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Rare variants are not so rare after all, new study finds
Scientists from the ICR have shown that each person in the UK has an average of 160 rare genetic variants.
Sir Kenneth Stowe, former ICR Chairman and senior civil servant, dies
Sir Kenneth Stowe, who was Chairman of the ICR in the eighties and nineties, has died.
Professor Nazneen Rahman featured in list of London’s most influential people
For the second consecutive year, Professor Nazneen Rahman has featured in the London Evening Standard’s ‘Power1000’ list of the most influential people in London.
Cancer genes control the way cells get fat
Scientists have shown that the tumour suppressor gene TP53 and genes in TOR family play a role in fat production during normal cell division, with important implications for cancer biology.
New Head of Cancer Biology to target cancer cell division
World-leading cell biologist Dr Jonathon Pines joins the ICR as Head of the Division of Cancer Biology.
Nearly half of testicular cancer risk comes from inherited genetic faults
Almost half of the risk of developing testicular cancer comes from the DNA passed down from our parents, a greater proportion than for other cancers.
Breast cancer test could spare some women from unnecessary chemotherapy
A prognostic tool for breast cancer could spare some women from unnecessary chemotherapy, a new study shows.
Shape-shifting cells can take detours to drive skin cancer metastasis
Scientists have observed malignant melanoma cells shift between forms that each have the ability to invade different tissue types.
New ‘mutation-tracking’ blood test could predict breast cancer relapse months in advance
Scientists have developed a blood test for breast cancer to spot patients will suffer a relapse after treatment, months before tumours are visible on hospital scans.
ICR among the world’s most innovative universities in new league tables
The ICR is the joint top institute in the world in the proportion of its academic papers cited in patent applications.
Imaging probe outperforms the best external detector for early cervical cancer
An endovaginal magnetic resonance imaging technique is more accurate at detecting early-stage cervical cancer than the best widely available method.
Genetic test could improve blood cancer treatment
As few as nine genetic features would need to be tested to help doctors identify patients at risk of developing more aggressive disease.