WLWT: COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Ohio
January 11, 2021
COVID-19 vaccine providers across Ohio will soon get better guidance about the next steps for getting shots into arms. Brett Kissela, MD, spoke to WLWT-TV, Channel 5 and said the benefits of the vaccine outweigh any potential side effects.
Before the OR, students get more anatomy practice
March 17, 2021
Charles Prestigiacomo, MD, created the Advanced Anatomy of the Head and Neck elective, offered to fourth-year students at the UC College of Medicine who are getting ready to match in surgical residencies and begin performing procedures on patients. He and colleagues are seeing how this class is better preparing students to begin their careers with a little more “real-life” practice.
US News & World Report: Lung cancer screening and COVID-19
December 21, 2020
New UC research shows a dangerous trend in lung cancer caused by the pandemic.
Searching for a cure for deadly brain tumors
March 24, 2022
The University of Cincinnati is enrolling patients for a new clinical trial testing a two-pronged immunotherapy approach to treat glioblastomas, deadly brain tumors.
Forbes: Could music be a game-changer for digital health?
August 27, 2021
UC research examining a music app to help breast cancer survivors is mentioned by Forbes.
Improving head and neck cancer treatment
February 2, 2022
The University of Cincinnati's Chad Zender is leading a clinical trial studying if using a combination of Cesium-131 radioactive seeds and immunotherapy can be more effective and provide better quality of life than current treatments for patients with recurrent head and neck cancer.
UC cancer research presented at national meeting
May 26, 2023
University of Cincinnati Cancer Center researchers will present abstracts at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting 2023, held in Chicago June 2-6.
A potential new treatment for brain tumors
September 23, 2022
The University of Cincinnati's Pankaj Desai, PhD, has received a $1.19 million grant from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to continue research into the use of a drug called letrozole to treat glioblastomas, the most deadly form of brain tumors.