See more Daily Mail on Google - save us as a Preferred SourceBy REBECCA ENGLISH, ROYAL EDITOR Published: 19:06 BST, 2 June 2026 | Updated: 19:37 BST, 2 June 2026

The King and the Princess of Wales will personally thank those who are leading the nation's battle against cancer at St James's Palace tonight.Charles, 77, and his daughter-in-law Catherine, 44, who share the unenviable bond of a diagnosis of the disease, were joined at a reception by Queen Camilla and the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester in honour of Cancer Research UK's 125th anniversary.His Majesty and the Princess were diagnosed within weeks of each other in 2024.While the King is still undergoing an undisclosed form of treatment, Catherine revealed she underwent a period of chemotherapy which finished in the late summer of that year.In January 2025 she announced that she was happily in remission but has spoken of the huge toll it has taken on her physically and warned her return to public duties would be slow and measured.During the reception the royals will meet researchers, clinicians, volunteers and partners involved in Cancer Research UK's prevention, diagnosis and treatment of cancer.High profile supporters of the charity including fellow cancer survivors Davina McCall, Hannah Fry and Adele Roberts are expected, as well as singer Ronan Keating, who lost his mother to cancer, and his wife, Storm.The reception will include immersive installations showcasing the work of the charity, including the charity's past impact, current work and future innovation. Princess Catherine is set to personally thank those who are leading the nation's battle against cancer at a special reception at St James's Palace tonight Catherine, 44, shares the unenviable bond of a diagnosis of the disease with King Charles The Princess of Wales was welcomed by researchers, clinicians, volunteers and partners involved in the work of Cancer Research UKThe King and Queen will view visual representations of how technological innovation is transforming cancer research.The reception is being held to launch Cancer Research UK's 125th anniversary year, its work stretching back to the founding of the charity's predecessor organisations (The Imperial Cancer Research Fund and the Cancer Research Campaign, founded in 1902 and 1923 respectively).Since then, the charity has helped to transform how cancer is understood, prevented, detected and treated.This progress has contributed to a doubling of cancer survival in the UK over the past 50 years and today 8 in 10 people who receive cancer drugs in the UK receive a drug developed by or with Cancer Research UK.The King has been Patron of Cancer Research UK since 2024. His Majesty's patronage was announced to coincide with a visit to University College Hospital Macmillan Cancer Centre to highlight some of the innovative research supported by Cancer Research UK.The Duke of Gloucester and Princess Alexandra are joint presidents of the charity. Fellow cancer survivor Davina McCall was among those seen speaking with the Princess of Wales at the reception Th reception is being held to launch Cancer Research UK's 125th anniversary year Davina McCall beamed as she met King Charles and Queen Camilla at the receptionKate wore a £1,600 midi dress by Rodarte with a detachable flower charm.She also spoke to the widow of 'bowel babe' Dame Deborah James, who was honoured by Prince William for her incredible fundraising and campaigning in the face of incurable bowel cancer.Dame Deborah received her insignia from the future king in May 2022 in a special ceremony at her parent's home and died just weeks later.Her husband Sebastian Bowen told the Princess: 'I've been thinking about you guys a lot'.Catherine praised Deborah for the 'impact of her work' and listened intently as Mr Bowen told her how it had been 'bittersweet' to smash fundraising targets for research and clinical trials into the disease that his wife had dreamed of achieving.He also appeared to thank William for a sympathetic conversation he apparently had with the couple's two children. The princess replied: 'He's good like that.'