CancerWorld shared a post on LinkedIn:
“CancerWorld Issue #110 (December) is live!
This final issue of 2025 brings together the thinkers, builders, and human beings defining the past, present, and future of cancer care.
This month’s issue features:
Origins & Insight
In our first cover story, Prof. Robert A. Weinberg reflects on the “series of accidents” that shaped modern cancer biology, from the discovery of oncogenes to The Hallmarks of Cancer. An exclusive conversation you should not miss.
Healing & Humanity
Our second cover story profiles Prof. Andrea Ferrari, architect of European paediatric sarcoma research and the heart behind Progetto Giovani in Milan. A moving exploration of how one doctor reshaped AYA oncology, mentorship, and the meaning of presence.
Policy & Survivorship
Ireland’s Minister Robert Troy explains how the #RightToBeForgotten is restoring fairness for survivors trying to rebuild their lives, proving that compassionate policy can rewrite the future.
Science, Innovation & What’s Next
Prof. Paolo A. Ascierto on life beyond the PD-1 plateau: mRNA vaccines, smart cytokines, T-cell engagers, and Europe’s readiness to ensure access and equity.
Dr. Enrico Franceschi reveals neuro-oncology’s hidden survivorship burden, where cognition, identity, and long-term support must start at diagnosis.
Dr. Christos Tsagkaris reframes cancer screening through the lens of health-rights literacy.
Voices, Systems & Lived Experience
From Kenya, Diana Mwango reports on cancer therapy delivered at home, challenging long-held assumptions about where care must happen.
Dr. Arjun Gupta argues that time itself is a toxicity, urging oncology to count not only survival, but the hours patients lose to travel, waiting, and treatment.
Isabel Deprince‘s deeply human story of grief, art, and the world she painted for her late brother.
Our Co-Editor-in-Chief Prof. Adriana Albini closes the year with her article on Common Sense Oncology, a movement calling for evidence that reflects what patients truly value: fairness, quality of life, time, and survival.
Read the full issue here.
Let us know which story moves you most as we head into 2026.”

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