Health
Fecal microbiota transplants help patients with advanced melanoma respond to immunotherapy – Science Daily
For patients with cancers that do not respond to immunotherapy drugs, adjusting the composition of microorganisms in the intestines — known as the gut microbiome…

For patients with cancers that do not respond to immunotherapy drugs, adjusting the composition of microorganisms in the intestines — known as the gut microbiome — through the use of stool, or fecal, transplants may help some of these individuals respond to the immunotherapy drugs, a new study suggests. Researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Center for Cancer Research, part of the National Institutes of Health, conducted the study in collaboration with investigators from UPMC Hillman…
-
Noosa News14 hours ago
‘Sunny, benign’ school holiday weather after morning showers in parts of Queensland
-
Business15 hours ago
Why is Alphabet stock worth less than Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon even though it is the most profitable S&P 500 company?
-
General21 hours ago
Michael Beatty, veteran current affairs journalist and animal welfare advocate, dies aged 76
-
General21 hours ago
Jordan Thompson retires from Wimbledon round-of-16 match with American Taylor Fritz