ICR researcher in the lab

Our PhD application process

Our competitive PhD programmes are designed for the next generation of world-leading scientists who want a career in cancer research. 

How to apply for a PhD studentship

Successful candidates will undertake a four-year research training programme under the guidance of a team of our world-class researchers.

Key information 

  • ICR-funded studentships are open to candidates of all nationalities.
  • The majority of our science PhD projects are fully funded studentships, which cover tuition fees, project running costs and a tax-free stipend for living expenses. 

Application process flow diagram

Before you apply

  • Identify studentships of interest on the PhD project list
  • Check when the application deadline is - different projects may have different deadlines
  • Make sure you meet all the entry requirements, including English skills
  • Check the fees and funding

The application process

When you submit your application you will receive an acknowledgment email from [email protected], and your referees will be will be contacted immediately.

If you are selected for interview, you will be contacted by the ICR Registry via email with further information. Unfortunately, because of the volume of applications we receive, it is not possible to contact all applicants to advise them if they have been unsuccessful, or provide feedback as to why.

For questions about the application process please contact [email protected].

Sign up to our mailing list for future PhD opportunities

 

Fill out your application on the Student Recruitment System.

You will need to:

  • Select the relevant recruitment round(s)
  • Provide two references
  • Submit your application by the deadline specified on the project.

Student Recruitment System 

Key information about your referees

  • You will need to provide two references.
  • Ask your referees if they can provide a reference for you before you submit your application.
  • Both referees should be individuals that can comment on your suitability as a PhD student, for example because they have had input in, or have supported your most recent degree or research project.
  • At least one of the references should be academic. This means the referee should be someone who can comment on your academic ability and suitability for further study.
  • Referees will be asked to comment on things such as examination performance, practical work, time management, your ability to express ideas orally and in writing, reliability, initiative, independent work, and self-motivation. 
  • Your referees will be contacted automatically when you submit your application. They will receive an email from [email protected] with full instructions on how to provide your reference.
  • The reference deadline is usually one week after the application deadline.
  • We do not accept references from employment agencies as they are not able to comment on your suitability for a PhD project.

Using the same referees when applying to two concurrent recruitment rounds

  • You should input the referee details in exactly the same way in both applications. Ensure the contact details and names are identical.
  • Your referees will receive an email asking for a reference for each recruitment round you apply to. However, once they have submitted a reference for one of the rounds, they will have the option to automatically pull through the previous reference they submitted for you on the other rounds.
  • It can be worth explaining to your referees this is how it will work and that they should follow the new link to enable the second application to be populated.

Changing your referee details

If your referee is unable to fill out the reference for you, we can change your referee details to another individual. Please send this request along with the full name and contact details for your new referee to [email protected] and we will change this on the system as soon as we can. Your new referee will be emailed immediately. 

Missing the reference deadline

We should receive your references by the reference deadline. Your referees can continue to add the reference to your application after the deadline and your application may still be considered, however your application will be under review by recruiting supervisors with whatever references have been submitted by this time. 

No applicant will be invited to interview unless both references have been received.

Please do not contact our recruiting supervisors directly. All our studentships are recruited using our online Student Recruitment System apply.icr.ac.uk and only applications we receive through this system can be considered.

The recruiting supervisor will see your application there. You should not send CVs to supervisors outside of our recruitment system. This helps us to ensure fair recruitment.

Any questions you have about the recruitment process, or your application can be addressed to [email protected].

We do provide detailed project proposals which should answer many of the technical questions you might have. There will be opportunities for networking and questions for recruiting supervisors further on during the application process. As a result and we discourage contact at this stage.

When applying for a PhD at the ICR our recruiting supervisors are assessing the quality of candidates during the application sifting and shortlisting stages. In general, they will be looking at if you would be a great PhD student at the ICR. As such there is no implied order of project preference.

If there are particular projects that have strongly motivated your application, please detail this in the ‘Research Interests’ section of your application. You must select three projects to submit your application. 

