CancerFax
Cancer Knowledge Hub β€” Expert-reviewed insights

Cancer insights that inform better decisions

Step-by-step guides, research summaries, and treatment overviews β€” reviewed by oncology navigators and written clearly for patients, families, and caregivers.

From newly diagnosed to relapsed and refractory β€” we publish what patients actually need to understand their options.

Reviewed by oncology navigators Updated regularly 50+ countries reached Clinically grounded
What you'll find here

Insights built for complex decisions

CancerFax Insights exists because cancer patients face decisions that are genuinely hard β€” not because of lack of will, but because the information landscape is fragmented, fast-moving, and often written for clinicians, not families.

Every insight published here is reviewed by our oncology navigation team before it goes live. We focus on the questions patients actually ask us: What is this treatment? Who qualifies? What should I prepare? What should I ask my doctor?

Use the search and filters below to find what's most relevant to your situation.

Cancer insights library

Browse the full library

Search, filter, and explore all published insights β€” by cancer type, treatment category, clinical trial readiness, or stage of your journey.

Search across cancer types, treatments, mutations, drugs, and trials

Topic

4 of 4 insights

CancerFax Services

CancerFax Services

Precision Oncology and Biomarker Testing: A Patient's Guide

Precision oncology uses biomarker testing β€” including IHC, FISH, NGS, and liquid biopsy β€” to match cancer patients with treatments that target the specific molecular drivers of their tumour, rather than treating all cancers of the same organ type identically. Getting the right biomarker panel at the right time is now one of the most consequential decisions in cancer care.

Precision Oncology

Precision Oncology

Limitations of Genomic Testing

The limitations of NGS testing are real and worth understanding. They do not cancel the clinical value -- they define the conditions under which results should be interpreted. Standard DNA panels may miss gene fusions better detected by RNA sequencing. A single biopsy samples one region at one timepoint. Liquid biopsy has reduced sensitivity in low-shedding tumours. A negative result means not detected -- not definitively absent.

Precision Oncology

Precision Oncology

Liquid Biopsy Explained

Liquid biopsy detects circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) from a blood draw, allowing comprehensive genomic profiling without an invasive tissue biopsy. FDA-approved platforms (Guardant360 CDx, FoundationOne Liquid CDx) are clinically validated for treatment-matched therapy identification. A positive liquid biopsy result is generally reliable. A negative result means the alteration was not detected in circulating DNA -- not that it is definitively absent.

Targeted Therapy

Targeted Therapy

Biomarker Testing Before Targeted Therapy

Biomarker testing is the step that decides everything else in targeted therapy. Without it, targeted therapy prescription is guesswork. Comprehensive NGS panels test for dozens of mutations simultaneously from a single sample. Liquid biopsy detects circulating tumour DNA from a blood draw. Both should be done before the first systemic treatment decision -- not as an afterthought.

By cancer type

Insights by cancer type

Find content specific to your diagnosis β€” from treatment overviews to clinical trial access and second opinion guidance.

Clinical trial access

Access to trials unavailable at home

CancerFax connects patients with clinical trials in China, India, and leading global centres β€” including phase I and II trials closed to international enrolment through standard channels.

500+

active clinical trials across China, India, and leading global centres

40+

cancer types with current advanced therapy access pathways

12+

years of patient navigation experience in cross-border oncology

A note from the CancerFax team

Why we publish independently

CancerFax Insights is editorially independent of the hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and treatment centres we work with. Our navigation team writes what patients need to hear β€” not what any institution wants them to read.

That means we tell patients when a treatment is likely out of reach, when a clinical trial has closed, and when the evidence for a new therapy is still thin. We believe informed patients make better decisions and have better outcomes β€” even when the honest answer is harder to hear.

β€” CancerFax oncology navigation team

Questions

About CancerFax Insights

How our content is produced, reviewed, and how to use it effectively.

What kind of insights does CancerFax publish?
CancerFax publishes expert-reviewed, patient-facing content covering advanced cancer treatments, clinical trials, precision oncology, international care pathways, and caregiver guidance. Every insight is reviewed by our oncology navigation team before publication.
Are these insights written for patients or medical professionals?
Our insights are written primarily for patients, families, and caregivers β€” but are clinically grounded enough to be a useful reference for healthcare professionals. We aim for clarity without oversimplification.
How often is content updated?
Insights are reviewed and updated regularly, especially when new clinical data or trial results change the standard of care. The last review date is shown on each article.
Can I use these insights to make treatment decisions?
Our insights are educational β€” they help you understand options, ask better questions, and prepare for medical consultations. They do not replace the advice of your treating oncologist. If you need structured guidance for your specific case, our navigation team can help.
How do I find insights relevant to my cancer type?
Use the search bar above to filter by cancer type, treatment name, mutation, or stage. You can also browse by topic category using the filter pills, or use the cancer type tags in the sidebar.
Ready to go further?

Get personalised guidance for your case

Our oncology navigators review your medical records, explain your options in plain language, and help you access the right specialists, trials, and treatment centres β€” wherever you are in the world.

Every navigation request is reviewed by a qualified oncology professional. We do not recommend treatments without reviewing your medical records.