Health
Changes to gut microbiome help melanoma patients respond to immunotherapy – News-Medical.Net
Statistical modeling developed by Oregon State University researchers has confirmed that changes to melanoma patients’ gut microbiome led them to respond to a type…

Statistical modeling developed by Oregon State University researchers has confirmed that changes to melanoma patients’ gut microbiome led them to respond to a type of treatment capable of providing long-term benefit.
Findings were published in Science.
The modeling technique invented by Andrey Morgun of the OSU College of Pharmacy and Natalia Shulzenko of Oregon State’s Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine is known as transkingdom network analysis.
The human gut microbiome is a community of more…
-
Noosa News15 hours ago
Flatmates of missing teen Pheobe Bishop, 17, identified
-
Noosa News17 hours ago
Tully Sugar Mill celebrates 100 years of cane harvesting amid floods and cyclones
-
General21 hours ago
One person dead after house fire in Melbourne’s south-east
-
General14 hours ago
Postecoglou’s message touches Blues AFL coach Voss after Spurs’ Europa League win