If we progress with your application there will be opportunities to change your preferences after panel interview, and again after one-to-one interviews after you have had a chance to meet with and learn more about recruiting supervisors and the projects they are offering.

If you are applying for the ICR and Imperial Convergence Science PhD programme your project choices will be used to inform the shortlisting process and used to plan the recruitment process if you progress to the interview stage. 

The associated documents that we ask for alongside the application form, such as your university transcripts and project summaries, are used by the Registry team to check your eligibility. They are also provided to supervisors as a separate document, to understand more about the specific content of your degree.

You do not need to send or attach a CV as the information you will complete in the Student Recruitment System is sufficient for us to evaluate your application as a whole.

There is an opportunity to provide detail about your employment history in the ‘Additional Information’ part of the application. You can also use the ‘Research Interests’ part of the application to highlight where your degree, or technical experience and expertise make you a good fit for research at the ICR, or on a specific project.

You should not attach personal photos of yourself to documents that you upload to the student recruitment system. Where you are shown in a document, such as a transcript, please obscure the image.

If shortlisted, you will be invited to attend a panel interview, which is the first part of our recruitment process. We will contact you to ask if you need any adjustments before the event.

Interview dates

If you apply in October/November, the interviews will be scheduled for January, with the exact dates clearly detailed on the website. Candidates that progress to the panel interview stage will get the opportunity to see videos of all the recruiting supervisors explaining their projects and giving an insight into working with their team.

For projects advertised at other times of the year, information on the interview process and date/s will be provided on the PhD projects page.

Panel Interviews

We will provide full details with your invite but generally panel interviews last around half an hour, with three or more people on the panel. You will be asked to present some of your work, and you will be assessed using the same criteria as all other candidates.

You will also have the opportunity to hear about the ICR and our PhD programme from the Deputy Dean. Current students will be available to explain what it is like to study with us and there will be opportunities to network with recruiting supervisors.

One-to-one interviews

Candidates who are successful at the panel interview will be invited to participate in further one-to-one interviews on a different date. These will be with individual supervisors and specific to the projects you are interested in. As such, you may be invited to more than one interview as part of the second-round interviews. 

Changing the interview date

In the majority of circumstances, we are unable to amend interview dates. If you are offered an interview and you are unable to attend on the given date, please contact the [email protected] as soon as possible.

Entry requirements for degree programmes

Admissions to all ICR research degree programmes are governed by the ICR Admissions Policy and Procedure and the Appeals and Complaints Procedure for Applicants. Copies of these, and our MPhil/PhD Code of Practice, are on our student resources page.

Applications for PhDs are invited from talented graduates or final year undergraduates.

Studentship funding is typically for a period of up to four years, and comes from the ICR and funding bodies such as The Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK, industrial partners, and other charities.

You are welcome to apply wherever in the world you are currently based. We particularly welcome British applicants from Black and ethnic minority backgrounds, as they are underrepresented at PhD level, both within the ICR and nationwide.

You can apply for multiple recruitment rounds, and you can apply where you have been previously unsuccessful. Your application will not be disadvantaged in either case.

For full details of our academic and English language eligibility criteria, please read below.

We consider applications on merit and have a strong commitment to enhancing the diversity of our students.

To be eligible for registration for the degree of MPhil/ PhD, you should have:

  • a degree in a relevant subject, passed with First Class or Upper Second Class honours [1]
  • or a Masters degree in a relevant subject
  • or an overseas qualification of equivalent standard to the above
  • or an MPhil in a relevant field (see paragraph 9.1 of the MPhil/PhD Code of Practice)

And you must have:

  • experience of research work relevant to the post [2]

Also, if your first language is not English:

  • you must be able to demonstrate a proficiency in English to the equivalent of an IELTS score of 7.0, with a minimum of 6 in any one component;
  • or within the last two years in a majority English speaking country, have either education experience in English for a minimum of 1 year; or work experience in English for a minimum of 18 months and be able to satisfy Home Office visa criteria where necessary. [3]

It may be possible to make a conditional offer to candidates whose IELTS score is less than the minimum, subject to further study and re-examination, and to UK visa requirements. The qualification would need to be in place before we sponsor a visa application.

