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Mohammad Abu Arja M.D., M.S.c.
Funded: 07-01-2024
through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Houston, TX
Institution: Baylor College of Medicine
affiliated with Vannie E. Cook Jr. Children's Cancer and Hematology Clinic, Texas Children's Hospital
Brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer related death in children. The outcomes for high-grade gliomas in children are dismal. Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells are genetically engineered cells programmed to target cancer cells with high precision. The application of CAR T cells in brain tumors in children is still limited compared to leukemia. One challenge is that CAR T cells need multiple hits to kill brain tumor cells compared with leukemic cells, where a single hit is sufficient. Dr. Abu Arja and team discovered a subset of CAR T cells that are more potent and can more proficiently kill brain cancer cells by increasing their lethality, making a second hit unnecessary. In this project, Dr. Abu Arja is studying the cellular program of this unique subset of potent killer CAR T cells to better understand why they are superior killers. Dr. Abu Arja plans to use these findings to genetically engineer new enhanced CAR T cells to eliminate tumors in children with brain cancers. The first year of this grant is funded by and named for the Be Brooks Brave Fund. Despite his diagnosis at age 5 with inoperable brain and spinal tumors, Brooks taught so many people what life is truly about--love. He was BRAVE beyond his years with an inspiring “faith over fear” attitude. This Hero Fund hopes to raise money for high-grade glioma research so no other family will hear the words, “there is no cure”.
Timothy Spear M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2024
through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
affiliated with University of Pennsylvania
Neuroblastoma is a devastating pediatric cancer, with only 50% survival in aggressive "high-risk" disease. Survivors are burdened with life-long side effects from chemotherapy and radiation. Newer therapies, such as cancer vaccines, provide an opportunity to mobilize a patient's own immune system to find and destroy cancer cells. Identifying the unique genetic signature of an individual patient's tumor allows scientists to formulate a personalized vaccine to stimulate the immune system to recognize tumor-specific mutations, called "neoantigens". Dr. Spear has developed a new tool to identify these unique genetic signatures (neoantigens) and test the effectiveness of the neoantigen vaccine in modes. These findings will lay the groundwork to develop a clinical trial using personalized vaccines for high-risk neuroblastoma and other pediatric cancers. This grant is funded by and named for the Arden Quinn Bucher Memorial Fund, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. Arden’s intelligence, empathy, and dynamic personality charmed everyone and is now her legacy. Before her neuroblastoma diagnosis on October 11, 2007 at age two, she happily played with boundless energy and imagination. Even throughout her difficult months of treatment, Arden bravely managed to keep smiling and learning. This fund supports St. Baldrick’s mission: funding the most promising research, wherever it takes place to provide kids fighting cancers less toxic, more effective treatments allowing them to live longer, healthier lives.
Rahela Aziz-Bose M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2024
through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Even after being cured, childhood cancer survivors face challenges to living a healthy life, and one major challenge is heart disease. Heart health is closely linked to healthy eating, but many survivors cannot eat as healthily as they want because they don't have access to, or can't afford, healthy foods ("food insecurity"). Dr. Aziz-Bose will enroll survivors in this study to ask what they are eating, and understand whether they experience food insecurity and other conditions that put heart health at risk. Survivors will also be interviewed for their ideas about how to support healthy eating, including the best ways to directly give families healthy foods, an approach called "food is medicine." Using this information, Dr. Aziz-Bose will fine-tune a "food is medicine" intervention that she developed, and test it on a larger scale to see its impact on food insecurity and heart health. The goal being to understand and tackle barriers to healthy eating so all survivors can have the best health possible. This grant is funded by Allied World, a global provider of insurance and reinsurance solutions.
