The Cancer Letter Archives
The Cancer Letter was founded in 1973, two years after Congress passed the National Cancer Act of 1971. These archives represent the first 40 years of The Cancer Letter, which is published weekly.
TCL
Vol.
35
No.
33
September 11, 2009
TCL
Vol.
35
No.
35
September 25, 2009
- Panel Urges Research On DCIS To Identify Women At High Risk For Invasive Cancer
- Panel Debates Whether DCIS Needs A New Name
- Walter Curran Succeeds Brian Leyland-Jones As Director Of Emory’s Cancer Center
- Fruit, Candy Flavored Cigarettes Banned In U.S.; FDA To Examine Menthol Flavored Tobacco
- Lasker Awards Announced
CCL
Vol.
32
No.
9
September 25, 2009
- TGen At Scottsdale Opens Clinical Trial Of OSI-906 For Adrenocortical Carcinoma
- Colorectal Cancer Screening Programs Could Cut Future Treatment Costs
- Study Tests PARP Inhibitor ABT-888 For Several Cancers
- Vanderbilt Lung Cancer Trial For Never Smokers Online
- Breast Cancer Patients Track Symptoms With Digital Device
- Colorectal Screening Rates Lower In Safety Net System
- Overdiagnosis Since Advent Of Prostate Cancer Screening
- Information Lacking On Use, Accuracy Of HER2 Tests
- FDA Approves Folotyn For Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma
- NCI Cooperative Group Clinical Trials Approved
TCL
Vol.
35
No.
36
October 02, 2009
TCL
Vol.
35
No.
37
October 09, 2009
- ODAC Votes For Approval Of PegIntron For Melanoma, Votrient For Renal Cancer
- Duke University Suspends Two Clinical Trials After Journal Paper Questions Assay Validity
- Obituary: Ruth Kirschstein, 82, NIH Administrator, Scientist, Mentor. House Member Softens Breast Cancer Bill
- NIH Grantees Win Nobel Prizes In Medicine, Chemistry
- NCCS Selects New President
TCL
Vol.
35
No.
39
October 23, 2009
- Duke Halts Third Trial; Coauthor Disputes Claim That Data Validation Was Blinded
- Moffitt Ends Pilot Study Based On Duke Test, Says Action Unrelated
- House DoD Report Provides $15 Million For Lung Cancer Screening
- FDA Approves Votrient For Renal Cell Carcinoma
- NCI Picks 11 Centers For Chemical Biology Consortium
- IOM Report Says Smoking Bans Cut Heart Attack Risk