ICGC is funded by participating nations, each of which focuses on one or more forms of cancer, with the goal of mapping the
genomes of at least 50 types of cancer.{{cite web ICGC membership is open to all entities that agree to follow its principles and guidelines. The ICGC has received commitments from funding organizations in Asia, Australia, Europe and North America for 47 project teams in 15 jurisdictions to study over 21,000 tumor genomes. Projects that are currently funded are examining tumors affecting the bladder, blood, bone, brain, breast, cervix, colon, head and neck, kidney, liver, lung, oral cavity, ovary, pancreas, prostate, rectum, skin, soft tissues, stomach, thyroid and uterus. Over time, additional nations and organizations are anticipated to join the ICGC. The genomic analyses of tumors conducted by ICGC members in Australia and Canada (pancreatic cancer), China (gastric cancer), France (liver cancer), Germany (brain cancer), Japan (liver cancer), Spain (blood cancer), the UK (blood, breast, lung and skin cancer) and the USA (blood, brain, breast, colon, kidney, lung, ovarian, rectal, stomach and uterine cancer) are now available through the Data Coordination Center housed on the ICGC website.
Members of the executive committee • Australia: Warwick Anderson,
National Health and Medical Research Council • Canada:
Thomas Hudson,
Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Susan Langlois,
Prostate Cancer Canada and Cindy Bell,
Genome Canada • China: Henry Yang and Youyong Lu,
Chinese Cancer Genome Consortium • European Commission: Jacques Remacle, Patrik Kolar and Iiro Eerola • France: Fabien Calvo,
Institut National du Cancer (INCa) • Germany: Axel Aretz and Frank Laplace,
Federal Ministry of Education and Research.
Gerd Nettekoven,
Deutsche Krebshilfe (
German Cancer Aid), founded bei
Mildred Scheel,
Bonn and
Berlin. • India: M.K. Bhan and T.S. Rao,
Ministry of Science & Technology, Department of Biotechnology • Italy: Maria Cristina Falvella
Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR) and Giampaolo Tortora
University of Verona • Japan: Sonoko Watanabe,
RIKEN, Tatsuhiro Shibata,
National Cancer Center Sachiko Suematsu, Rie Tsuchida and Hideo Eno
National Institute of Biomedical Innovation • Mexico: Miguel Betancourt
Instituto Carlos Slim de la Salud • Saudi Arabia:
Sultan bin Turki Al Sedairy King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre • South Korea: Hyung-Lae Kim
National Center for Cancer Genomics, National Project for Personalized Genomic Medicine, South Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare • Spain: Elias Campo and Rosa Rodríguez Bernabé,
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation • United Kingdom: Michael Dunn and
Michael Stratton, The
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute • United Kingdom: David Scott and Nic Jones,
Cancer Research UK • United States: Jean Claude Zenklusen and Louis Staudt,
National Cancer Institute Eric Green, and Carolyn Hutter,
National Human Genome Research Institute • United Kingdom: Rosalind Eeles,
Institute of Cancer Research • United States:
Olivier Elemento,
Englander Institute for Precision Medicine at
Weill Cornell Medicine • South Korea: Kyu-Sung Lee,
Samsung Medical Centre Research,
Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine • South Korea: Eun Sook Lee,
National Cancer Center • China: Huanming Yang,
BGI Genomics • South Korea: Sung-Soo Yoon
Seoul National University Hospital,
Seoul National University College of Medicine • Japan: Takayuki Yoshino
National Cancer Center Hospital East • China: Qimin Zhan
Peking University Health Science Center Representatives with observer status: • Hong Kong: Joseph Lee,
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology == Current research projects ==