Early-career investigator Madelyn Espinosa-Cotton, PhD, is grateful to all the AACR donors whose support funded a grant that enabled her to pursue promising new research on a rare form of sarcoma that strikes teens and young adults.
Learn MoreCancer is not a single disease, but rather a collection of diseases all characterized by the uncontrolled proliferation of cells.
Learn MoreThe Report highlights inequities among cancer patients in the use of the main pillars of cancer treatment, as well as areas where advances have been made in achieving equity in cancer treatment.
Read the ReportMore than 83,000 people in the United States are expected to be diagnosed with bladder cancer this year. Learn more about screening and treatment for this type of cancer.
Learn MoreStopping Cancer in its Tracks: Can prevention and early detection significantly reduce the burden of cancer?
Learn More in AACR StoriesFinancial Screenings for People with Cancer: Cancer patients say they want to be asked about their financial needs on a regular basis.
Read Practical KnowledgeYour donation to the American Association for Cancer Research will help fund early-career investigators. Fund the future of cancer research today.
Donate NowSubmit an abstract for the AACR Annual Meeting 2025 (April 25-30, Chicago).
Deadline: November 26
The AACR Cancer Progress Report 2024 highlights research-driven advances against the collection of often devastating diseases we call cancer.
Learn MoreThe AACR and its more than 58,000 members worldwide are advancing a scientifically bold agenda against the collection of diseases we call cancer.
Learn MoreDr. LoRusso, AACR President 2024-2025, explains that basic cancer research is essential to accelerating advances in cancer science and medicine.
Learn Morepercent decrease of the overall age-adjusted cancer death rate in the U.S. from 1991 to 2021
Learn Moretherapeutics were approved for new or expanded uses by the FDA from July 1, 2023, to June 30, 2024
Learn Moremillion cancer survivors in the U.S. are living with, through, and beyond their disease thanks to research
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