• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Inside Philanthropy

Inside Philanthropy

Who's Funding What & Why

Facebook LinkedIn X
  • Grant Finder
  • For Donors
  • Learn
    • State of American Philanthropy
    • Explainers
  • Articles
    • Arts and Culture
    • Civic
    • Economy
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Global
    • Health
    • Science
    • Social Justice
  • Places
  • Jobs
  • Search Our Site

“Beat Cancer Sooner.” What’s This British Grantmaker Up To?

Sue-Lynn Moses | May 5, 2017

Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on X Share via Email

Cancer Research U.K. (CR-UK) was established in 2002 with 20 founding members, who would later appoint 60 more members. Since then, the organization has grown into a coalition of nearly 100 members who share in the collective mission to “beat cancer sooner.”

Today, CR-UK’s strategy is to tackle all forms of cancer by focusing on prevention, early diagnosis, the development of new treatments, optimizing current treatments and improving personalized treatments in an effort to increase efficacy. It supports research on all types of cancer, focusing on the biology of the disease, increasing its research in early diagnosis and hard to treat cancers, and developing new tests, surgical procedures, radiotherapy techniques and cancer drugs.

This is a fairly new strategy for CR-UK, and to ensure its success, the group is investing an additional £50 million a year into new grantmaking programs to “encourage collaboration and innovation, and support research tackling some of the biggest scientific challenges in cancer research.” That additional funding commitment is beyond its £100 million Grand Challenges competition.

Launched 2015, CR-UKs Grand Challenges made an initial commitment of up to $100 million to help scientists overcome some of biggest hurdles in cancer research. CR-UK hoped that the challenge would hasten the pace of cancer research.

The original plan was to back one new research team every year for five years, during which time each team would receive up to £20 million. Perhaps CR-UK wasn’t expecting the number of exceptional proposals it received, but that’s exactly what happened. Receiving “several proposals the panel felt to be too important not to fund,” CR-UK entered into a partnership with the Dutch Cancer Society, and along with backing from an anonymous overseas donor, CR-UK’s inaugural Grand Challenges awards now offer funding up to £71 million or around $87 million.

Four winning teams are sharing the $87 million take. The work supported by CR-UK includes teams that are creating virtual reality maps for tumors, identifying preventable causes of cancer, preventing unnecessary breast cancer treatment, and studying tumor metabolism. The teams consist of scientists from notable institutions such as Harvard Medical School, Wellcome Trust, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Imperial College of London and principal scientists and investigators from AstraZeneca.

The next open call will be announced in June 2017 with a revised set of challenges.

CR-UK could be considered a bit adventurous in its funding, often backing unique projects that “bring novel approaches to the big questions in cancer.” It doesn’t shy away from taking a few risks in its funding, which—as we often note—is a key advantage of private philanthropy, in contrast to government research agencies, which tend to be more conservative in their grantmaking. 

In 2013, for example, CR-UK brought a tech team together in the hopes of creating a cell phone game that could possibly accelerate cures for cancer. Sounds crazy, but techies from Amazon Web Services, Facebook and Google were into it.

Related: Imagine a Mobile Phone Game That Could Help Cure Cancer

The game, tentatively named GeneRun, aimed to tackle the mountains of studies related to the discovery of “genetic faults driving cancer to find new ways to diagnose and treat patients in a more targeted way based on their genetic fingerprint.” The idea was that people would play a fun game while simultaneously combing through loads of scientific data. As promising as this project sounded, we haven’t heard anything about it since 2013. While this is unfortunate, it does demonstrate CR-UK’s willingness to take funding risks on innovative projects and ideas as long as they align with its overarching mission of accelerating the discovery of cancer cures.

read more

Why Five Spinal Cord Injury Organizations Teamed Up to Launch a New Venture Philanthropy Fund

Why Five Spinal Cord Injury Organizations Teamed Up to Launch a New Venture Philanthropy Fund

The WHO Foundation: Applying a “Start-up Mentality” to the Challenges of Global Health

The WHO Foundation: Applying a “Start-up Mentality” to the Challenges of Global Health

A Billionaire Couple's Quest to Cure the Genetic Disorder That Claimed Their Son's Life

A Billionaire Couple’s Quest to Cure the Genetic Disorder That Claimed Their Son’s Life

From Grassroots Beginnings, the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation Now Funds Nationwide

From Grassroots Beginnings, the Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation Now Funds Nationwide

Post-WeWork, the Neumanns Are Still Billionaires. Whatever Happened to Their Philanthropy?

Post-WeWork, the Neumanns Are Still Billionaires. Whatever Happened to Their Philanthropy?

