Highlights from the NCRI 2017 – part two
10 Nov 2017
Highlights from the NCRI 2017 – part one
08 Nov 2017
A hijacking hat-trick: secondary tumours steal blood supply to survive
26 Oct 2017
Dr Melissa Pilkington – identifying the best ways to support patients with hair loss
27 Sept 2017
Neoplastic Petals: unfurling the factors that help cancer to spread
07 Sept 2017
Rainbow Kaleidoscope: our image competition winner
01 Sept 2017
Spotlight on... Dr Paul Huang
14 Jun 2017
Investing in the best: How we decide what research to fund
06 Jun 2017
Dr Cristina Branco – tackling the root of breast cancer
10 May 2017
Breast Cancer Research Image Competition 2017
12 Apr 2017
Pieces falling into place: Genetic graffiti and PARP inhibitors
13 Mar 2017
Exploring the universe within cells: the 2016 Sir Antony Driver prize winner
19 Jan 2017
Fishing for cancer clues in liquid biopsies
11 Jan 2017
Matching mutations and medicines: research into ATR inhibitors
22 Dec 2016
Highlights from the 2016 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium: Part 2
19 Dec 2016
Highlights from the 2016 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium: Part 1
16 Dec 2016
Breast cancer research in 2016 – what did we learn?
12 Dec 2016
New research reveals how cancer cells pretend to be ‘super-fit’ to survive and spread
Our researchers uncovered how cancer cells can hijack a natural process called cell competition to help them grow and spread at the expense of healthy cells. These findings could lead to new treatment approaches for breast cancer.
19 Jul 2024
New way to kill cancer cells could lead to longer lasting protection for people with breast cancer
Researchers, part-funded by Breast Cancer Now, discovered that killing breast cancer cells in a new way activates the immune system to detect and destroy remaining cancer cells. This could offer longer protection to people with the disease.
21 May 2024
Researchers have furthered our understanding of how the biological clock affects breast cancer
Researchers funded by us have further uncovered how the biological clock affects breast cancer growing and spreading. This new knowledge could help us find new and better ways to treat the disease.
16 Apr 2024