VCCC
The Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre (VCCC) was established in 2009 and is a powerful alliance of ten successful Victorian organisations committed to cancer control: Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne Health (including The Royal Melbourne Hospital), The University of Melbourne, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, The Royal Women’s Hospital, The Royal Children’s Hospital, Western Health, St Vincent’s Hospital Melbourne (including St Vincent's Institute), Austin Health (including the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute and Austin Lifesciences) and Murdoch Childrens Research Institute.
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Gut microbiome and metabolites and Western lifestyle diseases - Prof Charles Mackay
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Behavioral and psychosocial intervention trials in oncology - Neil Aaronson
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Practice changing advances in systemic therapy for gynaecological cancer - Linda Mileshkin
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The RAGE Project Implementing diagnostic pathways for gastro-intestinal cancers Prof Jon Emery
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Tumour size, lympho-vascular invasion and metastasis A clinical perspective - Kailash Naryan
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Stress remodels the tumour microenvironment the impact on cancer progression - Erica Sloan
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Digital care A personal health transformation Prof Trish Livingston
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Cervical cancer prevention, everything is changing - Marion Saville
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The prevention of Uterine and Ovarian cancer - David Wrede
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Development of a care complexity index for use in ambulatory settings by cancer nurses Prof Mel Krishnasamy
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The protective role of an innate immune molecule in gastric B cell lymphomagenesis due to chronic Helicobacter infection - Assoc Prof Richard Ferrero
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Mental health of women with cancer – trauma, identity and maternity - Louise Newman
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Our microbiome and cancer - Prof Paul Johnson
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Managing menopausal symptoms after cancer What works and what doesn’t - Martha Hickey
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Hdac3 regulates lipid oxidation in the intestinal epithelium - Prof John Mariadason
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eSMART Using eHealth to predict those at risk of experiencing chemotherapy-induced symptoms Jo Armes
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Survivorship care plans (SCPs) – what do survivors of gynaecological cancer want - Nicole Kinnane