Although many scientists have assumed that cancer cells are immortal -- that they divide and grow indefinitely -- most can only divide a certain number of times before dying. The stem-cell hypothesis says that cancers themselves may not die because they are fed by cancerous stem cells, a small and particularly dangerous kind of cell that can renew by dividing even as it spews out more cells that form the bulk of a tumor. Worse, stem cells may be impervious to most standard cancer therapies.
Read full story in The New York Times































Recent comments
3 hours 55 min ago
1 day 1 hour ago
1 day 2 hours ago
1 day 2 hours ago
1 day 3 hours ago
1 day 3 hours ago
1 day 2 hours ago
1 day 16 hours ago
1 day 18 hours ago
1 day 21 hours ago