Students will benefit from the research interests of the Bioscience Research Group including studies of the tumour microenvironment and communication with infiltrating immune cells, of methods tumours employ to diminish the effectivity of immune effector mechanisms and of how tumours communicate using Extracellular Vesicles with pre-metastatic sites. The taught modules in the programme will cover such topics as Adoptive T cell therapy, tumour-associated macrophages, NK cells, monoclonal antibodies in cancer therapy, vaccines, microbial cancer therapies and immune checkpoint blockade.
The course will be delivered through a combination of lectures, tutorials, practical classes and a research project and will utilise problem-based and self-directed learning. Students will also use case studies to encourage critical understanding. Through their research projects, carried out in the inspirational New Science Building and supervised by world-leading researchers, they will be trained in data collection, analysis and its interpretation. The Cancer Immunotherapy programme will also utilise expert external speakers from the biopharmaceutical industry.