Driving breakthroughs in cancer care
In its inaugural edition, the program will invest up to $25 million to advance clinical trials across Canada.
Clinical Research Designed by Researchers Focused on Patients
The Cancer Research Society (CRS) is launching its first-ever national program entirely dedicated to investigator-initiated oncology clinical trials in Canada.
Led by the CRS, with the Canadian Cancer Society and the Terry Fox Research Institute as co-leads, this program aims to empower Canadian doctors and researchers to design and conduct cutting-edge clinical trials.
This unprecedented collaboration also brings together Lotte & John Hecht Memorial Foundation, Génome Québec, Kindred Foundation and Childhood Cancer Canada, all committed to advancing clinical research and turning promising ideas into tangible results for patients.
The program aims to foster the development of innovative treatments, improve patient care, and address priority clinical questions, including those related to rare and understudied cancers.
Most cancer clinical trials are funded by the pharmaceutical industry, focusing primarily on developing and testing new drugs. While these trials are essential, many important questions remain underfunded and unanswered for patients.
Investigator-initiated trials are different. Designed and led by doctors and researchers, they address clinically relevant questions that may not be fully explored in industry-led trials. These trials allow researchers to:
In its inaugural edition, the program will invest up to $25 million to advance clinical trials across Canada.
This national program aims to:
To reflect the diversity of investigator-initiated clinical research, the program will support two funding streams: