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DURHAM, N.C. - A study designed to enroll an equal number of Black and white men with advanced prostate cancer confirms key findings that have been evident in retrospective analyses and suggest potential new avenues for treating Black patients who disproportionately die of the disease.
Researchers at Duke Cancer Institute enrolled 50 Black and 50 white men with advanced prostate cancer to test whether there were outcome differences on treatment with the hormone therapy abiraterone acetate plus the steroid prednisone. In retrospective data reviews, the Duke researchers had previously found racial differences in PSA responses among advanced prostate cancer patients.
Gina Kolata, The New York Times
Published: 24 Apr 2021 07:32 PM BdST
Updated: 24 Apr 2021 07:32 PM BdST Doctors and nurses perform a surgery at a local clinic of cardiac surgery in the city of Blagoveshchensk, Russia April 2, 2021. REUTERS
Cleft palates that close without scars. Burn wounds that recover without a trace of injury. Years-old disfiguring scars that disappear, leaving skin smooth and flawless. );
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It sounds like science fiction, but healing without scarring may become a tantalising possibility. In a study published Thursday in Science, two researchers at Stanford University report that they have figured out the molecular signals that make scars form and found a simple way to block them at least in mice.