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Search newsletter

What's inside? See our first ever special edition of Search which is in addition to our twice-yearly newsletters. 

In this special summer edition of Search, we take an in depth look at the work our scientists are doing in bringing new treatments to people with cancer, who are at the heart of everything we do. 

You can find out more about the importance of understanding the biology of cancer. By unravelling cancer’s secrets, our scientists will have a better idea of how cancer develops, spreads and becomes resistant to treatment, which will help them find new ways to prevent and treat the disease. 

We then dive into drug discovery, explaining why protein degradation has the potential to lead to new treatments for hard-to-treat cancers and showcasing a recent advance that will help our structural biologists make further discoveries.

For instant access to our latest special issue of Search, simply subscribe by completing the form below. 

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Newsletter archive

Search issue 51 - Spring 2025

Find out how our scientists are developing improved breast cancer tools that will help identify women at high risk and our pioneering trial to test multiple treatments for brain cancer.

Download issue 51 (PDF)

Search issue 50 - Autumn 2024

In our 50th edition of the Autumn Search issue, we look at the latest research news featuring a new breast cancer drug approval in the UK, for treating the most common type of advanced breast cancer.

Download issue 50 (PDF)

Search issue 49 – Spring 2024

Look at how our researchers received a prestigious Queen's Anniversary Prize on behalf of the ICR, in recognition of our transformational breast cancer research programme.

Download issue 49 (PDF)

Search issue 48 – Autumn 2023

Find out how we're transforming treatment for people with cancers of unmet need, and meet our family charity partner Siobhan's Superstar Legacy, whose generous donation is supporting the work of our new Team Leader in Developmental Oncology, Dr Sally George.

Download issue 48 (PDF)

Search issue 47 – Spring 2023

Meet Dr Stephen-John Sammut, whose research uses AI to forecast how cancer is likely to respond to treatment, and find out more about capivasertib, a new promising drug born from the ICR’s cutting-edge science and pioneering programme of clinical trials.

Download issue 47 (PDF)

Search issue 46 – Autumn 2022

Meet the Director of our Centre for Evolution and Cancer, Professor Trevor Graham, whose research uses evolutionary principles and computational modelling to reveal how cancer develops.

Download issue 46 (PDF)

Search issue 45 – Spring 2022

Meet our new Team Leader, Dr Alex Radzisheuskaya, whose research focusses on how proteins help to package up DNA in cells – and the role that this can play in cancer.

Download issue 45 (PDF)

 

03/07/25

Researchers have tracked how the most common form of oesophageal cancer and its immune environment change during a standard form of treatment – offering vital clues that could shape future therapies, so they work for longer.

By analysing samples from patients with locally advanced oesophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), researchers discovered that while the cancer’s genetic makeup remains stable during treatment, its biological behaviour and tumour microenvironment change significantly.

The study, co-led by researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, and the Technical University Hospital of Munich, details how EAC adapts to survive, even without acquiring new genetic mutations – a phenomenon known as phenotypic plasticity. These new insights could help shape future treatments that target not just cancer cells, but also their surrounding environment.

How the tumour evolves, and why it matters

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (EAC), a cancer of the oesophagus – the tube that connects the mouth to the stomach – is one of the deadliest forms of cancer due to often late diagnosis and limited effective treatment options. It sees a five-year survival rate of less than 50 per cent and a median survival of under a year in advanced cases. Once relatively rare, it has become the dominant subtype of oesophageal cancer in high-income countries, with incidence rates rising sharply in recent decades.

The research team, largely funded by the German Cancer Consortium and Cancer Research UK, analysed tumour samples collected before, during and after treatment from 27 patients enrolled in the MEMORI trial. The study was designed to investigate how EAC responds at the molecular level to neoadjuvant therapy – treatment given before surgery to shrink the tumour and improve outcomes – followed by surgery. By applying cutting-edge techniques, they were able to build a detailed picture of how the tumour and its microenvironment respond to therapy.

While genetic mutations didn’t change consistently during treatment – either chemotherapy or a combination of chemotherapy and radiotherapy followed by surgical resection – the team observed shifts in gene activity and the immune landscape. Immune and stromal pathways, which regulate immune cell activity and the tissue supporting the tumour, respectively, were switched on. The tumour cells altered their behaviour without the cancer evolving into new, genetically different groups of cells. This behavioural shift may help the tumour avoid detection or attack by the immune system – a process known as immune evasion.

These results, published in Nature Cancer, suggest that cancer’s resistance is not necessarily driven by mutations but by flexible changes in how tumour cells behave and how they interact with their surroundings.

Understanding resistance could unlock smarter therapies

Importantly, the study linked poor treatment outcomes with signs of immune evasion, such as reduced T-cell activity and a lack of immune cell expansion. This suggests that targeting the immune environment, and not just the tumour itself, could improve outcomes for patients.

These findings highlight the potential of combining immunotherapy with standard treatments in future clinical trials. While still early-stage, the research provides a valuable framework for designing more effective therapies tailored to the biology of each tumour. These findings suggest that immune evasion may be key as to why some treatments fail. This points to the potential value of combining immunotherapy – stimulating the body’s immune system to help attack cancer cells – with standard treatments in future clinical trials.

Professor Trevor Graham, study co-lead and Director of the Centre for Evolution and Cancer at the ICR, said:

“This kind of reverse translation – where we deeply explore samples from patients who are in clinical trials – helps us understand why treatments fail and what we might do differently. Ultimately, we hope it will lead to new clinical trials and, eventually, more successful treatment for people with oesophageal adenocarcinoma.”

Combining immune-targeting therapies with standard care

The research team plans to expand its research within EAC to include a broader range of tumour presentations, including those not visible through PET imaging techniques, to validate their findings across a wider patient population.

Dr Melissa Barroux, first author of the study, and Gastroenterology Resident and Clinician Scientist at TUM Klinikum Rechts der Isar, said: “While any clinical impact is still several years away, this work shows us that a new generation of oesophageal cancer treatments will have to tackle both the cancer and the ecosystem it thrives in.

“With so many advanced oesophageal adenocarcinoma patients only living for less than a year, it remains a cancer of unmet need. The ultimate aim is to develop smarter, more personalised treatment combinations that could finally shift the needle for patients with this often-deadly disease."