Sahlgrenska Center for Cancer Research

Translational cancer research with the patient in focus
Here at Sahlgrenska Center for Cancer Research (SCCR) we focus our research with the patient in mind. This is so that the cancer patient could receive a better care in the future than in today’s society. Through a close collaboration with the Sahlgrenska University Hospital, we at the centre are trying to find new methods and treatments, which later can be tested and applied directly within the cancer care.

Our research groups work widely
Today our 27 research groups work in a wide spectrum of cancer related research questions, but they all have translational cancer research as a common denominator. Example of areas which are studied are brain cancers, lung cancer, breast cancer, melanoma, radiotherapy, prostate cancer and leukaemia. Other research areas at the centre are also epigenetics, ovarian and cervical cancer, sarcoma, neuroendocrine and thyroid cancers, pancreatic cancer and salivary gland tumors.
The research is in some cases used for developing diagnostic and prognostic tools, which in the longer term can improve the cancer care and ensure that the right treatments are being used.
Overbridging post graduate studies
Through the Cancer Research South (CARES) School we at Sahlgrenska Center for Cancer Research also provide courses within cancer research. As for our work, these courses are overbridging research and clinical work as well. CARES is a graduate research school which offers courses to PhD Students at University of Gothenburg and Lund University, which have both been part of the previous strategic program BioCARE.
Latest SCCR publications
- Equalizing prognostic disparities in KRAS-mutated stage III NSCLC patients: add… (External link)
- Age and comorbidity in relation to treatment and survival outcomes in triple-ne… (External link)
- A single-cell and tissue-scale analysis suite resolves Mixl1's role in heart de… (External link)
- Distinct metastatic organotropism shapes prognosis in lung adenocarcinoma with … (External link)
- Breast cancer patient-derived scaffolds enhance the understanding of PD-L1 regu… (External link)
- The colorectal cancer microenvironment governs clinical behaviors and chemother… (External link)
- Continuous map of early hematopoietic stem cell differentiation across human li… (External link)
- SCC publications (before name change) (External link)