Institute for Cancer Research

Kjetil Taskén
Institute head

Institute for Cancer Research has since its foundation in 1954 played a central role within the field of cancer research both in Norway and internationally. The Institute has seven research departments and more than 380 employees. About 70% of the employees and projects are externally funded. Read more

See introductory video with welcome to the ICR 

See full video covering all of ICR and its Departments 

Publication overview

Annual reports

Current news and events

Announcement from UiO Growth House:Innovation Hangout #2 2024 in Oslo Science Park 5 December

With this meeting place for academia and industry the UiO Growth House wants to inspire, give self-confidence and knowledge about the innovation process, help researchers and students to build networks and facilitate collaboration between academia and industry to put more research to use for the benefit of patients and society.

  • Inspirational talk: Jonas Hallén, PhD, Chief Medical Officer, Co-Founder, Calluna Pharma
  • Role model talk: TBA
  • Matchmaking between researchers and students and representatives from companies: Halden Pharma, Pharmaq, Sero, UiO iHub, Novartis, UiO Momentum internship and Calluna Pharma

 

Oslo University Hospital has awarded 6 excellent articles for the first half-year of 2024

Award winners during the ceremony
Award winners during the ceremony

In order to stimulate excellent research and draw attention to the hospital's research activity, Oslo University Hospital rewards outstanding publications every half-year.

Six research groups were awarded for their excellent papers published the first half-year of 2024 during a ceremony on November 28th. Each group received NOK 50.000 earmarked for further research, and the prize winners gave short presentations of their main findings.

Nature Communications publication:A new type of specialized epithelial subtype of cells may hold the key to overcoming resistance to prostate cancer treatments

Alfonso Urbanucci
Alfonso Urbanucci

A team of scientists has made a groundbreaking discovery that could explain why certain prostate cancer therapies are less effective than expected. With 5,000 Norwegian men diagnosed with the disease annually, resulting in roughly 1,000 deaths every year, a major clinical objective is to prevent the spread of cancer and recurrence. 

The study was published in Nature Communications November 16th. Alfonso Urbanucci from the Institute of Cancer Research is shared senior author.

EP PerMed grant awarded to European consortium led by Sigrid S. Skånland at Institute for Cancer Research

Sigrid S. Skånland
Sigrid S. Skånland

A European consortium coordinated by Sigrid S. Skånland, project group leader at the Department of Cancer Immunology, has been awarded an EP PerMed grant co-funded by the European Commission for their project “Chronic lymphocytic leukemia: Improving survival and quality of life (CLL-OUTCOME)”.

The vision of the European Partnership for Personalised Medicine is to “improve health outcomes within sustainable healthcare systems through research, development, innovation and implementation of personalised medicine approaches for the benefit of patients, citizens, and society”.

Long term collaboration celebrated:Joint meeting in precision medicine between Oslo and Porto scientists

Jan Vincents Johannessen and Manuel Sobrinho-Simoes, with Fatima Carneiro
Jan Vincents Johannessen and Manuel Sobrinho-Simoes, with Fatima Carneiro

At a two days meeting in Porto about “Precision cancer medicine and emerging opportunities” the former director of the Norwegian Radium hospital, Jan Vincents Johannessen, received the distinction Ordem de Sant´lago da Espada from the President of Portugal. The meeting celebrated the long term collaboration in diagnostics and research, which was initiated by the young pathologists J.V. Johannessen and Manuel Sobrinho-Simoes.
The scientific program was organized by Professors Ragnhild A Lothe, Leonor David and Manuel R Teixeira from these institutions, respectively.

Journal of Cell Biology publication:BEACH domain proteins as new guides in transmembrane cargo sorting

Serhiy Pankiv,first author
Serhiy Pankiv,
first author

Around one-fourth of all eucaryotic proteins, including cell surface receptors, are transmembrane proteins transported to their final destination along the lipid bilayer of the cellular endomembrane system. The protein sorting mechanisms that guide this transport and the pathways taken by transmembrane proteins are still not clearly defined. Now, researcher Serhiy Pankiv and co-workers in Anne Simonsen’s group identified the family of large BEACH domain-containing proteins (BDCPs) as sorting adaptors that, together with clathrin coat proteins, facilitate transport of transmembrane cargo to their destination.