Philip Pauerstein M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2024
through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco
affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital
Leukemia and lymphoma are blood cancers that are a major cause of death in children. Many of these cancers are curable with chemotherapy, but in some people the cancer comes back and is harder to cure. A new treatment called CAR-T cells involves genetic engineering of a cancer patient's own immune system cells to fight cancer, and can cure many people. However, this treatment still does not work well enough in about half the people who get it. Dr. Pauerstein proposes improving the sensitivity of CAR-T cells to cancer using engineered cell adhesion molecules, a type of molecular glue between two cells. CAR-T cells do not attach to cancer cells as strongly as normal T cells do, and this limits their ability to find and kill cancer cells. An engineered adhesion will be used in combination with CARs to improve the ability of CAR-T cells to kill cancer. Dr. Pauerstein and team will also study how changes in cell adhesion affect how CAR-T cells kill cancer. This work should improve cell-based treatments for blood cancers.
Vanja Cabric M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2024
through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
New York, NY
Institution: Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Hepatoblastoma is the most common liver tumor diagnosed in early childhood, and new therapies are urgently needed to improve survival and reduce treatment related morbidity. Immunotherapy is a type of cancer treatment that harnesses the body's own immune system to target and attack cancer cells. While some immunotherapies have been very successful against certain tumor types in adult patients, they have been largely unsuccessful in treating pediatric tumors. This demonstrates how little we know about how the pediatric immune system responds to tumors. Using samples and models of hepatoblastoma, Dr. Cabric's research aims to identify the key immune cells involved in recognizing and responding to hepatoblastoma. Identifying the key immune cells involved in tumor immunity, and mechanisms that allow tumors to escape detection and deletion by the immune system, will allow us to find novel targets for future immunotherapies that work in children. This grant is funded by Allied World, a global provider of insurance and reinsurance solutions.
Anand Bhagwat M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2023
through 06-30-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
affiliated with University of Pennsylvania
Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is a blood cancer that sadly takes the lives of many children each year, and major efforts are being made to save these lives. One idea has been to teach the patient's body to fight off the AML like it would fight off an infection. This strategy alters the patient's immune system by making CAR-T cells, which are cells that fight cancer. CAR-T cells have been successful in curing patients with another similar type of blood cancer, but when it was tried in patients with AML, the approach was less successful. Dr. Anand's project is to understand why it didn't work as well so that further improvements that lead to cures for kids with AML can be made. This grant is generously supported by the JJ's Angels Hero Fund which honors the memory of Juliana LaMonica and her courageous battle with AML. Diagnosed at the age of two, Juliana underwent a bone marrow transplant but passed away shortly after turning three. Her sweet spirit and charismatic personality continue to inspire people to support the funding of pediatric cancer research through Team JJ’s Angels.
Amanda Campbell M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2023
through 06-30-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Columbus, OH
Institution: Nationwide Children's Hospital
affiliated with The Research Institute at Nationwide
The goal of this project is to engineer immune cells to target cancer, particularly a type of pediatric cancer called acute myeloid leukemia (AML). AML cells develop strategies to escape surveillance by the immune system. Despite current therapies, cancer cells are able to survive and progress. Natural killer (NK) cells play an important role in the immune response to cancer by recognizing and killing tumor cells. NK cell activity is regulated by activating and inhibitory receptors. Tumor cells express proteins that provide inhibitory signals to NK cells, blocking NK cell anti-tumor functions and allowing for tumor escape. Dr. Campbell and colleagues propose to tip the balance in favor of immune cell activation by knocking out a key NK cell inhibitory receptor, TIGIT. Dr. Campbell hypothesizes that eliminating NK cell TIGIT expression will remove inhibitory "brakes" on NK cell activation and enhance anti-tumor activity. The purpose of this study is to develop an effective cellular therapy for pediatric AML.
Emma Cantor M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2023
through 06-30-2024
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Los Angeles, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Osteosarcoma is the most common bone tumor in children yet the survival rate remains low, below 75%. Children who are born with or develop certain mutations or who have been exposed to radiation or chemotherapy are more likely to get this cancer. However, not enough is known about how osteosarcomas develop. To learn more, researchers must better understand how normal bone cells become osteosarcoma cells. Dr. Cantor and colleagues have previously seen that patients with this cancer have elevated serum levels of abnormal DNA sequences (repetitive element DNAs) that may affect how these cells behave. Dr. Cantor and colleagues are creating models that mimic the cancer formation process to define the factors that drive the production of these abnormal DNA sequences and the effects of such sequences on the osteosarcoma cell behavior. Through these studies, Dr. Cantor hopes to learn more about this previously unrecognized abnormality. Better understanding of this process may allow researchers to develop new therapeutic approaches for children with osteosarcoma.
