Measuring the greatest distance between two tumours (Dmax) in a cancer patient's body imaged on CT scans is used as prognostic marker (a predictor of disease progression and how long a patient may survive) with conventional cancer therapies, but it hasn’t been closely looked at in the context of the increasingly promising CAR-T therapy (a kind of immunotherapy in which a cancer patient's own immune system is reprogrammed to attack their tumour). Here, taking this measurement in 39 patients before and after CAR-T therapy for the white blood cell cancer lymphoma, cancer in those with high Dmax progressed more quickly but it didn’t presage their overall survival
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