoma.

  • Article Thumbnail

    Seeing the Unexpected
    Mary Carrington, Ph.D., Senior Investigator in CCR’s Laboratory of Experimental Immunology and Director of the SAIC Basic Science Program at the Frederick National Laboratory for Cancer Research, has a talent for seeing unexpected molecular interactions, and for interpreting their implications. While studying the genes that code for human leukocyte antigens (HLAs)—the molecules that distinguish “self” vs. “nonself” on human cells, tissues, and organs—and the role they play in a person’s susceptibility to HIV infection, she and her colleagues made a novel discovery.

  • Article Thumbnail

    Deconstructing Health Disparities
    Survival rates for African-Americans with cancer are simply not as encouraging as those for other racial groups. Many factors have been examined—differences in socioeconomic status and access to health care, PSA screening, age at diagnosis, and disease stage and grade—to identify reproducible causes for these substantial racial disparities, but so far, no convincing explanation has emerged. Stefan Ambs, Ph.D., M.P.H., a Senior Investigator in CCR’s Laboratory of Human Carcinogenesis, who heads the Breast and Prostate Unit, is determined to change this situation.

Home | Contact Us | Policies | Accessibility | Viewing Files | Search | CCR - For Our Staff

A service of the National Cancer Institute

National Cancer InstituteNational Institutes of HealthHealth and Human ServicesUSA Gov - Official Web Portal