Researchers have been awarded almost £250,000 to investigate the role of gut bacteria (Image: Getty) Research investigating the role of gut bacteria in breast cancer could unlock new treatments to stop the disease spreading, scientists say. The composition of our gut bacteria affects the immune system and previous research in other cancers suggests this can impact disease progression. A team led by Dr Stephen Robinson at the Quadram Institute in Norwich have been awarded £250,000 funding from a leading charity to study the process.
They will take samples from women before treatment to track how their gut bacteria changes and whether those with certain bacteria fare better. function loadOvpScript(){let el=document.createElement('script');el.
setAttribute('src','https://live.primis.tech/live/liveView.
php?s=114945&playerApiId=v114945');document.getElementById('ovp-primis').appendChild(el)}window.
top.addEventListener('primisPlayerInit',e=>{try{if(e.detail&&e.
detail.playerApiId==="v114945"){if(window.document.
getElementsByClassName('jwplayer')[0]){e.detail.float('disable')}}}catch(e){}});window.
addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded',()=>{setTimeout(()=>{if(typeof flagTcfLoaded!=='undefined'&&flagTcfLoaded===!0){loadOvpScript()ExpressApp.Log('[Load] OVP flagTcfLoaded',new Date())}else{document.addEventListener("tcfLoaded",()=>{loadOvpScript()ExpressApp.
Log('[Load] OVP tcfLoaded',new Date())})}},1500)}) It is hoped the findings could lead to new treatments harnessing gut bacteria to a.