8.06.2026
Research at CCCZ: Understanding Blood Cancers, Developing Immunotherapies, Optimizing Treatments
Recent publications from the Department of Medical Oncology and Hematology (MOH) at the Comprehensive Cancer Center Zurich (CCCZ) highlight the breadth of cancer research in Zurich—from fundamental insights into the origins of blood disorders to new immunotherapies and the optimization of existing treatments.
Hematoxylin and eosin–stained bone marrow from a mouse transplanted with hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells deficient in Ercc6l2 and Trp53. The image from the publication by R. Schimmer et al. is featured on the cover of Blood, Volume 147, Issue 15.
Cancer medicine emerges from the interplay of basic research, clinical research, and patient care. Researchers and physicians in MOH at CCCZ address questions along this entire continuum—from the biological causes of disease to new therapeutic approaches and the improvement of existing treatments.
Several recent MOH publications exemplify this breadth. They range from fundamental insights into the development of blood cancers to novel forms of immunotherapy and the optimization of treatments following stem cell transplantation..
Understanding Mechanisms of Disease
To treat cancer more precisely, researchers must first understand the biological processes that drive disease. This knowledge is particularly critical in rare blood disorders, where molecular analyses often reveal why certain patients are especially prone to developing leukemia.
When a genetic rescue becomes a risk later on
New Paths in Immunotherapy
Immunotherapies harness the body’s immune system to recognize and eliminate cancer cells. Researchers at CCCZ and its partner institutions are working to expand these approaches to additional hematologic and oncologic diseases and to make them more controllable and adaptable.
CAR T-cells for advanced systemic mastocytosis
A flexible T-cell system against leukemia cells
T-cell engagers with an additional activation signal in AML
Optimizing Therapies
Not all advances in cancer medicine come from entirely new treatments. Equally important are improvements in combining existing therapies, reducing side effects, and evaluating their benefits in real-world clinical settings.
Combination therapy for chronic graft-versus-host disease
These studies illustrate how research at CCCZ integrates multiple levels of cancer medicine: precise understanding of biological mechanisms, development of new immunotherapies, and optimization of existing treatments. Together, these efforts generate insights that not only explain disease and treatment responses but also open new avenues for more targeted, effective, and patient-centered cancer care.
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