The UK will set up the world's largest database of cancer patients in an attempt to revolutionise diagnosis and treatment of the deadly disease that claims millions of lives globally.
The database will collate all the available data on each of the 350,000 new tumours detected in the country each year, Public Health England said.
The aim is to use the register to help usher in an era of "personalised medicine" that will see treatments matched to the exact type of cancer a patient has.
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"This will fundamentally change the way we diagnose and treat cancer. In five years we'll be sequencing cancers and using therapies targeted to it," Rashbass told the BBC.
The service will also exchange information with Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, which have their own registers.
Cancer starts with a mutation that turns a normal cell into one that divides uncontrollably and becomes a tumour. However, huge numbers of mutations can result in cancer and different mutations need different treatments.
Research into the genetics of breast cancer means it is now thought of as at least 10 completely separate diseases, each with a different life expectancy and needing a different treatment.
The national register will use data from patients at every acute NHS trust as well 11 million historical records.
It will eventually track how each sub-type of cancer responds to treatment, which will inform treatment for future patients.
UK's Department of Health has already committed 100 million pounds to sequence the entire genetic code of 100,000 patients with cancer and rare diseases in order to accelerate progress in personalised medicine.
Emma Greenwood, Cancer Research UK's head of policy development, said: "It's great news that this national database has been set up.
"It means we have all the UK's cancer information in one place, making us well equipped to provide the highest quality care for every cancer patient.
"It'll be easier and quicker to further cancer research, and will speed up work to deliver personalised cancer medicine to patients in the future."
According to WHO, cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide, accounting for 7.6 million deaths (around 13 per cent of all deaths) in 2008.