I suggest this:
On the internet, google "Google Scholar" or go to scholar.google.com. On the Google Scholar screen, click the down arrow that is in the search field and enter the years 2006 to 2016. Search "mass cytometry to find cancer."
Many, but not all, of the articles that come up require a subscription to see the whole article. Your school may have subscriptions, but, even if it doesn't, you should still be able to get enough information. Click on nih.gov [HTML] or wiley.com [HTML] when one of these is to the right of the title of an article to see the entire article for free. Even when you can't see an article in its entirety without a subscription, you can see the abstract, which is a summary, and you get all the information to cite the article. I see an article there, accessible through wiley.com, that compares mass cytometry to an older method, fluorescence cytometry, "Single-cell mass cytometry adapted to measurements of the cell cycle."
The journal articles at doaj.org are all "open access" (free to access). A list of journals that are to some degree free and accessible through NIH (National Institutes of Health) is at
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/.