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Princess of Wales to join King Charles for major cancer research event

Princess of Wales to join King Charles for major cancer research event Kensington Palace has announced that the Princess of Wales will join the monarch for a cancer charity engagement at St James’ Palace this evening Princess Kate will be joining King Charles and Queen Camilla for a major cancer research event in London this evening. Kensington Palace announced that the Princess of Wales will be teaming up with the monarch at the royal gathering in honour of Cancer Research UK in London’s St...

Daily Mirror 8d ago

Princess Kate joins King Charles and Queen Camilla at major Cancer Research UK event

Princess Kate joins King Charles and Queen Camilla at major Cancer Research UK event Kate Middleton and King Charles III made public that they were being treated for cancer with the Princess of Wales announcing last year she was in remission Kate Middleton has joined the King and Queen at a reception celebrating the crucial work of Cancer Research UK. The Princess of Wales joined Charles II and Camilla at the special reception in London's St James's Palace. The Royals attended today's...

Daily Mirror 7d ago

Richard Scolyer shares his ‘greatest lesson’ in open letter to Australians before famed cancer researcher’s death aged 59

‘My intention is for this letter to be published upon my passing – as my final farewell,’ Scolyer wroteRichard Scolyer, cancer researcher and former Australian of the year, dies aged 59Richard Scolyer, acclaimed melanoma researcher who tried experimental treatment on his own brain cancer – obituaryFollow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesAn open letter to all Australians from Prof Richard A Scolyer AO16 December 1966 – 7 June 2026 Continue reading...

The Guardian Health 2d ago

Richard Scolyer, cancer researcher and former Australian of the year, dies aged 59

Scolyer, who did pioneering work on immunotherapy, was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer in 2023Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastProf Richard Scolyer, the world-renowned cancer researcher and former Australian of the Year, has died at the age of 59.Scolyer’s family shared a statement the eminent pathologist and melanoma expert penned before his final stages of illness.

The Guardian World 2d ago

Richard Scolyer, cancer researcher and former Australian of the year, dies aged 59

Scolyer, who did pioneering work on immunotherapy, was diagnosed with inoperable brain cancer in 2023Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updatesGet our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcastProf Richard Scolyer, the world-renowned cancer researcher and former Australian of the Year, has died at the age of 59.Scolyer’s family shared a statement the eminent pathologist and melanoma expert penned before his final stages of illness.

The Guardian Health 2d ago

GLP-1s appear to protect against cancer. Researchers are trying to figure out how

Recent studies suggest GLP-1s, the weight loss and diabetes drugs, may both prevent cancer and slow its progression. While weight loss is known to curb cancer risks, GLP-1s may act on other brain and metabolic pathways to prevent cancer.(Image credit: Michael Siluk)

NPR News 1d ago

Why are so many young people getting cancer? What researchers do and don't know

Nature, Published online: 08 June 2026; doi:10.1038/d41586-026-01780-6Candidates for the trend are emerging, but are likely to vary from one type of tumor to another.

Nature 2d ago

Why are so many young people getting cancer? What researchers do and don't know

Article URL: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01780-6 Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48446909 Points: 45 # Comments: 5

Hacker News 1d ago

Oncologist says common drink can help slash risk of bowel cancer 17pc

Oncologist says common drink can help slash risk of bowel cancer 17pc UK research found simple changes can improve your health and wellbeing Drinking one glass of milk a day could significantly reduce the risk of bowel cancer, according to research. A study by Oxford University and Cancer Research UK found adding one glass of milk a day to your diet could reduce the risk of bowel cancer by 17%. Bowel cancer is the fourth most common in the UK and cases have been growing rapidly among younger...

Daily Mirror 5d ago