Institute for Cancer Research
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 320 employees, master students included. About 70% of the employees and projects are externally funded.
The Institute has internationally strong research groups within biochemistry, cell and tumor biology, genetics, radiation biology, immunology and cancer prevention. For more than 30 years there has been a close interaction between researchers at the Institute and cancer surgeons, oncologists and pathologists. This emphasis on translational science has resulted in numerous clinical protocols based on in-house research, and the Institute is a key partner in the Comprehensive Cancer Center, organizationally under the Division of Surgery and Cancer Treatment at Oslo University Hospital.
Scientific production - Institute for Cancer Research
| Publications | |
| 2011 | so far |
| 2010 | 197 |
| 2009 | 166 |
| 2008 | 139 |
Latest news
NBS prizes to PhD students from Institute for Cancer Research
Two PhD students at the Dept. of Biochemistry and CCB at the Institute for Cancer Research, Simona Kavaliauskiene (Sandvig’s group) working with membrane transport, and Angela Oppelt (Wiedlocha’s group) studying cell movement, were honored by a poster-prize and a prize for an excellent lecture, respectively.
Institute seminars spring season 2012
The upcoming seminar on Wednesday January 25th will be held by Pierre Åman from Cancercentrum, Sahlgrenska Hospital, Göteborg, Sweden (invited by Ola Myklebost, Dept. of Tumor Biology).
The institute seminars are held in the new research building at Montebello (photo) on Wednesdays from 12-13.
Aiming at national support for targeted cancer therapy research
Oslo Cancer Cluster recently arranged their annual "Cancer Crosslinks Seminar". This year the subject was targeted cancer therapy. Among the lecturers was professor Ola Myklebost, senior researcher at the Department of Tumor Biology and leader of The Norwegian Cancer Genomics Consortium (NCGC).
2011 was the starting year for a governmental research programme for clinical cancer studies, administered by the Norwegian Research Council. The theme area for the announcement is "individually adapted cancer treatment". A sum amounting to 100 mill NOK will be distributed over a period of 5 years and 60 mill NOK was announced this autumn. The NCGS has applied for support for a research project spanning 3 years for studying genetic changes in tumors.
Christos Samakovlis: The molecular basis of airway maturation in Drosophila
Jan 17, 2012
Latest publications
Inst. for Cancer Research
po(2) Fluctuation Pattern and Cycling Hypoxia in Human Cervical Carcinoma and Melanoma Xenografts
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys (in press)
PubMed 22270159
Truth in hope and hope in truth
J Palliat Med, 15 (1), 128-9
PubMed 22268412
Genome-wide association analysis identifies three new breast cancer susceptibility loci
Nat Genet (in press)
PubMed 22267197
Selected publications
Journal Impact Factor > 5, first or last author from the Institute for Cancer Research
The ESCRT machinery mediates polarization of fibroblasts through regulation of myosin light chain
J Cell Sci (in press)
PubMed 22266905
ColoGuideEx: a robust gene classifier specific for stage II colorectal cancer prognosis
Gut (in press)
PubMed 22213796
Shaping development with ESCRTs
Nat Cell Biol, 14 (1), 38-45
PubMed 22193162





Print this page



