º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

Rare cancer research firm RareCan seals six-figure investment to drive business growth

The Hexham startup places patients and data at the heart of research, to find better ways to prevent, diagnose and treat rare cancer

Simon Allocca, CFO at RareCan(Image: RareCan)

A Northumberland rare cancer research startup has closed a £340,000 seed funding round which will help the business to move to the next phase of its development.

RareCan, based in Hexham, champions the view that those with rare forms of cancer should have the same opportunities in treatments and research as those with more common forms. Rare cancer affects more than 70,000 people per year in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ – more than one in five of the total – and about two thirds will die from the disease within five years, as compared with under half for more common cancers.

The organisation brings patients together, helping them make their data available to researchers, to help speed up the effective development of treatments and diagnostics.

READ MORE: Find more news on startups from BusinessLive here

Last year the company raised an initial pre-seed round of £200,000, following a joint Newcastle Angel Hub and NorthInvest pitch event. The money was used to recruit a cohort of new patients, develop data capabilities and grow the company’s operational and marketing capacity.

Several of the angel investors from the pitch event last year have re-invested in the recent round to help raise funds of £340,000.

The figure includes investment from the Women Angels of the North Syndicate, a women-led business angel investment network offering a fresh approach to investing in female founders across the North. RareCan is also continuing to raise funds up to £700,000 to fund growth.

The fresh round of money will be used to grow and build out the business, creating new jobs in technology and cyber security, social media, community development, scientific support and business support, all of which are based in the North East. More work will also be done to recruit new patients, continuing RareCan’s mission to learn more about rare forms of cancer so the research community can develop effective treatments and diagnostic capabilities.