Further eligibility criteria may apply to specific programmes and projects. Carefully read any information provided by the funding body and in the project proposals. You can also help us to ascertain your eligibility by being accurate in your answers to screening questions in the application forms, such as your requirement for a visa to study in the UK and the ITN eligibility questions. You can provide clarity by using the ‘Additional Information’ part of the application. For example, you might want to include some of your employment history to confirm eligibility.


Please note that:

  1. If you have not yet completed the relevant qualification then you are expected to be in your final year of study, and to nominate an academic referee from your institution who can confirm the classification you are on track to achieve. Our standard expectation from undergraduate study is a First, but we will consider candidates with a good Upper Second.
  2. One of your referees must be able to comment on your research experience.
  3. The Home Office visa criteria for English language eligibility is either for applicants to be from or have studied an appropriate academic qualification in a majority English-speaking country (see the UK Government's Student visa guidance) or have passed an approved English language test.

Majority English speaking countries:

Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, the British overseas territories, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Ireland, Jamaica, Malta, New Zealand, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, UK, USA.

PhD programmes and cohorts

Deadline extended to: Sunday 24 November 2024

The ICR's MRC-funded Doctoral Training Partnership aims to prepare students to build and execute collaborative multidisciplinary research projects and provide them with the skills and capabilities to translate their innovations for the benefit of patients.
 
The ICR provides a unique and enriching training environment for students through three distinct but complementary research themes that build on established expertise: Genome Stability and DNA Damage Response, Advanced Therapeutics, and Radiation Oncology and Biology.
 
To become information science-literate experimental scientists equipped to work in a team science environment, students will gain a thorough grounding in data analysis and computation skills, as well as core research skills by attending taught sessions one day a week in the first two terms. This training will be designed to ensure that all students, no matter their background, master the fundamentals of database interrogation, statistics, data handling and analysis, so they can apply them in their PhD projects and have sufficient appreciation of the wider biomedical research landscape to formulate questions beyond their discipline and to support their future career progression.

Under this DTP, we are able to offer some projects as iCASE collaborations with one of our five industry partners. The iCASE scheme provides students with experience of collaborative research with a non‐academic partner, thereby offering an experience of at least two distinct research cultures and access to a wide range of technology, facilities, and expertise. Students will have the opportunity to spend a period of time with the industry partner (usually no less than three months over the lifetime of the PhD).

Queries about this programme this be directed to [email protected].

Funding for our PhD projects comes from a variety of different sources. Some of our funding comes from programmes which have unique targets and student experiences.

The Cancer Research UK Convergence Science Centre was established as a strategic partnership between The Institute of Cancer Research and Imperial College London. The mission of the Centre is to bring together engineering, physical sciences, life sciences, and medicine to develop innovative ways to address challenges in cancer research to benefit cancer patients. This is achieved through multidisciplinary collaborations that integrate otherwise distinct approaches to co-create new tools, technologies and methodologies.

The Convergence Science Centre aims to train the next generation of convergence scientists by building cross-institutional research teams with supervisors from distinct disciplines who will equip PhD students with the skills to work across disciplinary boundaries. Students will be exposed to the world leading research, expertise and infrastructure across both institutions. 

We invite applications to our highly competitive Convergence Science PhD Programme, which is four-years in length under the guidance of a supervisory team of world-class researchers across the two institutions. Successful candidates will receive a fixed, tax-free annual stipend of £23,000 per annum, and project costs including tuition fees will be underwritten for the four-year duration. Students enrolled on the programme will be provided with bespoke training to develop the skills required to work across the boundaries of different disciplines. 

