King Charles III hosted a royal reception this week to honor 125 years of Cancer Research UK. He was joined by Queen Camilla and Catherine, Princess of Wales. The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester were also present for the occasion.
The gathering marked one of the most meaningful anniversaries in British public health. For 125 years, Cancer Research UK has worked to transform what a cancer diagnosis means for patients and families across the country. The charity funds research into how cancer develops, how to detect it earlier, and how to build more effective treatments. After more than a century of that work, the progress is real.
The Royal Family’s official account shared a tribute to mark the milestone, crediting the charity with “125 years of life-changing research.” The numbers speak for themselves. Cancer survival in the UK has doubled over the past 50 years. And today, 8 in 10 people receiving cancer drugs in the UK are treated with a drug developed with Cancer Research UK’s involvement.
That second figure is worth pausing on. For the vast majority of cancer patients in the UK, the medicine they depend on traces back to science this charity helped make possible. That’s the result of 125 years of funding, collaboration, and dedicated research.
King Charles has served as Patron of Cancer Research UK for years. In early 2024, he announced his own cancer diagnosis and began treatment. That experience brought a deeply personal dimension to his ongoing support for the charity. At this reception, he wasn’t just a figurehead lending his name to the cause. He was someone who understands, firsthand, what this research means for patients.
Catherine, Princess of Wales, gave the event further meaning. She shared her own cancer diagnosis in March 2024 and has been open about her treatment and recovery in the time since. At a reception celebrating 125 years of cancer science, her presence alongside the King and Queen sent a quiet but powerful message about resilience and hope.
For anyone touched by cancer, whether personally or through someone close to them, this kind of milestone matters. Doubled survival rates aren’t an abstract statistic. They’re real people living longer. Real families getting more time together. Cancer Research UK has been part of making that possible for longer than most living people can remember.
Queen Camilla and the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester rounded out the royal party. Their presence reinforced the sense that this reception was a genuine expression of gratitude, not just a formal calendar event.
Cancer Research UK turns 125 in 2026, and the anniversary gives everyone a moment to appreciate just how far cancer medicine has come. The science hasn’t stopped moving. New treatments are being researched. More breakthroughs are ahead. The charity that helped build what exists today is still working on what comes next. That’s worth celebrating.
