Taggart’s doctors offered him two treatment options. The first was chemotherapy, which his doctor said might extend his life by three or four weeks. The…
![Two years after being diagnosed with salivary gland cancer in October 2014, Keith Taggart learned that the small tumor that had started in his cheek had spread to his lungs, liver, and kidney. “As we say in Oklahoma,” he said, “I was totally eat up with cancer.”](https://leadingdiscoveries.aacr.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/KeithTaggart_1500x1000_1-300x215.jpg)
Taggart’s doctors offered him two treatment options. The first was chemotherapy, which his doctor said might extend his life by three or four weeks. The…
When the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey hired William N. Hait, MD, PhD, as the founding director of its Cancer Institute in…