Dame Tessa Jowell “feels a deep sense of responsibility” to give a voice to patients and pave the way for other cancer sufferers, her daughter has said.

Jess Mills said she was inspired by her mother’s “ferocious sense of mission”, as the Labour peer became the first patient to donate her medical data to the Universal Cancer Databank (UCD).

The project aims to develop better treatments for rare forms of cancer and speed up the discovery of new ones by sharing patient information with researchers across the world.

Baroness Jowell was diagnosed with brain cancer in May last year.

She has since called for greater collaboration to fight cancer, earning a standing ovation for an emotional address to the House of Lords.

Universal Cancer Databank
Jess Mills, daughter of Baroness Tessa Jowell, during an interview with the Press Association to discuss the newly launched Universal Cancer Databank, in London (Yui Mok/PA)

Ms Mills told the Press Association: “My mum has been my internal compass my whole life and she has taught me everything.

“And I have to say that I have learnt more from her than I ever could have imagined in this last year.

“Her bravery, her dignity, her ferocious sense of mission, her selflessness and her courage and her vision and her ability to lead at a moment where others would quite simply withdraw.

“So we are doing this for her, with her, we are doing this for all of us.”

Cancer treatment debate
Baroness Tessa Jowell with Sarah Jones and James Brokenshire in the House of Commons ahead of a debate on cancer treatment (The Brain Tumour Charity/PA)

Baroness Jowell has a rare brain tumour known as glioblastoma, which strikes fewer than 3,000 people in England every year and has a very poor prognosis.

She has pledged support to the UCD, a project by the Eliminate Cancer Initiative and part-funded by the Minderoo Foundation, at the House of Commons on Thursday.

The database will first collect the data of brain cancer patients to share with researchers.

Baroness Jowell hopes the UCD will help tackle the “cancer inequalities” across the world and put patients “at the front of the agenda”, her daughter said.

“My mum feels a deep sense of responsibility to be the voice for so many voiceless patients and this action tonight is her starting to pave the path for others to tread,” Ms Mills said.

“The whole conversation around cancer treatment and the search for cures has to come back to the patient.

“This is a really historical moment to mark the future as we want to see it.”

Universal Cancer Databank
Australian philanthropist Andrew Forrest and Jess Mills, daughter of Baroness Tessa Jowell, talk to the Press Association about the new Universal Cancer Databank, in London (Yui Mok/PA)

Andrew Forrest, an Australian philanthropist and founder of the Eliminate Cancer Initiative, described Baroness Jowell’s pledge as an “incredibly selfless act” and described the project as the beginning of “the march of the patients”.

He said: “We hadn’t met, we didn’t know each other, and I put the idea to her that she could be the first to step out and contribute her data, knowing that it’s going to go into a global bank which will be freely accessible to researchers all over the world.

“The energy in her conviction literally crackled down that phone line.

“She said: ‘I’m going to do this Andrew, this is exactly what the world needs’.”

Brain cancer was picked as the first target of the collaborative project because it was “probably the most terrifying disease known to man” and the “toughest” to crack, Mr Forrest said.

He hopes millions of people will follow in Baroness Jowell’s steps and share their medical data “to help other people not tread the same tortuous suffering path which they are on”.

Baroness Jowell said: “It is my hope that, through my cancer journey and sharing of my data, we will be able to develop better treatments for cancer and speed up the discovery of new ones.

“I’m grateful to the Eliminate Cancer Initiative and all the people who have shown me such support since I learned I had a brain tumour.

“Together, with hope, we can achieve greater survival for cancer patients across the world.”