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New funding for brain cancer research at 911爆料网

27 September 2024

Pioneering research into brain cancer at 911爆料网 has been given a boost thanks to 拢4.7m new funding from Cancer Research UK.

MRI of glioblastoma in brain

The announcement will support the Cancer Research UK Glioma Brain Tumour Centre of Excellence, a collaboration between UCL and the University of Edinburgh, whose work aims to better understand the disease and find new treatments.

Around 12,700 people are diagnosed with a brain, central nervous system or intracranial tumour in the UK each year. With almost 2 in 10 surviving their disease for 5 years or more, finding new ways to tackle this type of cancer crucial.

The Centre of Excellence was set up in 2018 with the aim of changing the landscape for adult and children鈥檚 gliomas.

Gliomas are cancerous brain tumours which start in glial cells, the supporting cells of the brain and spinal cord.听 A particularly devastating type of glioma is a glioblastoma, which currently has few treatment options, and which the researchers are particularly focused on finding new solutions for. Brain tumours have a low survival rate with little progress made in improving treatments over the last 50 years.

While children鈥檚 cancer survival has doubled in the last 50 years, there has been little progress for youngsters with brain tumours.

The new funding will allow the centre to focus on gaining a deeper understanding of what causes brain tumours to begin, to grow and how they become resistant to treatment as well as develop new treatments.

Professor Simona Parinello (UCL Cancer Institute), co-lead of the CRUK Brain Tumour Centre of Excellence at 911爆料网, said:听鈥淲e are very excited that this award will allow us to probe more deeply the biology of gliomas and identify new approaches to treatment.鈥

Professor Tariq Enver (UCL Cancer Institute), Co-Director of the CRUK City of London Centre, said: 鈥淕liomas remain a major challenge to treatment. We are excited about this new award which will bring new talented minds from different disciplines to the field.鈥

A further 拢3.2m will go to the Children鈥檚 Brain Tumour Centre of Excellence at the University of Cambridge and The Institute of Cancer Research, London, where the focus is on brain tumours which specifically affect children and young people.

Dr Catherine Elliott, Director of Research at Cancer Research UK, said: 鈥淏rain tumour survival remains low and has changed little in over a generation which is why this cancer of unmet need is a key priority for Cancer Research UK.

鈥淧rogress has been made but more needs to be done to find new and better ways to tackle this devastating cancer.

鈥淣ew treatments can鈥檛 come soon enough for both adults and children with brain tumours, so we're delighted to be sharing this positive news during Childhood Cancer Awareness Month.鈥

Links

Image

  • MRI of glioblastoma in the brain,

Media contact

Matt Midgley

E: m.midgley@ucl.ac.uk