Leicester cancer expert receives £100,000 donation towards research

He is the international leader in mesothelioma research

Author: Lauren WattPublished 6th Jul 2025

A Leicester cancer expert who prolonged the life of the author and charity founder, Mick May, has received a £100,000 donation to help continue his ground breaking work.

Professor Dean Fennell is a clinician scientist at the University of Leicester and the international leader in mesothelioma research - a terminal asbestos-linked cancer.

in 2018, 54-year old Mick May was just 54 when he was given the news of his cancer and referred to Professor Fennell who was able to identify a highly unusual genetic mutation for Mick’s mesothelioma and prescribed him a skin cancer drug never previously given for this type of cancer.

This “personalised treatment” achieved a measurable response of Mick’s tumour, prolonging his life by four more years - Mick lost his battle with the disease in 2022.

Now his widow, Jill, is giving something back to allow Professor Fennell to continue his research

Jill has raised £100,000 to establish the Mick May PhD Fellowship in Mesothelioma.

Jill said:

“It had been on my mind ever since Mick died nearly three years ago that our experience of mesothelioma and its treatment options sharply contrasted to that of the vast majority of people who contract the disease - often elderly and without the raft of advantages we had. The donation was my effort to redress the balance in some small way.

“Mick was referred to Dean in 2018 when new treatment options were running dry. When confronted with the results of the genomic sequencing of Mick’s tumour he thought that Mick might benefit from a particular treatment, and this truly personalised medicine approach gave us extraordinary reprieve and extra years of unexpected and exuberant life.

“Having chatted to Dean about what support I could offer it was clear the recruitment of a PhD student could help fast forward his findings into treatment for others. I’m delighted that we’ve managed to raise this money in memory of Mick and that the funding of the PhD will be known as the Mick May Fellowship in Mesothelioma. It’s such a fitting way to remember Mick and I know he would be extremely proud.”

Mick died aged 63 in 2022, having made medical history, and enjoyed additional fulfilling years thanks to his revolutionary treatment.

Professor Fennell said: “This funding supports the development of new precision medicines entering the clinic to help patients with mesothelioma by applying state-of-the-art artificial intelligence to allow us to identify those patients who will best respond to tailored treatments.”

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