We invite applications from talented UK graduates or final year undergraduates from a life science, chemistry, computer science, engineering, or physics background. Convergence Science PhDs cover tuition fees for UK students only (except where otherwise stated in the project specification); however, international students are also invited to apply subject to outlining how they will meet the difference in tuition fees. We look forward to receiving applications from all candidates and will select those who display the potential to become world leading researchers of the future based on their application and performance at an interview. We are encouraging applications from candidates of Black and ethnic minority backgrounds as they are underrepresented at PhD level within our programme.

Queries about this programme should be directed to [email protected].

Fiona Want is a third-year PhD student in the Target Evaluation and Molecular Therapeutics team at the ICR. Her project focuses on the role of two APOBEC3 proteins in bladder cancer, investigating why they are hijacked and how their activity may contribute to the emergence of drug resistance.

What is your educational/work background?

Before starting my PhD, I completed an MSci undergraduate degree in genetics at the University of Nottingham. During that time, I carried out a project investigating movement in predatory bacteria, Bdellovibrio.

Why did you want to study at the ICR?

I was particularly drawn to studying at the ICR as it is a world-leader in cancer research offering the unique opportunity to work as part of a multidisciplinary team combining mechanistic biology and drug discovery.

Talk us through your typical day

On a typical day (pre-COVID!), I would spend most of my day in the lab doing a mixture of tissue culture and molecular biology. But I would always make time for tea breaks in the office to catch up with my colleagues and have interesting, impromptu scientific discussions as well. However, as you can imagine my day has changed a lot lately! Due to COVID restrictions, my typical day now starts (very early) with a morning shift in the lab followed by analysing data and planning experiments at home in the afternoon. It has certainly been an adjustment and I really miss my teammates who are on the afternoon lab shift as I haven’t seen most of them properly since before lockdown!

What big projects are you working on?

APOBEC proteins have a key role in the immune system, helping to fend off viruses by damaging their DNA. However, recent data has shown that APOBECs can be hijacked by cancers, potentially helping to speed up their evolution and to develop drug resistance. My job is to understand the role of APOBEC proteins in bladder cancer. It’s particularly exciting to be part of a team working on a new class of drug that could specifically target cancer’s ability to evolve.

What are you most proud of?

My PhD journey has been a little challenging at times. Last year I broke my leg and ended up having to take a four-month interruption to my studies to recover. Just after returning to the lab full time, lockdown started! I am proud that despite all this, I have never given up, am still pushing forward with my project. During lockdown, I won first prize for my virtual student poster at the ICR conference!

How do you take part in life at the ICR outside your studies?

I’ve been on the Student Committee since my first year and I’m currently Vice President for the Sutton site. It’s great being part of something that ensures students' voices are heard. I am also a Student Wellbeing Advisor which involves being an informal point of call for students, offering support and guidance with any concerns they have.

What opportunities has studying at the ICR given you?

Studying here has offered me so many opportunities; I have attended conferences, get to regularly present my work and help contribute to the student experience through the Student Committee. I am always pushed to do the best that I can and believe my time here will prepare me well for my future career.

What’s your favourite part of life at the ICR?

Being part of such a great team; everyone is so friendly and supportive. If there is a technique you want to learn or a problem you need help troubleshooting, there is always someone in the institute with the expertise willing to help you.

What do you do to wind down?

I enjoy listening to music, baking and going for walks in the countryside with my other half. Much to my supervisor’s dismay (as it’s how I broke my leg….), horse riding is still my passion and I will go any time I can!

PhD opportunities currently available

Enhancing immune responses to radiation with spatiotemporal dose modulation and drug combinations

Primary supervisor: Dr Magnus Dillon Primary site: Sutton Funded by CRUK RadNet Enhancing immune responses to radiation with spatiotemporal dose modulation and drug combinations

HPV- and genome instability-driven innate immune responses in head and neck cancer

Primary supervisor: Dr Ben O'Leary Primary site: Chelsea Funded by CRUK RadNet HPV- and genome instability-driven innate immune responses in head and neck cancer