Science
New cancer treatments can be tested in artificial cells on tiny chips the size of a postage stamp – The Conversation CA
Artificial cells on tiny microfluidic chips can provide early insight into how new cancer drugs behave in cells, and why certain…

It usually takes 10 to 15 years to develop a new drug, and they cost around US$2.6 billion each. Because its difficult to predict how a drug candidate will interact with human cells, many drugs never pass clinical trials. Testing new drugs on human cells…
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