The Center for Immuno-Oncology (CIO) investigates how our immune system reacts to cancer and what we can do to improve tumour immunity. We combine deep fundmental understanding of immunology with preclinical studies to translate new knowledge into clinical trials with the aim of developing new life-saving treatments for a spectrum of cancers.
Oxford’s long history of excellence in immunology is now focused on cancer, and CIO is the hub of the University-wide Oxford Cancer Immuno-Oncology Network (OCION) which links immuno-oncology researchers from multiple disciplines from across the University of Oxford, its affiliated hospitals and industrial partners.
CIO News
£1.7 million for vaccine to prevent lung cancer
2 April 2024
Oxford and UCL researchers seeking to create the world’s first vaccine to prevent lung cancer in people at high risk of the disease have been granted up to £1.7 million from Cancer Research UK and the CRIS Cancer Foundation.
What's new for Oxford Cancer
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Oxford Cancer Professor Yang Shi honoured by the Royal Society
16 May 2024
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Blood proteins may be able to predict risk of cancer more than seven years before it is diagnosed
15 May 2024
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OCION Funding Scheme: In conversation with David Church and Luciana Gneo
10 May 2024
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Researchers develop new way to identify people with new-onset diabetes who are at risk of pancreatic cancer
8 May 2024
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Immune cells hunt down cancer around the body – discovery could lead to personalised treatments for advanced breast cancer
2 May 2024