What if you could detect cancer just as it is getting started? New research published in the journal Nature just might give medicine the tools to do just that.
Frontiers Cancer Susceptibility as a Cost of Reproduction and Contributor to Life History Evolution
Cancer evolution: Darwin and beyond
PDF) Computational Methods Summarizing Mutational Patterns in Cancer: Promise and Limitations for Clinical Applications
The evolutionary history of 2,658 cancers
The evolution of lung cancer and impact of subclonal selection in TRACERx
The whole-genome panorama of cancer drivers
Subclonal somatic copy number alterations emerge and dominate in recurrent osteosarcoma
The evolutionary history of 2,658 cancers
Frontiers Deconstructing Pancreatic Cancer Using Next Generation-Omic Technologies–From Discovery to Knowledge-Guided Platforms for Better Patient Management
The pancreatic cancer genome revisited Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology
esophageal cancer – NIH Director's Blog
PDF) Identification of multiplicatively acting modulatory mutational signatures in cancer
State-dependent evolutionary models reveal modes of solid tumour growth