News

Understanding the links between nutrition and childhood cancer

Understanding the links between nutrition and childhood cancer

When children have cancer, one of the biggest daily challenges is feeding them. The cancer itself often causes weight loss. Cancer treatment can make children feel nauseous and lose their appetites just when they should be getting better nutrition to help them through the rigours of treatment.

Treating blood cancers through genomics

Treating blood cancers through genomics

Blood cancers aren’t like other cancers. There’s no lump that can be excised, no solid tumour that can be easily targeted for radiation. Because blood flows through your whole body, so does blood cancer. Many of the symptoms these cancers produce – fatigue, fever, swollen lymph nodes, bruising – are easily mistaken for something else.

Hunt for blood marker for endometrial cancer

Hunt for blood marker for endometrial cancer

Endometrial cancer is striking younger women. Detection and treatment could be improved with a first-of-its-kind blood test. Funding from the CCR Li Family Funding Round enabled this research to succeed and we are so proud of the researchers involved and their award of further funding.

Endometrial cancer researchers working to develop blood-based screening test, targeted therapies

Endometrial cancer researchers working to develop blood-based screening test, targeted therapies

Endometrial cancer, also known as uterine cancer or womb cancer, has long been thought of as a disease of older women, relatively easy to detect because it causes post-menopausal bleeding. However, endometrial cancer is increasingly occurring in women who still get their periods, making the cancer more difficult to detect. That’s why University of Auckland researchers are working on developing a first-of-its-kind blood test to screen for endometrial cancer.

Genetic discrimination is a threat in New Zealand because of lack of protections

Genetic discrimination is a threat in New Zealand because of lack of protections

Genetic testing is increasingly used as part of routine healthcare to determine a patient’s risk for some conditions, including certain cancers.
But insurers can use genetic test results to refuse cover or increase premiums. This is called genetic discrimination — the use of someone’s genetic information to treat them differently.

Can we cancer it

Can we cancer it

A very special short video profiling an important philanthropic contributors to the Centre for Cancer Research (the Li Family). Mr Li has since passed away but his tremendous legacy supports cancer research every day.

The Side Eye’s Two New Zealands: The 2,700 Day Gap

The Side Eye’s Two New Zealands: The 2,700 Day Gap

Rich and poor, young and old, renters and landlords: sometimes it feels like there are parallel versions of our country. In 2021, Toby Morris’s Side Eye is exploring this theme in the series Two New Zealands. Whether it’s the wealth gap, generation gap, the rural-urban contrast, the different ways Māori and Pākehā are treated in the health, justice and education systems, or how differences in gender or sexuality affects people’s experiences and opportunity – there’s a lot to discuss.