Research projects
Active Italy
Liver cancer
Researchers are hoping to discover new ways to diagnose liver cancer more accurately, which would help patients receive better treatments more quickly.
Researcher: Dr Fulvio Chiacchiera
When prevention fails: Understanding how mutated proteins make liver cancer more likely
Active Austria
Lung cancer
This project could lead to new immunotherapy treatments that can block tumour growth in lung cancer and potentially many other cancer types.
Researcher: Dr Stefano Angiari
Turning red lights green: How do cancer cells stop immune cells from doing their job?
Complete France
Multiple myeloma
Multiple myeloma is a hard to treat blood cancer and so in this project researchers want to find ways to help immunotherapy work for more patients.
Researcher: Dr Philippe Pasero
Predicting resistance in multiple myeloma and boosting immunotherapy
Complete United Kingdom
Oesophageal cancer
By better understanding how oesophageal cancer first emerges researchers hope to find new ways to prevent this disease and improve survival rates.
Researcher: Dr Maria Alcolea
Understanding the role of mutation interactions in oesophageal cancer
Complete France
General cancer research
Immunotherapy doesn’t always work but by learning more about how immune cells and cancer cells interact researchers hope it can work better for more patients.
Researcher: Dr Loredana Saveanu
Finding ways to make immune cells target cancer cells more effectively
Complete Belgium
Melanoma
Therapies for melanoma sometimes stop working if treatment resistance develops so by understanding how this happens researchers hope to find new, better, cures.
Researcher: Dr Pierre Close
Demystifying what makes melanoma so ‘good’ at resisting treatments
Active United Kingdom
Multiple cancers
Lung cancer and breast cancer cells behave very differently so by exploring the unique ways their cells communicate researchers hope to find better cures.
Researcher: Dr Olivier Pardo
Protein paradox: finding out how a family of molecules can both help and hinder cancer
Complete United Kingdom
Brain cancer
This project hopes to reveal if changing the intervals between radiotherapy doses makes it better at treating one of the most common types of brain tumour.
Researcher: Dr Jamie Dean
Rhythmic radiotherapy: Tackling glioblastoma by changing the interval of treatments
Complete Sweden
Multiple cancers
This project hopes to discover more about the biology of how solid tumours develop to find new ways to prevent, diagnose or treat these cancers.
Researcher: Professor Staffan Stromblad
Understanding how 'tissue stiffening' affects cancer developmentWe have funded over £220m of research worldwide since 1979 and cancer survival rates have doubled in that time.
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