Journal Guides7 min readUpdated Mar 25, 2026

Is Cancer Research Indexed in PubMed? Yes, With MEDLINE and Archive Depth

Cancer Research is indexed in PubMed and currently indexed for MEDLINE, and its record also reflects meaningful archive depth through OLDMEDLINE.

Associate Professor, Clinical Medicine & Public Health

Author context

Specializes in clinical and epidemiological research publishing, with direct experience preparing manuscripts for NEJM, JAMA, BMJ, and The Lancet.

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Quick answer: yes. Cancer Research is indexed in PubMed, currently indexed for MEDLINE, and also carries meaningful archive support through OLDMEDLINE.

Direct answer

If you publish in Cancer Research, your article is discoverable in PubMed and sits inside the active MEDLINE system.

The NLM record shows:

  • publication history beginning in 1941
  • PubMed coverage from volume 25, issue 6 (July 1965)
  • MEDLINE coverage from volume 25, issue 6 (July 1965)
  • current indexing status: Currently indexed for MEDLINE
  • current subset: Index Medicus
  • archive support through OLDMEDLINE

That is a very strong indexing record, especially for a long-running oncology journal whose historical literature still matters.

Why this matters for Cancer Research

Cancer Research papers often keep circulating long after publication because they contribute to:

  • mechanism and pathway interpretation
  • translational oncology framing
  • therapeutic-target reasoning
  • review and evidence-synthesis work

PubMed visibility matters for current papers. Archive depth matters because older Cancer Research papers are still part of how oncology readers build arguments around targets, resistance mechanisms, and disease biology.

PubMed, MEDLINE, and OLDMEDLINE

This journal is a good example of why all three fields matter:

  • PubMed means current papers are easy to find in standard biomedical searches.
  • MEDLINE means the journal is actively inside the curated NLM index.
  • OLDMEDLINE means the older literature still has structured presence in the biomedical search ecosystem.

That combination is one reason Cancer Research functions as both a current journal and a historically important archive.

What indexing does and does not tell you

This page answers the discoverability question. It does not answer whether the paper is strong enough for Cancer Research.

Indexing tells you the paper will be findable. It does not tell you whether the manuscript is broad enough, mechanistically important enough, or translationally meaningful enough for this journal’s real editorial bar.

That is why the better next reads are:

Practical verdict

Yes, Cancer Research is indexed in PubMed and currently indexed for MEDLINE, and its archive support makes the record even stronger.

If your question is whether a published paper will be discoverable in the biomedical literature system, the answer is clearly yes. If your question is whether the manuscript deserves a Cancer Research audience, that is a separate fit call. A free Manusights scan is the best next step if you want that judgment before submission.

References

Sources

  1. 1. Cancer Research NLM Catalog record, NLM.
  2. 2. NLM Catalog help: current indexing status, NLM.

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