Robert Lindquist M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2023
through 06-30-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco
affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital
Children with the brain tumor ependymoma have high relapse rates and poor long-term survival. Treatment options for ependymoma are limited and there is no known effective chemotherapy. Dr. Lindquist is working to make a new model of this tumor, to study how the tumor forms and grows, and to test new therapies in this model and patient-derived tumors. The ultimate goal is to identify new therapies that will extend the lives of children with ependymoma.
Crystal Wang M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2023
through 06-30-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Palo Alto, CA
Institution: Stanford University
affiliated with Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital
Cancer cells compete with the body for food. Some cancer cells use fat to grow, spread, and hide in the brain. When cancer cells hide in the brain, it is hard for chemotherapy reach them due to the blood brain barrier, which allows cancers to come back when they come out of hiding. Dr. Wang and colleagues are investigating how childhood leukemia uses fat to survive in the brain and how drugs that starve leukemia of fat can kill leukemia cells hiding in the brain. The second year of this grant is generously supported by Rhys’ Pieces of the Cure, a Hero Fund created to honor Rhys Goldman and his journey with cancer. He was diagnosed with pre-B acute lymphoblastic leukemia just 2 weeks before his 6th birthday and endured treatment for three years. Rhys missed a lot of school and life during those years but since marking the end of treatment in July 2018, he has been enjoying swimming, singing in a boys’ choir, chess tournaments, playing with his dogs and going to school. Rhys’ Pieces for the Cure was created to ensure more research is funded for the treatment of pediatric cancer that is specifically focused on less toxic cures for kids.
Christopher Kuo M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2023
through 06-30-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Los Angeles, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Ewing sarcoma (EwS) is a malignant cancer of bone and soft tissues that occurs mainly in children, adolescents and young adults. If the tumors spread, fewer than 1/3 will survive. For some pediatric cancers, recent progress has led to new treatments that use one's own immune system to target cancer cells. However, immunotherapy has not been successful for EwS because we don't know enough about how EwS tumor cells evade the immune system. The tumor microenvironment (TME) is an intricate ecosystem consists of cancer cells and the host's immune system. Dr. Kuo's project will focus on dissecting the TME of EwS, to understand how tumors develop. Using EwS tumors removed from pediatric patients during their cancer diagnosis and treatment, Dr. Kuo will use newly-developed techniques to map the TME and use a genetic model of EwS developed at CHLA to examine tumor/immune cell interactions in living tissue. The long-term goal of this work is to identify new treatment options for children with EwS. This grant is funded by and named for The Shohet Family Fund for Ewing Sarcoma Research. In his freshman year of college, Noah was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma. He endured many months of chemotherapy and had limb salvage surgery. Able to return to school, Noah had no evidence of disease for 2½ years until April 2018 when routine scans revealed he had relapsed. He passed away in May 2021 at the age of 25. Noah and his family were always passionate about the need for curative treatments for diseases of the AYA population. The Shohet family intends to raise funds for this Hero Fund in Noah's memory to find cures for Ewing sarcoma and to carry on his legacy of possibilities and hope.
