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Cancer vaccines to be brought to Vietnam

Vietnam will receive cancer vaccines from Japan in the near future, Prof Dr Ta Thanh Van, Rector of the Hanoi Medical University (HMU) told Lao Dong newspaper.

The vaccine, which treats existing cancer, is a key part of the university’s cancer prevention research to be deployed.

Antigens from the tumour of the patients will be taken out and processed, then brought back to the patients’ bodies to stimulate the creation of antibodies, he explained.

Van said cancer vaccines have already been applied in some hospitals in Japan and proved effective against several types of cancer.

The HMU will launch the vaccines in Vietnam after receiving approval from the Ministry of Health, he added.

More than 300,000 Vietnamese patients are struggling with cancer, said Director of the Vietnam National Cancer Hospital (Hospital K) Tran Van Thuan.

In addition, about 165,000 new cases of cancer and 115,000 deaths due to the disease are reported in Vietnam annually.

Each year, Vietnamese people spent some 2 billion USD on medical treatment, mostly on cancer, in foreign countries.
VNA/VNP

Cultural festival spotlights Mu Cang Chai tourism potential

Cultural festival spotlights Mu Cang Chai tourism potential

The festival provides an opportunity for Mu Cang Chai to showcase and further promote its potential, strengths, natural beauty and distinctive cultural identity to visitors from within and beyond the province. Through this, the locality is gradually realising its aspiration to become a flagship tourism destination of the northwestern region.

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