Publications by authors named "Sherri Cohen"

Article Synopsis
  • NK cells play a crucial role in cancer immune defense by providing a fast response to tumors, allowing for direct attacks on cancer cells without needing prior antigen recognition.
  • * Gamida Cell's NAM platform aims to boost the effectiveness of NK cells, particularly in treating multiple myeloma (MM) by targeting CD38, a protein common on MM cells.
  • * Researchers have used CRISPR technology to create genetically modified NK cells that lack CD38 and have enhanced abilities to target MM cells, achieving a significant reduction in self-destruction among NK cells during treatment.
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Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors are used to treat many advanced-stage epithelial cancers but induce severe skin toxicities in most treated patients. These side effects lead to a deterioration in the quality of life of the patients and compromise the anticancer treatment. Current treatment strategies for these skin toxicities focus on symptom reduction rather than preventing the initial trigger that causes the toxicity.

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Article Synopsis
  • Tumor cell lines play a key role in studying cancer biology and responses to treatment, specifically focusing on how BRCA1/2 mutations impact sensitivity to the PARP inhibitor talazoparib.
  • Researchers analyzed various BRCA1/2-mutant cell lines from human breast and ovarian cancer specimens to assess their growth response after treatment with talazoparib.
  • The results showed a partial link between specific BRCA mutations and sensitivity to the drug, with some cell lines being sensitive while others, even with similar mutations, showed resistance, suggesting that loss of heterozygosity (LOH) may not always predict treatment efficacy.
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Objective: Pediatric aerodigestive programs appear to be rapidly proliferating and provide multidisciplinary, coordinated care to complex, medically fragile children. Pediatric subspecialists are considered essential to these programs. This study evaluated the state of these programs in 2017 by surveying their size, composition, prevalence, and the number of patients that they serve.

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Pediatric feeding disorders (PFDs) lack a universally accepted definition. Feeding disorders require comprehensive assessment and treatment of 4 closely related, complementary domains (medical, psychosocial, and feeding skill-based systems and associated nutritional complications). Previous diagnostic paradigms have, however, typically defined feeding disorders using the lens of a single professional discipline and fail to characterize associated functional limitations that are critical to plan appropriate interventions and improve quality of life.

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Tumor genome sequencing is important for increasing our understanding of the development of cancer, which may be affected by different therapies. In the present study, genomic evolution was investigated in a patient with stage IV pancreatic cancer bearing a germline breast cancer 2 () mutation. The patient received cisplatin, a DNA cross-linking agent, which led to a long-lasting complete response.

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Hereditary cancer comprises more than 10% of all breast cancer cases. Identification of germinal mutations enables the initiation of a preventive program that can include early detection or preventive treatment and may also have a major impact on cancer therapy. Several recurrent mutations were identified in the BRCA1/2 genes in Jewish populations however, in other ethnic groups in Israel, no recurrent mutations were identified to date.

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Mutations in MCM9, which encodes DNA helicase, were recently shown to cause a clinical phenotype of primary ovarian failure and chromosomal instability. MCM9 plays an essential role in homologous recombination-mediated double-strand break repair. We describe a multiplex family with early colorectal carcinoma and mixed polyposis associated with primary hypergonadotropic hypogonadism.

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Proper regulation of cell proliferation, cell apoptosis, and cell death are vital for the development and survival of living organisms. Failure or dysfunction of any of these processes can have devastating effects, including cancer. The Hippo pathway, first discovered in Drosophila, has been found to be a major growth-regulatory signaling pathway that controls these crucial processes and has been implicated in cell-progress regulation and organ size determination.

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