
This week we’re in the Langhe — at Fontanafredda — for the first in-person meeting of the Virtual Evolving Cancer Cell Consortium (VECC), an initiative our HT colleague Andrea Sottoriva has been pushing for.
The aim: figure out how AI methods, the right data, and the right computational tools can together help us understand cancer-relevant cellular processes — and how a consortium of labs working in parallel can move faster than any of us could alone.
Around thirty PIs from across Europe and beyond are part of our consortium. From HT: Andrea Sottoriva, Francesco Iorio, Jan Funke, and Florian Jug. The rest of the table brings researchers from the Crick, ICR, Sanger, EMBL-EBI, IRB Barcelona, ETH, NYGC, UCL, Curie, and a dozen other institutions — single-cell genomics, cancer evolution, spatial omics, modelling, AI methods.

The first day mostly went into laying out where each lab stands, what each is trying to build, and which parts of the puzzle naturally connect. Lots of whiteboards and flip-charts. Not yet conclusions, but the kind of shared vocabulary that makes the conclusions possible.

More to come as the consortium takes shape.


