A new study reveals a shocking jump in “biological age” among Gen-X, Millennials, and Gen-Z—and it might explain the rise in early-onset cancers.
The concept of biological age, distinct from chronological age, is gaining public traction, though often misinterpreted.
Our genetic heritage is not a blueprint or an algorithm, as many biologists have imagined, but something else entirely.
A risk model that combines a mammographic artificial intelligence (AI) risk score with polygenic and clinical risk scores ...
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death and disability, affecting millions of working-age adults and their families each ...
We look at power, speed, calories, recovery, fuelling and more to compare a Tour de France rider's efforts to those of an ...
For a child diagnosed with neuroblastoma—the most common infant cancer, occurring when early nerve cells grow out of ...
PS, designed entirely by artificial intelligence, passed its first human safety trial at Cambridge — triggering ...
Ascendis Pharma A/S (Nasdaq: ASND) today announced that the latest data from its clinical development programs for the treatment of children with achondroplasia will be shared in an oral presentation ...
A quantum-inspired AI approach can analyze millions of molecular features from small datasets, improving predictions, ...
Natera, Inc. , a global leader in cell-free DNA and precision medicine, today announced that the National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®) has updated its Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology ...
Your school-aged pop superfan may have already raved to you about Birdland. Oscar, Francis and Conrad Cvitan, the 18-year-old ...