New Research on Atypical Teratoid Thabdoid Tumor

September is Childhood Cancer Awareness Month. While cancer in children does not occur as often as in adults, research on childhood cancers is an integral part of the world’s biomedical community effort to study and fight cancer. Researchers across the globe work on understanding childhood cancers and developing new therapies.

New research has just been published on Atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor (ATRT). ATRT is a very rare and difficult to treat form of brain cancer occurring most of the time in three-year-old children or younger.

The new study led by an international team of researchers focused on the inactivation of one single gene, called SMARCB1, and its interaction with the development of ATRT. Previous studies have shown the link between the inactivation of the gene SMARCB1 and ATRT, but this new study demonstrates how the loss of SMARCB1 might disrupt neural development and lead to tumor growth.

The study was published in the journal Genes & Development. The authors hope that this discovery will help with developing targeted therapies.

A Wedding at MSK

No one envisions themselves getting married in a hospital. But that’s where Miranda Wickham and Enver Candan found themselves saying “I do” just weeks after Mr. Candan was admitted to MSK for acute promyelocytic leukemia treatment.

As The New York Times reported, after COVID-19 and the cancer diagnosis canceled two earlier plans to wed, the couple applied for a marriage license and expected to sign some forms at the hospital to make their union official. But the staff on Mr. Candan’s floor saw to it that it was an event to remember. They recruited Recovery Room Nurse and Universal Life Minister Sonja Schedler as the officiant, provided flowers picked from a staff member’s garden, blew bubbles as the couple walked down the hall, and turned a conference room into a festive reception space.

“We didn’t even know them personally, and all of these people had done all this. It was very emotional,” Ms. Wickham told The New York Times.

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