Funded by the Dick Vitale Pediatric Cancer Research Fund
Despite significant advances in the treatment of pediatric cancer, leukemia remains the second leading cause of cancer related death in children. T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) is an aggressive cancer that affects both children and adults. When T-ALL does not respond to chemotherapy or returns after initial treatment (relapses), there are few treatment options. New treatments are needed for T-ALL. The way cancer cells use energy or develop building blocks for growth is different from normal cells. We are working to understand how these energy and building processes within T-ALL cells are altered, with the hope that we can use this as a vulnerability for developing new therapies. We are particularly interested in drugs that alter how the cells produce a building block called methionine, and we are testing how these drugs work in T-ALL. Our ultimate goal is to find effective and non-toxic treatments for T-ALL.