The David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research At MIT

About

  • Leadership Council
  • Director's Message
  • Future
  • Scientific Advisory Board
  • FAQs
  • Administration

Faculty

Research

  • KI Approaches to Cancer
  • NCI Research Programs

facilities

  • The Koch Institute
  • Core Facilities

News and Events

  • Grants and Fellowships
  • Cancer Solutions Newsletter
  • Press Kit
  • Summer Symposium

Contact

Support

  • Make a Gift Now
  • Naming Opportunities
  • Bequests and Trusts
  • Corporate Giving
  • Gifts of Stock
  • Gifts of Other Assets
Skip to content

About the Koch Institute

  • Leadership Council
  • Director's Message
  • Future
  • Scientific Advisory Board
  • FAQs
  • Administration

A New Institute With a Three-Decade Track Record

The David H. Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT both transforms and transcends the MIT Center for Cancer Research (CCR). Founded in 1974 by Nobel Laureate and MIT Professor Salvador Luria, CCR has made enormous contributions to the field of cancer research, including:

  • Identified the molecules that led to two of the first FDA-approved molecularly targeted anti-cancer drugs: Herceptin® (1998) and Gleevec® (2001)
  • Isolated the first human cancer genes
  • Discovered extracellular matrix components and their receptors, which play a critical role in metastasis
  • Contributed to the sequencing of the human genome
  • Developed novel materials for sustained delivery of anti-cancer drugs

CCR/Koch holds National Cancer Institute designation as a Cancer Center, and our faculty have earned the most prestigious national and international science honors:

  • Five current and former faculty have been awarded the Nobel Prize
  • 15 current faculty are members of the National Academy of Sciences
  • Two current faculty are members of the National Academy of Engineering
  • Six current and former faculty have been awarded the National Medal of Science
  • Nine current faculty are Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigators

About David H. Koch and the establishment of the Koch Institute... more >>

Phillip A. Sharp

Phillip A. Sharp, Institute Professor (Nobel Laureate, 1993) circa 1980