Abstract The breast cancer research community has recognised that access to a source of carefully collected well-annotated human breast tissue is essential for translational research. Research institutions often face barriers in gaining access to this resource as collections typically have restrictive access policies or an over burdensome application process. This was formally recognised by around 50 prominent breast cancer researchers through a Gap Analysis conducted in London, UK in 20061. As a direct result of this report, 4 leading UK centres (Barts Cancer Institute, the Universities of Dundee, Leeds and Nottingham) with multi disciplinary expertise in pathology, basic science, bioinformatics and computer science have collaborated with a leading breast cancer charity to form the Breast Cancer Campaign Tissue Bank (BCCTB; http://www.breastcancercampaigntissuebank.org). BCCTB is a unique resource of biological materials and supportive clinical data, efficiently and ethically collected from patients with breast cancer, to provide researchers with high quality, relevant materials, helping to raise the standard of breast cancer research and facilitating the co-ordinated translation of scientific findings into the clinical setting. A wide range of biological materials are banked, including fresh frozen tumour and surrounding tissue, isolated purified cell populations (which can be provided for culture or DNA/RNA/protein extraction), whole blood and serum samples, as well as formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded material. Specialised collections are also available through the Bank on a collaborative basis. BCCTB has a centralised IT system allowing efficient tracking of samples and recording of raw data from studies, and providing a user-friendly web-based search portal to view material available. A purpose-built Bioinformatics platform allows mining breast cancer literature data from multiple sources and integrating different types of -omics and clinical data alongside publically relevant annotations from a growing number of biological resources such as NCBI, Ensembl, UniProt and Reactome. This platform is also fully interoperable with the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and can be automatically cross-queried from the ICGC data portal which allows direct cross-comparison of experimental findings generated from the ICGC breast cancer projects with literature-derived information stored in our portal. Together this results in the highly efficient and co-ordinated use of samples, reducing duplication of effort and facilitating data mining and analysis. As science is constantly evolving we have an inbuilt R&D program, including cell immortalisation, investigating improved sample storage and collection methods and on-going IT development, all of which will ensure the bank remains cutting-edge. Tissue is released following review by a Tissue Access Committee comprising clinical and non-clinical breast cancer researchers and patient advocates. Direct interaction with end users ensures the materials and data supplied meets the researcher needs. Currently BCCTB is accepting applications from UK based researchers with projects funded by Breast Cancer Campaign. It will launch to the wider breast cancer community in the next 18 months. 1Thompson A et al., Breast Cancer Research 2008, 10:R26. Citation Information: Cancer Res 2011;71(24 Suppl):Abstract nr P5-21-03.