04 November 2022
04 November 2022
After receiving her bachelor's degree in Biochemistry and a master's degree in Health Sciences from the University of Minho, which introduced her to the field of immunology, Cardoso embarked upon a PhD in the laboratory of Henrique Veiga-Fernandes at the Champalimaud Foundation to study the role of neuro-immune interactions in metabolism.
03 November 2022
Everything around a malignant tumour and its metastases, from its so-called microenvironment to the patients themselves as individuals, influences cancerous growth, and ultimately the outcome of the disease. This is the take-away message from CRSy2022 – the three-day international scientific symposium that took place at the Champalimaud Foundation, in Lisbon, from 19 to 21 October.
31 October 2022
All cancers are genetic in nature, in the sense that they all arise from genetic mutations inside cells. But the origin of those mutations can vary: they can be due to environmental factors (for example exposure to carcinogenic substances such as tobacco smoke or asbestos particles), but also to spurious DNA replication errors during the cellular division of any cell type in the body. Such random, unpredictable DNA errors account for nearly two-thirds of the mutations responsible for cancer.
31 October 2022
Helena Gouveia, oncologist at the Breast Unit of the Champalimaud Foundation (CF) tells us about two important examples of collaborative endeavours between this Unit and CF’s research labs. Scientists and clinicians join efforts to do translational research/medicine – that is, to take recent scientific advances “to the patients’ bedside” as safely, quickly and efficiently as possible.
31 October 2022
In this short video, Marcio Debiasi, oncologist at the Breast Unit of the Champalimaud Foundation, presents a study dubbed KeyPARTNER, which is being carried out in this Unit with support from industrial funders. The study’s aim is to optimize the use of chemotherapy together with immunotherapy for the treatment of so-called “triple negative” breast cancers, which are considered to be the most aggressive breast tumours.
26 October 2022
Accessing the so-called “metaverse” through augmented reality headsets connected to the internet can help breast cancer surgeons to locate a patient’s tumour, during surgery, by virtually superposing the patient’s medical images onto her physical body lying on the operating room table, explains Pedro Gouveia, surgeon at the Breast Unit of the Champalimaud Foundation. With this in view, the Unit is already building a digital surgery lab, where artificial intelligence and computer vision will combine to give rise to the breast cancer surgery of the future.
26 October 2022
Axillary lymph node dissection is a procedure to remove all lymph nodes in the armpit so as to avoid breast cancer recurrence. But, explains David Pinto, a surgeon at the Breast Unit of the Champalimaud Foundation, it causes complications – and, in 40% of the cases, it is unnecessary. Since comparative studies on alternative procedures are scant, the Unit is also participating in the European clinical trial AXSANA, which will provide results within two years.
26 October 2022
Maria João Cardoso, coordinator of the Champalimaud Foundation’s Breast Unit Surgical team, and also in charge of the Cinderella Project, developed in this Unit - which recently received five million euros in European funding. In this video, she explains how important it is, nowadays, to consider not only the medical outcomes, but also the aesthetic aspects, when it comes to submitting women to breast surgery.
More on this project here.
20 October 2022
Leonor Matos, Medical Oncologist at the Champalimaud Foundation’s Breast Unit, presents here the NEOPROGRAM, a project that will soon be launched in the unit, which was designed for patients who are going to receive chemotherapy or hormone therapy with curative intent. Its goal is to evaluate the benefits of different types of physical exercise for the patients’ quality of life and for tumour responses to the treatments.