Sanger scientists receive major grant to study rise of early onset colorectal cancer

Dr Trevor Lawley and Professor Mike Stratton awarded funding to enable investigation into the roots of growing cancer concern. 

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Wellcome Sanger Institute researchers, Professor Sir Mike Stratton and Dr Trevor Lawley, together with Dr Paul Brennan of the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) have been awarded a significant grant, enabling their team to investigate the causes of early onset colorectal cancer. 

The grant has been awarded by the European Research Council (ERC), which brings together 66 research teams, including 239 scientists, who will collectively receive a total of €684 million in ERC Synergy Grants.1,2

Colorectal cancer – also known as bowel cancer – can be found anywhere in the large bowel, which includes the colon and rectum. It is the third most commonly diagnosed cancer and accounts for approximately 10 per cent of all cancer cases.3 Despite overall colorectal cancer cases decreasing, in the last 20 years there has been a notable increase of early-onset colorectal cancer which is typically defined as receiving a diagnosis below the age of 50 years.4,5 Some countries which have seen this rise include the UK, USA, Australia, Japan and multiple European and Latin American countries.6,7 If current trends continue, colorectal cancer is projected to become the leading cause of cancer-related deaths among young adults globally by 2030.

The reasons behind this surge in cases have remained a mystery. Young adults diagnosed with colorectal cancer often have no family history of the disease and few known risk factors such as obesity or hypertension. This has fuelled speculation about potential hidden environmental or microbial exposures that are contributing to cases, especially in young adults.

The team at the Sanger Institute has gathered extensive pilot data suggesting that, in recent decades, certain bacteria in infants’ guts that produce mutagens – agents that cause genetic change – have increased the number of DNA mutations in bowel cells early in life. This exposure may help explain the rising rates of early-onset colorectal cancer globally. 

With this new grant of €10.4 million and over the course of six years, the team will follow up on previous work, which found an association between early onset colorectal cancer and the exposure to colibactin – a toxin produced by certain strains of the E. coli bacterium. This work was carried out by Team Mutographs as part of Cancer Grand Challenges, a global research initiative founded by Cancer Research UK and the National Cancer Institute in the US.8

The team will collect blood, stool, and colorectal tissue samples from over 3,000 people across 10 countries, including individuals with early and late onset colorectal cancer and healthy controls. They will generate more than 12,000 whole genome sequences from tumour and normal tissue to identify patterned changes in DNA, known as mutational signatures, linked to bacteria that produce genotoxins (DNA-damaging substances).

In parallel, they will screen bacteria for genotoxic activity (damage to DNA such as mutations or breaks) and expose gut organoids – miniature versions of lab-grown organs – to these strains of bacteria to confirm associated changes in DNA. Using advanced computational analysis, the results will help assess the role of bacteria that change or harm DNA in early onset colorectal cancer and inform new prevention strategies.

Ultimately, the researchers hope to reveal new causes of cancer, which may lead to future preventative strategies to help control the incidence of early onset colorectal cancer and the deaths caused by this devastating disease. 

“The rise in early onset bowel cancer is one of the most urgent conundrums in modern medicine. This grant will enable us to combine cutting-edge genomic and microbiome research to uncover its causes and ultimately, help develop strategies to prevent it.”

Professor Sir Mike Stratton, Senior Group Leader at the Wellcome Sanger Institute

“We suspect that changes in the bacteria that colonise our guts early in life may be leaving a lasting imprint on our DNA. This grant gives us the opportunity to test this idea on a global scale and understand how microbes may be influencing cancer risk decades later.”

Dr Trevor Lawley, Group Leader at the Wellcome Sanger Institute

“By combining population data with genomic and microbiome research, we hope to uncover how early-life exposures contribute to cancer risk. This collaboration has the potential to change how we think about cancer prevention worldwide.”

Dr Paul Brennan, Branch Head Genomic Epidemiology at the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) in France 

“Collaboration is at the heart of the ERC Synergy Grants. In our latest round, teams of researchers will join forces to address the most complex scientific problems together – this time, they are more international than ever. The competition was fierce, with many outstanding proposals left unfunded. With more funds, the ERC could fully capitalise on this wealth of first-class science. Such scientific endeavours are what Europe needs to be at the real forefront.”

Professor Maria Leptin, President of the European Research Council 

More information

Notes to Editors

  1. In total, 712 proposals were submitted. Only about one in ten proposals were selected for funding, with the successful projects receiving on average €10.3 million each. The selected projects will be carried out at universities and research centres in 26 countries across Europe and beyond. Germany (29 projects), the United Kingdom (24), France (21) and the United States (21) host the highest numbers of successful teams. 
  2. This funding, part of the EU’s Horizon Europe research and innovation programme, fosters collaboration between outstanding researchers, enabling them to combine their expertise, knowledge and resources to push the boundaries of scientific discovery. 
  3. World Health Organisation. Colorectal cancer. Available at: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/colorectal-cancer [Last accessed: November 2025]
  4. Siegel, R. L. et al. Global patterns and trends in colorectal cancer incidence in young adults. Gut 68. (2019)
  5. Patel, S. G., Karlitz, J. J., Yen, T., Lieu, C. H. & Boland, C. R. The rising tide of early-onset colorectal cancer: a comprehensive review of epidemiology, clinical features, biology, risk factors, prevention, and early detection. Lancet Gastroenterol. Hepatol. (2022)
  6. Vuik, F. E. et al. Increasing incidence of colorectal cancer in young adults in Europe over the last 25 years. Gut 68. (2019)
  7. Sung, H. et al. Colorectal cancer incidence trends in younger versus older adults: an analysis of population-based cancer registry data. The Lancet Oncology. (2025)
  8. As part of a long-term collaboration between the Sanger Institute, University of California San Diego (US) and the International Agency for Research on Cancer (France), the Mutographs project has uncovered the mutational processes underlying oesophageal, kidney, and head and neck cancers worldwide.