Carlos Minutti

31 March 2023

Research within the Watch&Wait Programme

Neste último vídeo da série, Laura Fernández, Cirurgiã Colorretal, fala da investigação da equipa sobre o Protocolo Watch&Wait (W&W).

Em estudos recentes, mostraram que a probabilidade de os doentes com cancro retal, que permanecem livres de tumores durante cinco anos, voltarem a desenvolver a doença é quase nula. Atualmente, a equipa está a tentar determinar quais os doentes, integrados no programa W&W, que serão mais susceptíveis de apresentar metástases.

AI and Machine Learning in Cancer Imaging 3.0

On behalf of the International Cancer Imaging Society (ICIS) and the Champalimaud Foundation, we would like to invite you to register for our jointly hosted meeting 'AI and Machine Learning in Cancer Imaging 3.0', which will be held on 30 June and 1 July 2023.  The meeting will take place at the Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown, in Lisbon. 

30 March 2023

The European Research Council awards four ERC Advanced Grants to Life Sciences in Portugal

In Portugal, the winning scientists are Isabel Gordo (Gulbenkian Institute of Science, IGC), Maria Manuel Mota (João Lobo Antunes Institute of Molecular Medicine, iMM), Mariana Pinho (ITQB-NOVA) and Henrique Veiga-Fernandes (Champalimaud Foundation). Each will receive between €2.5M and €3.5M for the development of research projects over the next five years.

Science: between literal and metaphorical meanings

Modern scientific endeavours are often guided by the positivistic ideal of obtaining a neutral, detached point of observation from which truths about the world can be deduced and believed to hold independently of the socio-political context in which they were obtained.

Catarina Dias

23 March 2023

Check Up #13 - The differences between cancer types

There are different ways to classify cancers: for instance, by the organ (or tissue) in which they originate, and by the type of cells they involve. Cancers can be solid (tumour-forming) or liquid (blood cancers).

Using the first method yields more than 200 different types of cancer. In alphabetical order, the most common are: bladder cancer, breast cancer, colon and rectal cancer, endometrial cancer, kidney cancer, leukemia (blood cancer), liver cancer, lung cancer melanoma (skin cancer), non-Hodgkin lymphoma, pancreatic cancer, prostate cancer, and thyroid cancer.

Simon Zamora Bustamante

08 March 2023

Zoom-In on Champalimaud - 3rd Edition - Issue 2

In 1975 (International Women’s Year), the United Nations recognised March 8 as International Women’s Day, but did you know that the date has been important to women’s rights since 1908, when hundreds of female workers in New York demonstrated to form their own union and demand the right to vote? Each year, this date reminds us to strive for a fairer society, regardless of gender.

28 February 2023

Check Up #12 - Cancer staging

When we hear about someone having been diagnosed with “stage IV” cancer, most of us know this is very bad news. It is the most advanced overall cancer stage.

Classifying – or staging – a cancer is paramount to determining the cancer’s prognosis (its likely evolution) and to choose the most appropriate treatment. A misclassified cancer can lead to wrong treatment options, including undertreatment or overtreatment.

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