Ruyan Rahnama M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2022
through 08-31-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco
affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital
Based on the progress to date, Dr. Rahnama was awarded a new grant in 2024 to fund an additional year of this Fellow grant. Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) is a blood cancer that affects children. While there have been important advances in treatment and care of pediatric patients with AML, 20-40% relapse and have poor outcomes. Novel therapies are urgently needed to combat this disease. One treatment modality under investigation involves manipulation of the body's immune system by reprogramming immune cells with inherent anti-leukemia properties to specifically target AML cancer cells. Dr. Rahnama is focused on the study of natural killer (NK) cells as immune cells of interest. NK cells can be engineered to express Chimeric Antigen Receptors (CARs) that recognize specific proteins on leukemia cells in order to attack and kill them. The site where the CAR-modified NK cell and the target leukemia cell come together is known as the immunological synapse (IS). The IS is highly organized and plays a key role in activating the NK cell. Dr. Rahnama aims to better understand the interaction between CAR-modified NK cells and target leukemia cells by studying the biology of the IS as related to how tightly the two cells interact. Her goal is to improve CAR-NK cell design for ultimate use as pediatric AML treatment. This grant was awarded at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and transferred to the University of California, San Francisco. This grant is funded by and named for the Aiden's Army Fund. When he was 8 years old, Aiden Binkley was diagnosed with Stage IV rhabdomyosarcoma. He had a huge tumor in his pelvis and the cancer had metastasized to his lungs. But this bright, funny and courageous boy believed he got cancer so he could grow up to find a cure for it. Aiden’s story has inspired so many people and his vision to cure cancer is being carried on by Aiden’s Army through the funding of research. They will march until there is a cure!
Betsy Young M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2022
through 06-30-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco
affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital
Based on the progress to date, Dr. Young was awarded a new grant in 2024 to fund an additional year of this Fellow grant. Osteosarcoma is a bone tumor that usually occurs in children and young adults and can be deadly especially when the tumor spreads to other body parts. The treatment strategy for this disease has not seen significant improvement in over 30 years, and there is no specific treatment for tumors that have spread throughout the body. In this project, the major goal is to identify factors that control the spread of osteosarcoma in order to develop new therapies to extend the lives of patients. Currently, Dr. Young is investigating whether osteosarcoma cells block the activation of one part of the patient's immune system, protecting the cancer cells from an immune attack and allowing them to spread throughout the body. This work has the potential to uncover new treatments to harness the immune system to fight this devastating disease. This grant is named for the Team Jackson Hero Fund. The fund was established in honor Jackson Schmitt who died six days after his diagnosis with osteosarcoma from a stroke. Jackson’s story was told worldwide and his legacy lives on through funding life-saving osteosarcoma research.
Marc Schwartz M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2022
through 06-30-2024
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School
One of the most exciting recent developments in cancer treatment is the growing ability to use the bodys own immune system to directly fight tumors. However, these treatments still do not work on most patients, and we think it is critical to understand how each cancer type avoids the immune system. Dr. Schwartz is investigating how neuroblastoma, one of the most common pediatric solid tumors, escapes destruction by the immune system. To accomplish these goals, he will use cutting-edge technologies to dissect the immune biology in a model of neuroblastoma, with a particular focus on studying an important type of cancer-killing cell called a 'CD8 T cell'. Dr. Schwartz thinks him and his colleagues have identified an important new way that neuroblastoma evades these T cells. Their preliminary results suggest that neuroblastoma directly causes T cell death, limiting the ability of T cells to survive and kill enough tumor cells. He is trying to learn how neuroblastoma causes the death of T cells and find ways to block this immune evasion strategy. Most importantly, he predicts that combination treatment designed to block neuroblastoma's ability to kill T cells along with existing immune therapies will drastically improve the ability of the immune system to eradicate neuroblastoma. A portion of this grant is funded by and named for the Oliver Wells Fund for Neuroblastoma, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. From the moment he was born, Ollie was the center of the Wells family with a contagious smile and a sparkle in his eyes. As the youngest child, it was devastating when they learned the 15 year old toddler had cancer. Oliver was diagnosed with high risk neuroblastoma and spent the next 13 months bravely enduring chemotherapy and radiation, more than a dozen surgeries and a bone marrow transplant. But Ollie persevered and smiled through it all. It was an unfair fight from the beginning and in July 2018, Ollie passed away. The Oliver Wells Fund for Neuroblastoma was established in his memory to raise funds to find cures and give hope to other kids facing the same fight. In this way, the Wells family intends to share Oliver’s joy for life and use his story to help find a cure.
LaShanale Wallace Ph.D.