A Public-Private Cancer Funder Backs Team Science and Targets Inequities in Care and Outcomes

A Public-Private Cancer Funder Backs Team Science and Targets Inequities in Care and Outcomes

A Foundation’s Long Quest to Take on Huntington’s Disease Picks Up Speed

A Foundation’s Long Quest to Take on Huntington’s Disease Picks Up Speed

Backed By Sergey Brin, the Newest Force in Parkinson's Research Looks to Speed Cures

Backed By Sergey Brin, the Newest Force in Parkinson’s Research Looks to Speed Cures

Five Questions for Alice Pomponio, Head of the American Cancer Society's Impact Investing Arm

Five Questions for Alice Pomponio, Head of the American Cancer Society’s Impact Investing Arm

How the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Is Working to Ensure Equitable Access to Care

How the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Is Working to Ensure Equitable Access to Care

A Quiet Exodus: Funders Exit HIV Giving Even as Equity Gaps Grow

A Quiet Exodus: Funders Exit HIV Giving Even as Equity Gaps Grow

Paul Allen's Philanthropic Legacy Continues with Funding for a Brand-New Field of Health Research

Paul Allen’s Philanthropic Legacy Continues with Funding for a Brand-New Field of Health Research

Progress on Breast Cancer Hasn’t Been Evenly Distributed. This Funder’s on the Case

Progress on Breast Cancer Hasn’t Been Evenly Distributed. This Funder’s on the Case

Starting With a Big Boost for Rare Disease Research, This Couple Are Ramping Up Their Giving

Starting With a Big Boost for Rare Disease Research, This Couple Are Ramping Up Their Giving

Military Experience Is Less Common Today, But These Funders Are Staying True to Veterans

Military Experience Is Less Common Today, But These Funders Are Staying True to Veterans

A Local Foundation, a Little-Known College, and a Potential HIV and Cancer Breakthrough

A Local Foundation, a Little-Known College, and a Potential HIV and Cancer Breakthrough

Gates Remains Among the Few in Philanthropy to Drive Research for an HIV Vaccine

Gates Remains Among the Few in Philanthropy to Drive Research for an HIV Vaccine

After a Tragic Diagnosis, a Former NFL Player and His Wife Rally Support for ALS Research

After a Tragic Diagnosis, a Former NFL Player and His Wife Rally Support for ALS Research

Type 1 Diabetes Is an Overlooked Global Threat. This Health Funder Has Made it a Top Priority

Type 1 Diabetes Is an Overlooked Global Threat. This Health Funder Has Made it a Top Priority

A New Big Gift Tackles the Problem of Inflammatory and Immune-Mediated Disease

A New Big Gift Tackles the Problem of Inflammatory and Immune-Mediated Disease

Report Finds Scant Funding for Disability Rights and Social Justice — and Points the Way Forward

Report Finds Scant Funding for Disability Rights and Social Justice — and Points the Way Forward

Can AI Help Locate Low-Cost Cancer Treatments? These Funders Want to Find Out

Can AI Help Locate Low-Cost Cancer Treatments? These Funders Want to Find Out

How Effective is Effective Altruism? A Deep Dive Into Two of Open Philanthropy’s EA-Inspired Programs

How Effective is Effective Altruism? A Deep Dive Into Two of Open Philanthropy’s EA-Inspired Programs

Why a Relatively Small Funder Made a Big Donation to Study Neglected Diseases

Why a Relatively Small Funder Made a Big Donation to Study Neglected Diseases

These Health Research Funders Are Facing Down the Next Pandemic Threat — Whatever It May Be

These Health Research Funders Are Facing Down the Next Pandemic Threat — Whatever It May Be

Six Things to Know About This Billionaire Hedge Fund Manager’s Philanthropy

Six Things to Know About This Billionaire Hedge Fund Manager’s Philanthropy

A Q&A With Stanley Druckenmiller on Priorities, Big Bets and Feeling

A Q&A With Stanley Druckenmiller on Priorities, Big Bets and Feeling “Incredibly Privileged”

COVID Won't be the Last Pandemic. A Top Biomedical Funder Seeks to Get Ahead of Emerging Pathogens

COVID Won’t be the Last Pandemic. A Top Biomedical Funder Seeks to Get Ahead of Emerging Pathogens

This Wealthy Virginia Family Is Helping Make the State a Biotech Hub

This Wealthy Virginia Family Is Helping Make the State a Biotech Hub

Sergey Brin's Off-the-Radar Foundation Is Huge — and Growing Fast. Here’s What We Know About It

Sergey Brin’s Off-the-Radar Foundation Is Huge — and Growing Fast. Here’s What We Know About It

Filed Under: IP Articles Tagged With: Diseases, Health

Primary Sidebar

Find A Grant Square Banner

Newsletter

Donor Advisory Center Banner
Consultants Directory Banner

Philanthropy Jobs

Check out our Philanthropy Jobs Center or click a job listing for more information.

Footer

  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Facebook

Quick Links

About Us
Contact Us
Consultants Directory
FAQ & Help
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy

Become a Subscriber

Individual Subscriptions ▶︎
Multi-User Subscriptions ▶︎

© 2024 - Inside Philanthropy