Condition Guide

Glioblastoma Clinical Trials
in the UK (2026)

26 May 2026 12 min read TrialConnect Research Team

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and aggressive primary brain tumour in adults, with around 3,200 new cases diagnosed in the UK each year. Despite standard treatment with maximal safe surgery, radiotherapy, and temozolomide chemotherapy, median survival remains just 15–18 months. UK researchers are leading ambitious trials in CAR-T cell therapy, oncolytic viruses, tumour-treating fields, and personalised vaccines — bringing genuine hope to what has long been one of oncology's toughest challenges.

In this guide

  1. The UK Glioblastoma Trial Landscape
  2. Types of Glioblastoma Trials
  3. Cell Therapy & CAR-T
  4. Immunotherapy & Vaccines
  5. Oncolytic Virus Therapy
  6. Tumour-Treating Fields
  7. Targeted & IDH-Focused Therapy
  8. Who Can Participate?
  9. UK Trial Locations
  10. How to Find Your Match

The UK Glioblastoma Trial Landscape

Brain tumour research is a UK national priority, with dedicated funding through Brain Tumour Research, the Brain Tumour Charity, and NIHR. The UK's network of neuro-oncology centres — led by institutions like UCL Queen Square, the Christie, and Addenbrooke's — has an exceptionally active trial portfolio. The National Brain Tumour Registry provides real-world outcome data that informs trial design.

There are currently over 60 actively recruiting glioblastoma and high-grade glioma trials in the UK, ranging from Phase 1 first-in-human to Phase 3 practice-changing studies.

Types of Glioblastoma Trials

CAR-T Cell Therapy

Engineered T cells targeting EGFRvIII, IL13Rα2, and HER2 on glioblastoma cells, delivered intratumorally or intraventricularly.

Immunotherapy & Vaccines

Checkpoint inhibitors, personalised neoantigen vaccines, and dendritic cell vaccines stimulating anti-tumour immunity.

Oncolytic Viruses

Modified viruses (HSV, adenovirus, reovirus) injected into tumours, selectively replicating in cancer cells and triggering immune responses.

Tumour-Treating Fields

Portable devices delivering alternating electric fields that disrupt cell division, now in UK trials combining TTF with novel agents.

Cell Therapy & CAR-T

UK centres are at the global forefront of CAR-T for solid tumours, with glioblastoma as a key target:

Immunotherapy & Vaccines

GBM creates an intensely immunosuppressive microenvironment, but trials are finding ways to break through:

Oncolytic Virus Therapy

Oncolytic viruses are designed to replicate selectively in cancer cells, destroying them and stimulating immune responses:

Tumour-Treating Fields

Tumour-treating fields (TTF) use alternating electric fields to disrupt cancer cell division:

Targeted & IDH-Focused Therapy

Molecular profiling of brain tumours is revealing targetable vulnerabilities:

Who Can Participate?

Glioblastoma trial eligibility depends on molecular markers, prior treatment, and functional status:

💡 Tip: Preserve Tumour Tissue

If you are facing glioblastoma surgery, discuss tumour banking with your neurosurgeon before the operation. Having frozen tumour tissue available is essential for many clinical trials — particularly vaccine and CAR-T studies that need to sequence your tumour's DNA. Molecular profiling (IDH, MGMT, EGFR, BRAF, MET) should be requested at diagnosis, as it directly determines trial eligibility.

UK Glioblastoma Trial Locations

Major UK centres running glioblastoma trials include:

How to Find Your Match

Use our Smart Matcher to find glioblastoma trials tailored to your molecular profile, treatment stage, and functional status. Whether you are newly diagnosed and seeking trials alongside standard chemoradiation, or facing recurrence and exploring CAR-T, vaccines, or oncolytic virus therapy, we can match you to actively recruiting studies.

Browse our glioblastoma condition page for all recruiting studies, or explore related conditions like Alzheimer's disease for other neurological research.

Find Glioblastoma Trials For You

Our Smart Matcher uses your tumour profile, treatment history, and clinical status to find the most relevant clinical trials.

Find My Matching Trials → Browse All Glioblastoma Trials