Dear Voornaam Next year, we’re holding a new conference in prevention research with the American Cancer Society on 25-27 June in Boston. We’ll bring together cancer prevention researchers from discovery biology through translational and behavioural science to population and implementation research. John Burn from Newcastle University, Tim Rebbeck from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Thea Tlsty from the University of California San Francisco are shaping the programme to share the latest thinking, results, and address opportunities within the field. Register your interest to be the first to know when registration opens, and follow along #PrevConf24 on our socials for more updates. |
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Funding & Research Opportunities |
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| Applications accepted all-year round |
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| Applications accepted all-year round |
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| Applications accepted all-year round |
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FUNDING FOR DATA SOLUTIONS FOR CHILDREN’S AND YOUNG PEOPLE’S CANCERS If you’re working on data-driven research questions to develop new and scalable solutions to common challenges in children’s and young people’s cancer, apply for our new pilot award. The award offers up to £250k in funding to deploy new or existing datasets to answer unaddressed scientific questions in cancers in 0–24-year-olds. Multi-disciplinary teams across a broad range of fields are welcome to apply. |
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CHARLOTTE MELLOR WINS BACR STUDENT IMPACT AWARD 2023 Congratulations to Charlotte Mellor who has been awarded the British Association for Cancer Research (BACR) 2023 Student Impact Award. Charlotte is a Cancer Research UK-funded PhD student at The University of Manchester. She received the award for her outreach with widening participation initiatives including the Manchester Access Programme, which supports local Year 12 students get into research-intensive universities, no matter what their background. Read about Charlotte’s work, and don’t forget to follow #CRUKFunded on our social channels for more researcher highlights.
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KEEP UP WITH PREVENTION RESEARCH UPDATES Do you want to keep up with our latest updates in the prevention research sphere? Sign up to our mailing list to find out more about our prevention strategy, funding opportunities and upcoming events. You can check out our initiatives to bring cancer biology into prevention, increase understanding of risk and use behavioural, pharmacological and immunological approaches to develop new ways to prevent cancer. |
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| DPHIL IN CANCER SCIENCE PROGRAMME AT OXFORD The DPhil in Cancer Science Programme at the University of Oxford is now accepting applications from cancer researchers with clinical, biological, engineering, mathematics and statistics backgrounds. You’ll access world-leading research training, mentoring and a specialised, fundamental, subject-specific training programme tailored to your individual research needs and interests. Find out more about the course and where can you go from here. |
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FREE RADNET WORKSHOP ON COMPLEX RESEARCH TECHNOLOGIES Calling discovery researchers at all levels. Register now for our one-day workshop on 17 November in Manchester to upskill in complex research technologies. Join us to connect with other health professionals and learn more about CRISPR, expression profiling, complex modelling and computational approaches. You can also post questions specific to a particular technology ahead of the workshop. |
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| ACCESS SEED-FUNDING TO TRANSLATE YOUR RESEARCH Are you interested in funding opportunities to translate your innovative ideas into cancer treatments, diagnostics and medical devices? The Cancer Research Horizons £15m+ Seed Fund can help you bridge the funding gap to achieve this. Cancer Research Horizons, our innovation engine, has over 25 years’ experience establishing and growing over 65 startup companies, which have gone on to raise £2.3bn+ in investment. If you would like to join this cohort get in touch with the Cancer Research Horizons team. |
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“FALLING INTO CANCER RESEARCH WAS QUITE ACCIDENTAL” Neil Hunt is a physical chemist who leads a team at the University of York exploring infrared spectroscopy in liquid biopsies. And Peter Weightman is a physics professor who’s developing a prototype device to predict prognosis based on machine learning with a multi-disciplinary team at the University of Liverpool. We found how they are both applying lessons from non-cancer fields to detecting cancer earlier. |
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| Cambridge, UK 03 November 2023 |
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| Oxford, UK 13 November 2023 |
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| London, UK 14 November 2023 |
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| Edinburgh, UK 14 November 2023 |
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| London, UK 21 November 2023 |
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| London, UK 29 November 2023 |
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| Manchester, UK 27 February 2024 |
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