Cancer Research Grants in New Zealand: Funding Better Outcomes for Kiwi Patients

Cancer is New Zealand's leading cause of death — responsible for approximately one in three deaths. Over 25,000 New Zealanders are diagnosed with cancer each year, and the impact extends far beyond the patient to family, community, and the health system. Despite significant investment, New Zealand lags behind comparable countries in cancer outcomes — with particular gaps for Māori (who have higher incidence and worse outcomes for many cancers) and for access to newer treatments. Grant funding supports the research, prevention, and support services that improve outcomes for New Zealand cancer patients.

Cancer in New Zealand

Scale

  • Approximately 25,000+ new cancer diagnoses per year
  • Cancer is the leading cause of death (about 30% of all deaths)
  • Most common cancers: prostate, breast, colorectal, melanoma, lung
  • Cancer survivorship is growing — more New Zealanders living beyond cancer

Disparities

  • Māori have higher incidence of most cancers (lung, stomach, cervical, liver)
  • Māori die from cancer at disproportionately higher rates
  • Pacific peoples face similar disparities
  • Rural New Zealanders have later diagnosis and less access to treatment
  • Socioeconomic status strongly predicts cancer outcomes

New Zealand research landscape

New Zealand has strong cancer research despite small population:
- University of Auckland, University of Otago, Massey, Victoria
- Malaghan Institute of Medical Research (immunology and cancer)
- Maurice Wilkins Centre (molecular biodiscovery)
- International collaborations with Australian, UK, and US institutions

Key funders for cancer research

Cancer Society of New Zealand

The Cancer Society is both a service organisation and research funder:
- Cancer Society Research Grants (competitive, peer-reviewed)
- Focus on New Zealand-specific research questions
- Support for early career cancer researchers
- Clinical research and survivorship research

Health Research Council (HRC)

The HRC is New Zealand's primary medical research funder:
- Project grants across all health areas including cancer
- Explorer grants (innovative, early-stage research)
- Clinical Research Training Fellowships
- Rangahau Hauora Māori (Māori health research) — including cancer

Maurice and Phyllis Paykel Trust

A significant NZ philanthropic funder of health and cancer research.

Lindsay Foundation

Some health and cancer research investment.

Leukaemia & Blood Cancer New Zealand

Disease-specific research and patient support — grant funding for blood cancer research.

Breast Cancer Foundation NZ

Breast cancer research and awareness:
- Research grants
- Pink Ribbon fundraising for research
- Patient support programme

Melanoma New Zealand

Melanoma research and prevention — NZ has high melanoma rates.

Key research organisations

Malaghan Institute of Medical Research

Malaghan is New Zealand's leading immunology research institute — with significant cancer research:
- CAR-T cell therapy research
- Cancer immunotherapy
- Clinical trials
- Philanthropically and government-funded

Maurice Wilkins Centre

University of Auckland-based — molecular cancer biology and biodiscovery.

Centre for Cancer Research, University of Otago

Otago-based cancer research — gastrointestinal, breast, and other cancers.

Types of funded cancer research

Basic science

  • Cancer biology (understanding how cancers develop and spread)
  • Genetic and molecular research
  • Immunology (harnessing immune system against cancer)
  • Drug target identification

Clinical research

  • Clinical trials (new treatments)
  • Biomarker research (better diagnosis and treatment selection)
  • Survivorship research
  • Treatment quality and outcomes

Prevention and screening

  • Cancer risk factor research
  • Screening programme effectiveness
  • Prevention intervention research

Health services research

  • Access and equity in cancer care
  • Māori cancer outcomes research
  • Rural cancer care
  • Health system improvement

Types of funded cancer support services

Patient support programmes

  • Cancer Society patient support
  • Counselling and psychological support
  • Information and navigation
  • Financial support (grants for patients in hardship)

Transport and accommodation

  • Patient accommodation near treatment centres (lodges)
  • Transport to treatment
  • Cancer Society transport subsidies

Māori cancer programmes

  • Kaupapa Māori cancer support
  • Cancer screening outreach to Māori communities
  • Cultural support through cancer journey

Palliative care

  • End-of-life care for cancer patients (major proportion of palliative care)
  • Hospice support
  • Home-based palliative care

Grant application considerations

New Zealand relevance

Cancer Society NZ and HRC prioritise research with direct New Zealand relevance — not studies that simply replicate overseas work, but research that addresses NZ-specific questions (Māori cancer disparities, NZ-specific cancers, NZ treatment access).

Māori cancer equity

Māori cancer disparities are a high-priority research area — applications addressing Māori cancer incidence, outcomes, and equity in access to treatment are well-positioned with most NZ funders.

Translational relevance

Basic science research is funded, but translational relevance is increasingly expected — how does your research lead to better outcomes for patients?

Patient involvement

Cancer research increasingly requires patient and survivor involvement in study design, oversight, and dissemination. Show how you've engaged people affected by cancer.

Small country advantage

New Zealand's small size can be an advantage — national datasets, relative geographic containment, and accessible health system data enable research that's harder elsewhere. Show how you use New Zealand's unique research environment.


Tahua's grants management platform supports cancer research funders and oncology organisations — with research grant management, clinical programme tracking, patient support outcome measurement, and the reporting tools that help cancer funders demonstrate their investment in better outcomes for New Zealand's cancer patients.

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