Funded: 01-01-2022
through 12-31-2024
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Memphis, TN
Institution: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS) are clonal stem cell disorders characterized by abnormal cell growth and shape, lack of mature blood cells, and increased risk of acute myleoid leukemia (AML) development. Approximately 10,000 new cases are diagnosed every year in the United States. Survival ranges from months to years, and bone marrow transplantation remains the only cure. To identify new drug targets associated with more specificity and less morbidity and mortality, it is essential to understand the molecular course of MDS. Unbiased sequencing studies have identified over 45 recurrent somatic mutations in MDS patient samples. Of these pathways, splicing factor and epigenetic regulator mutations are the most common. Point mutations in splicing factor 3b subunit 1 (SF3B1) are found in less than 25% of MDS patients. Dr. Wallace and colleagues have shown that mutations in SF3B1 lead to an altered function, name upstream cryptic 3 splice site selection. Epigenetic regulators, including the de novo DNA methyltransferase, DNMT3A, are the second most common class of mutations identified in MDS. Studies on the effect of loss of DNMT3A expression have primarily been limited to the effects of altered methylation in regions outside of the gene body, such as enhancer accessibility. Although sequencing studies have shown that both splicing factor and epigenetic regulator mutations commonly co-occur as early mutations in MDS pathogenesis, it is unknown how altered DNA methylation and aberrant mRNA splicing can cooperate to promote MDS progression. Using cell line and animal model systems, Dr. Wallace will determine whether the cooperation of epigenetic regulator and splicing factor mutations lead to a more aggressive form of MDS. This grant is funded through a partnership between the St. Baldrick’s Foundation and the American Cancer Society.
Lisa Niswander M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2021
through 06-30-2024
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
affiliated with University of Pennsylvania
Children with some kinds of blood cancers (leukemias) are not cured by regular chemotherapy and are at high risk of dying without better treatment options. Dr. Niswander is working to create new treatments that are more personalized for each child’s leukemia cells. The first treatment targets ‘miswired’ communication networks inside the leukemia cells that make them cancerous, and the second treatment uses the body’s own immune system to attack the leukemia cells. Each of these treatments is able to kill a patient’s cancer cells. But, eventually the leukemia cells develop changes that allow them to begin growing again despite the therapy, and the cancer comes back. These two therapies have never been combined together in patients. In this project, Dr. Niswander and colleagues are studying the best ways to combine these new treatments for two kinds of high-risk pediatric leukemias, since often two treatments that work in different ways are better than one. She is hopeful that by using patients’ own leukemia cells they will identify the best personalized treatments for future testing in pediatric patients to improve their chances of cure and living long and healthy lives. For 2022, this grant is named for the Invictus Fund, a St. Baldrick’s Hero Fund created in memory of Holden Gilkinson. It honors Holden's unconquerable spirit in his battle with bilateral Wilms tumor by funding cures and treatments to mitigate side and late effects of childhood cancer. In 2021, this grant was generously supported by Super Soph's Pediatric Cancer Research Fund, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. Sophie Rossi was diagnosed with AML at 3 months of age. Throughout her courageous battle, she was always smiling, always joyful. This fund was created to honor her spunky, sweet spirit by funding research to find cures for AML and all childhood cancers.
Matthew Kudek M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2021
through 06-30-2023
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Milwaukee, WI
Institution: Children's Hospital of Wisconsin
affiliated with Medical College of Wisconsin, Midwest Children's Cancer Center
Neuroblastoma is one of the most common pediatric tumors, responsible for 12% of all cancer deaths in children under 15 years old. Only about 50% of patients with widespread neuroblastoma will live for ten years after diagnosis. A recent breakthrough in cancer treatments known as CAR T cell therapy reprograms a patient’s own immune cells to recognize tumor cells. While CAR T cell monotherapy works for some cancer types, several research studies using CAR T cells to treat neuroblastoma have been relatively unsuccessful. This is likely due to immune suppression caused by the tumor itself. Interestingly, it is known that if a person with cancer develops an infection, the infection can stimulate an immune response that will promote cancer remission. With this knowledge, Dr. Kudek and colleagues have pioneered an innovative technique to boost CAR T cell therapy response. They have shown that the cancer-destroying function of reprogrammed immune cells is boosted when a weakened infection is introduced into a tumor and found that this treatment combination in bladder cancer led to cure in most of the disease models. Encouraged by these findings, he is pursuing proof-of-principle studies to determine how this treatment approach can be best applied to neuroblastoma treatment. This grant is named for the LukeStrong a Force Against Neuroblastoma Childhood Cancer Fund. When Luke was 5 years old, he was diagnosed with high-risk neuroblastoma. He is now in his teens and still in active treatment for relapsed neuroblastoma. Since 2014 Luke’s “Never tell me the odds” attitude has inspired his family and friends to shave their heads, fundraise with St. Baldrick’s, and help conquer childhood cancers.
