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Latest News

Close up image of a human eye, showing the iris and pupil
21st January 2026
New approach offers hope for people with rare eye cancer

A more active approach to monitoring and treating people with a rare eye cancer (known as uveal melanoma) that has spread to the liver could help some patients to live longer, according to researchers at Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London. The findings, from a retrospective study of the largest UK cohort of patients with this condition to date, offer an encouraging sign of progress in this rare and difficult-to-treat cancer.


17th December 2025
Celebrating the BCI’s highlights of 2025

Join us as we look back at some highlights of Barts Cancer Institute’s news stories this year.


Illustration of a brain
7th November 2025
Discovery reveals new understanding of cancer-driving proteins in rare brain tumours and beyond

Scientists have discovered that a single letter change in a gene called PRKCA drives a rare and hard-to-treat brain cancer, chordoid glioma, through an entirely unexpected mechanism. The findings could open up new ways to design targeted treatments for this difficult-to-treat disease, and possibly for other cancers involving the same gene.


Procyon DX logo: a yellow four-pointed star on the left, surrounded by blue dots, with text Procyon DX in blue on the right.
29th October 2025
New spinout launches to advance early pancreatic cancer detection

Queen Mary University of London has launched a new company, Procyon Diagnostics, to provide pioneering early cancer detection tests. The company’s first test, PancRISK, offers new hope for detecting pancreatic cancer earlier, building on over 15 years of research by Professor Tatjana Crnogorac-Jurcevic at Queen Mary’s Barts Cancer Institute (BCI), funded by the Pancreatic Cancer Research Fund.


Blood samples in a laboratory
22nd October 2025
Blood test helps guide immunotherapy for bladder cancer

A new clinical trial led by Professor Thomas Powles at Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London, has shown that a blood test to detect tumour DNA could help doctors decide which patients with bladder cancer are most likely to benefit from further treatment after surgery. The new approach improved survival in those identified as high-risk while safely sparing low-risk patients from unnecessary side effects.


30th September 2025
New AI model sheds light on high-risk skin cancer: Q&A with the authors

Researchers have developed an artificial intelligence (AI) tool that could help doctors identify which skin cancers are most likely to spread. We spoke to Professor Jun (Alex) Wang, a group leader at BCI, and Dr Emilia Peleva, a Clinical Research Fellow and dermatologist in his team, about their new study, published in npj Precision Oncology.


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