Cancer researchers show introducing bacteria to a tumour’s microenvironment creates a state of acute inflammation that triggers the immune system’s primary responder cells to attack rather than protect a tumour. newsroom.unsw.edu.au Submitted by unswsydney t3_11qwpro on March 14, 2023 at 4:37 AM in science 69 comments 7,704
fanghornegghorn t1_jc63dv6 wrote on March 14, 2023 at 9:14 AM Reply to comment by Kiflaam in Cancer researchers show introducing bacteria to a tumour’s microenvironment creates a state of acute inflammation that triggers the immune system’s primary responder cells to attack rather than protect a tumour. by unswsydney Also the flu vaccine. Permalink Parent −9−
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