Jessica Tsai M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2021
through 06-30-2023
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a deadly pediatric brain cancer. Tragically, the majority of children diagnosed with the disease die within 12 months because the most effective treatment, radiation, is palliative at best. Therefore, there is a significant need to develop new therapeutic strategies to improve the terrible outcomes for these patients. Looking at genes that are turned on or off in a cancer can be helpful to figure out what is causing cancer growth. DIPGs are known to have mutations in a group of genes called histones that intriguingly regulate whether other genes in the cell are turned on or off. While looking at genes that are turned on or turned off in DIPG, Dr. Tsai found a gene called FOXR2 that is turned on in a subset of these tumors. FOXR is not usually present in the normal brain, but it has high levels in a subset of DIPGs. This is exciting because if researchers can target FOXR2 with new therapies, only tumor cells would be affected, sparing the normal cells in the brain. The goal of this project is to figure out exactly how FOXR2 makes DIPGs grow and to identify strategies that can be used in new treatments to target FOXR2. A portion of this grant is generously supported by Griffin's Guardians, a St. Baldrick's partner. Griffin's Guardians was created by the Engles in memory of their son, Griffin. Their mission is to provide support and financial assistance to children battling cancer in Central New York, raise awareness about pediatric cancer and provide funding for research.
Erica Braverman M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 03-31-2023
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Pittsburgh, PA
Institution: Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh
affiliated with University of Pittsburgh
There are new cancer therapies in which a patient's own immune system is retrained to fight against their cancer. In one of these therapies, known as CAR-T cells, a patient's immune cells are removed from the bloodstream and reprogrammed to target and attack their cancer when the cells are returned to the body. While this therapy has shown great promise, there are still situations, especially with very high-risk cancers, where it does not work. One significant issue that exists with this treatment is that the retrained immune cells do not always stick around after being given back to the patient, which allows the cancer to outlast the therapy and come back. We know that once cancers have resisted a treatment once, it is difficult to use the same treatment again. This projects aims to find ways to alter tumor-targeting immune cells to make them last longer when they are given back to patients, ultimately allowing for a long-term cure for their cancer without the need for further treatment. This grant is generously supported by the TeamConnor Childhood Cancer Foundation. TeamConnor Childhood Cancer Foundation's mission is to raise funds for national childhood cancer research programs, to build awareness that only a fraction of the NIH’s annual funding supports childhood cancer research, and to support inpatient programs. Founded in 2008 in honor and memory of Connor Cruse, TeamConnor has funded over $4M in pediatric cancer research grants across the United States.
Stephanie Dixon M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 06-30-2022
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location:
Memphis, TN
Institution: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
Most children diagnosed with cancer today will survive but will develop late complications of their cancer treatment. Childhood cancer survivors have almost twice the risk of diabetes compared to other adults. Diabetes is known to increase the risk of heart disease among survivors, and heart disease is the leading cause of non-cancer death among survivors. Prediabetes is easily diagnosed and begins months to years before diabetes. However, little is known about prediabetes risk-factors and prevention in survivors, despite reports that up to 1 in 3 survivors have prediabetes. Using treatment information and recent assessment of over 3,500 adult survivors of childhood cancer, this research will identify the extent of prediabetes among survivors, characterize what cancer-treatments increase risk, and determine how quickly these survivors develop diabetes. Research will then establish if a medication and lifestyle intervention to prevent diabetes in prediabetic survivors is safe and achievable. This will inform a future diabetes intervention trial with the goal of improving long-term survival and quality of life for childhood cancer survivors.