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The researchers want to learn what it’s like to attend healthcare appointments as a caregiver, and how doctors and nurses can better support you. Your feedback will help: Improve how healthcare staff ...
Cancer Research UK is a registered charity in England and Wales (1089464), Scotland (SC041666), the Isle of Man (1103) and Jersey (247). A company limited by guarantee. Registered company in England ...
Shine Local Dunbar will see our community come together to light up our streets. Walk for loved ones. Walk for future generations. Walk with friends old and new to raise vital funds for life-saving ...
This trial is using artificial intelligence to see whether it improves quality of life questionnaires. It is for people who have cancer or had cancer in the past. Artificial intelligence (AI) allows ...
This study is looking at preventing ovarian cancer in women at increased risk by removing the fallopian tubes first and then the ovaries at a later date. Read more about A study to prevent ovarian ...
Please note - this trial is no longer recruiting patients. We hope to add results when they are available. This trial is looking at treating areas of abnormal cells in the lungs with an electric ...
Upper urinary tract urothelial cancer is a rare type of cancer of the lining of the kidney or ureter. It used to be called transitional cell cancer (TCC) of the kidney or ureter. This is because it ...
We're calling on everyone from researchers, to regulators, patients and the NHS to integrate fragmented efforts to realise a future where early detection and diagnosis is a routine reality. If we are ...
Cryotherapy is a treatment that uses extreme cold to destroy prostate cancer cells. It is also called cryoablation or cryosurgery. You might have cryotherapy for prostate cancer that hasn't spread ...
Caring for the needs of someone with cancer can be a satisfying and positive thing. It can bring loved ones or carers closer to the person with cancer and strengthen the bond between people. For many ...
In the UK, around 2,200 young people (aged 15 to 24 years) are diagnosed with cancer each year. Young people’s cancers can be different to cancers in children and adults. So they need specialists who ...
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