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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)

 

20/06/25

Scientists have developed a tool that can predict how bowel cancer adapts to treatment – helping researchers to design new personalised drugs that will keep patients living well for longer. 

A team from the Institute of Cancer Research, London, and Queen Mary University of London have designed a new technology that uses evolutionary biology to measure and predict how cancer cells will evolve when they are exposed to a new treatment.

Bowel cancer is the fourth most common cancer in the UK. There are around 44,100 new bowel cancer cases in the UK every year, or around 120 every day.  Most bowel cancers are treated with chemotherapies and these treatments haven’t changed in almost 50 years.

Patients with late-stage disease typically die from drug resistance – when the cancer stops responding to treatment.

What causes drug resistance?

Drug resistance is caused by molecular changes in cancer cells that renders the treatment ineffective. Understanding exactly how this resistance develops will allow researchers design new and better drugs that target the mechanisms of resistance – ensuring cancer is kept at bay for longer. It will also allow clinicians to use existing drugs in the optimal way – altering doses if necessary.  

There are two routes that cancer cells can take to escape a drug’s action, but until now, it has been very hard to tell them apart.

In research published in the journal Nature Communications, the team from the Centre for Evolution and Cancer at The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR), and funded by the Wellcome Trust and Cancer Research UK, tracked bowel cancer cells as they evolved resistance to chemotherapy.

Together with colleagues from Queen Mary University of London, the researchers used mathematical modelling to pinpoint when resistance to the drug developed. They could then determine whether resistance was caused by a rare genetic mutation in one cell that was copied as the cell divided, or whether there was a non-genetic change responsible.

Helping to design personalised drugs

The researchers have now turned their method, called EIRAs (Evolutionary Informed Resistance Assays), into a tool that can be adopted into the process of developing new medicines. By using EIRAS, they hope that new personalised drugs can be designed which target the route that a patients’ tumour has taken to evolve resistance.

The researchers are seeking commercial partners to further progress this work, as well as working with colleagues in the ICR’s Centre for Cancer Drug Discovery. A patent has been submitted for the technology, which the researchers believe could be used to support the development of a number of cancer drugs – they have already begun exploring its use for ovarian and breast cancer.

'Treatment resistance is a long-standing problem that we are desperate to solve'

Professor Trevor Graham, Professor of Genomics and Evolution and Director of the Centre for Evolution and Cancer at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said:

“Just like bacteria evolve resistance to antibiotics, cancer cells can evolve resistance to chemotherapy, making treatment less effective. This treatment resistance is a long-standing problem that we are desperate to solve. Cancers may respond well for a while, but sadly then they usually become resistant and the drug stops working.

“By studying bowel cancer cells over time as we treat them with chemotherapy, we have been able to develop a machine learning technology that can unpick how and when these cells become resistant. We hope this information will allow us to design new, personalised drugs – ones that target these changes so that the cancer responds to treatment. We also believe we can use the technology to learn how to alter the dose of existing drugs, to keep them working for longer.

“I’m excited to work with colleagues and partners – including those in the ICR’s Centre for Cancer Drug Discovery – to implement this technology, and to bring more treatment options to patients living with cancer.”

Dr Freddie Whiting, postdoctoral researcher at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said: 

“With this new computational method of measuring how cancer cells evolve during treatment, we are hopeful that it will be easier to identify those that minimise the evolution of drug resistance. I am excited to see our platform, Evolutionary Informed Resistance Assays (EIRAs), incorporated into the drug discovery process to speed up the development of drugs that lead to the best possible response in patients.”

'We are constantly searching for ways to halt cancer’s growth when treatments stop working'

Professor Kristian Helin, Chief Executive of The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said:

“As cancer researchers, we are constantly searching for ways to halt cancer’s growth when treatments stop working. This work will help us to identify new targets to tackle cancer once resistance develops.

“The research brings together ideas in machine learning, cancer evolution, and drug discovery. The Institute of Cancer Research has an unrivalled track record of drug discovery, and I look forward to seeing this technology progress, through our Centre for Cancer Drug Discovery and through collaborations with partners, to drive the development of treatments that benefit patients for even longer.”

Professor Richard Nichols, Professor of Evolutionary Genetics in the School of Biological and Behavioural Sciences at Queen Mary University London, said:

“These advances have come from treating cancer cells’ resistance to chemotherapy as a question about evolution.  We asked whether their resistance has a genetic basis, building on methods that were first developed to resolve disputes among biologists about the colour patterns of snails. The success of this project shows the value of cross-fertilization of ideas, sometimes between subject areas that seem distantly related.”

Morag Foreman, Head of Discovery Researchers at The Wellcome Trust said:

“Every cancer is unique and will not respond to treatments in the same way. Recognising how resistance develops on a case-by-case basis means we can tailor treatment plans for individuals to ensure they continue to be effective, adding another tool to help us better understand cancer as a disease. At Wellcome, we’re pleased to have supported this research, which is an excellent example of how interdisciplinary approaches are essential to tackling the pressing health issues we face.”