Netherlands Cancer Institute
Netherlands Cancer Institute
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2023Partners:INRA Sophia Antipolis, UCL, Lightpoint Medical Ltd, MR Solutions Limited, Bruker UK Ltd +112 partnersINRA Sophia Antipolis,UCL,Lightpoint Medical Ltd,MR Solutions Limited,Bruker UK Ltd,GE Aviation,Hamamatsu Photonics UK Ltd,Lightpoint Medical Ltd,Dexela Ltd,Blackford Analysis Ltd,Microsoft Research,Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology,Fujifilm Visualsonics Inc,Agilent Technologies UK Ltd,Siemens AG,The Francis Crick Institute,Philips Healthcare,Medtronic,Wolfson Foundation,Mirada Solutions,Millennium the Takeda Oncology Company,Pelican Cancer Foundation,Olea Medical,WF,Hvidovre Hospital,ESI Group,Netherlands Cancer Institute,UU,University of Pennsylvania,Creatv MicroTech (United States),Alzheimer's Society,University College Hospital,Siemens AG (International),Alzheimer's Research UK,Pulseteq Ltd,The Huntington's Disease Association,Agilent Technologies (United Kingdom),Precision Acoustics (United Kingdom),icometrix,Mediso,The Francis Crick Institute,Hitachi Ltd,Netherlands Cancer Institute,Teraview Ltd,Blackford Analysis Ltd,PerkinElmer (United Kingdom),IXICO Ltd,Philips Healthcare (Global),MRC National Inst for Medical Research,Elekta UK Ltd,Elekta UK Ltd,JPK Instruments Limited,Brain Products GmbH,Pelican Cancer Foundation,Medtronic,Alzheimer's Society,Moorfields Eye Hosp NHS Foundation Trust,Dexela Ltd,GE Healthcare,Creatv MicroTech,Cancer Research UK,Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology,Child Health Research Appeal Trust,Microsoft Research,RENISHAW,Alzheimer's Research UK,Child Health Research Appeal Trust,The Huntington's Disease Association,GE Healthcare,Yale University,Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Reso,Rigaku,Yale University,RAPID Biomedical GmbH,icoMetrix,Great Ormond Street Hospital,Olea Medical,CANCER RESEARCH UK,Hitachi Ltd,Bruker UK Ltd,Fujifilm Visualsonics Inc,Beijing Normal University,Danish Research Centre for Magnetic Reso,University of Pennsylvania,TeraView Limited,Beijing Normal University,Moorfields Eye NHS Foundation Trust,Renishaw plc (UK),Siemens,Siemens AG,Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity,Vision RT Ltd,Imaging Equipment Ltd,Imperial Cancer Research Fund,Imaging Equipment Limited,PULSETEQ LTD,Precision Acoustics Ltd,MR Solutions Limited,Philips (Netherlands),RAPID Biomedical GmbH,Mirada Solutions,University of Utah,Mediso,Agility Design Solutions,Agency for Science Technology-A Star,Millennium the Takeda Oncology Company,University College London Hospital (UCLH) NHS Foundation Trust,Hamamatsu Photonics UK Ltd,IXICO Technologies Ltd,University College London Hospitals,Brain Products GmbH,Teraview Ltd,Agency for Science Technology (A Star),Diameter Ltd,Rigaku,ESI Group,Vision RT LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L016478/1Funder Contribution: 5,797,790 GBPMedical imaging has transformed clinical medicine in the last 40 years. Diagnostic imaging provides the means to probe the structure and function of the human body without having to cut open the body to see disease or injury. Imaging is sensitive to changes associated with the early stages of cancer allowing detection of disease at a sufficient early stage to have a major impact on long-term survival. Combining imaging with therapy delivery and surgery enables 3D imaging to be used for guidance, i.e. minimising harm to surrounding tissue and increasing the likelihood of a successful outcome. The UK has consistently been at the forefront of many of these developments. Despite these advances we still do not know the most basic mechanisms and aetiology of many of the most disabling and dangerous diseases. Cancer survival remains stubbornly low for many of the most common cancers such as lung, head and neck, liver, pancreas. Some of the most distressing neurological disorders such as the dementias, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and some of the more common brain cancers, still have woefully poor long term cure rates. Imaging is the primary means of diagnosis and for studying disease progression and response to treatment. To fully achieve its potential imaging needs to be coupled with computational modelling of biological function and its relationship to tissue structure at multiple scales. The advent of powerful computing has opened up exciting opportunities to better understand disease initiation and progression and to guide and assess the effectiveness of therapies. Meanwhile novel imaging methods, such as photoacoustics, and combinations of technologies such as simultaneous PET and MRI, have created entirely new ways of looking at healthy function and disturbances to normal function associated with early and late disease progression. It is becoming increasingly clear that a multi-parameter, multi-scale and multi-sensor approach combining advanced sensor design with advanced computational methods in image formation and biological systems modelling is the way forward. The EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Medical Imaging will provide comprehensive and integrative doctoral training in imaging sciences and methods. The programme has a strong focus on new image acquisition technologies, novel data analysis methods and integration with computational modelling. This will be a 4-year PhD programme designed to prepare students for successful careers in academia, industry and the healthcare sector. It comprises an MRes year in which the student will gain core competencies in this rapidly developing field, plus the skills to innovate both with imaging devices and with computational methods. During the PhD (years 2 to 4) the student will undertake an in-depth study of an aspect of medical imaging and its application to healthcare and will seek innovative solutions to challenging problems. Most projects will be strongly multi-disciplinary with a principle supervisor being a computer scientist, physicist, mathematician or engineer, a second supervisor from a clinical or life science background, and an industrial supervisor when required. Each project will lie in the EPSRC's remit. The Centre will comprise 72 students at its peak after 4 years and will be obtaining dedicated space and facilities. The participating departments are strongly supportive of this initiative and will encourage new academic appointees to actively participate in its delivery. The Centre will fill a significant skills gap that has been identified and our graduates will have a major impact in academic research in his area, industrial developments including attracting inward investment and driving forward start-ups, and in advocacy of this important and expanding area of medical engineering.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2023 - 2027Partners:University of Bristol, JLU, Netherlands Cancer Institute, LUMC, Netherlands Cancer Institute +3 partnersUniversity of Bristol,JLU,Netherlands Cancer Institute,LUMC,Netherlands Cancer Institute,University of Bristol,University of Leeds,University of LeedsFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/X031535/1Funder Contribution: 265,251 GBPThe Doctoral Network RepState aims to train a new generation of innovative scientists in biochemistry and biophysics to address central questions in biology concerning the mode of action of critical DNA Repair proteins that act as state machines. RepState consists of a highly collaborative consortium consisting of 14 participants coming from academia, industry and the creative sector, representing the natural sciences as well as the social sciences. Participating laboratories in RepState are part of established research schools within renowned research organizations and universities. This environment of excellence offers a multidisciplinary PhD program to 13 young researchers, through training in the fundamental chemical and physical principles that underlie biology and human health. In addition, training will focus on method development using technology and experience provided by the academic participants as well as by the two small technology-driven companies. Training incorporates a local program, rotations within partner laboratories, exposure to the non-academic sector and annual meetings. Fellows will follow scientific workshops, courses in transferable skills and career development, and will disseminate and communicate their projects to a diverse audience in close collaboration with the creative sector. The RepState fellows will form a new generation of mature and innovative European scientists with a thorough understanding of fundamental quantitative principles underlying biology, with experience in technique development, career perspectives in multiple sectors and an understanding of the importance of the role of fundamental science for society and human health.
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