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Canadian research gets $41 million to prevent cancer and boost early detection.
Summary
The federal government announced a $41 million investment to support 19 Canadian research teams focused on cancer prevention and earlier detection, led by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research with partners including the Terry Fox Research Institute and the Canadian Cancer Society.
Content
The federal government announced a $41 million investment to support research aimed at preventing cancer and improving early detection. The announcement was made Thursday at Toronto's Princess Margaret Cancer Centre and will fund 19 research teams across the country. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research is leading the effort with partners that include the Terry Fox Research Institute and the Canadian Cancer Society. Officials said this is CIHR's largest investment to date for cancer prevention research, and noted cancer remains the leading cause of death in Canada.
Key details:
- The investment totals $41 million and will support 19 research teams.
- The announcement took place at Toronto's Princess Margaret Cancer Centre.
- The Canadian Institutes of Health Research is leading the funding with partners including the Terry Fox Research Institute and the Canadian Cancer Society; CIHR called this its largest prevention research investment to date.
- Research projects include studies on whether common diabetes and weight-loss drugs can lower cancer risk, exploring vaccines for cancer prevention, and investigating the role of gut bacteria in prostate and colorectal cancer.
- Funded projects will address multiple cancer types, including stomach, breast and ovarian cancer, leukemia and cervical cancer.
- Last year Canada recorded about 255,000 new cancer cases and 87,400 deaths, and cancer cost Canadian health systems an estimated $30.2 billion in 2024.
Summary:
The investment is intended to support work that could reduce cancer risk and improve early detection, outcomes officials say can save lives and ease burdens on patients, families and the health-care system. Undetermined at this time.
