Elvin Wagenblast, PhD

Funded by the Dick Vitale Pediatric Cancer Research Fund

Our research focuses on a type of leukemia called B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), which is most commonly found in children and adolescents. Despite advancements in treatment, a significant number of young patients do not respond well to existing therapies and face high risks of relapse. Our project specifically addresses those cases caused by changes in a gene called CRLF2, which are associated with poor outcomes. To understand and combat this challenging disease, we are using a cutting-edge technique called CRISPR/Cas9 to create detailed models of human blood cells that carry the same genetic changes seen in patients with CRLF2-related leukemia. These models allow us to study the disease in a controlled environment and understand the step-by-step development from the initial genetic changes in a human blood cell to full-blown leukemia. By examining these models at a microscopic level, using technologies that analyze individual cells, we aim to uncover new details about how these leukemias develop and find weak points where new drugs could intervene. Our goal is to identify new treatments that could target these leukemias more precisely and to explore ways to detect and perhaps prevent the disease before it fully develops. This research could lead to better survival rates and less suffering for children affected by this aggressive type of leukemia, providing hope for families facing this diagnosis. The knowledge gained could also help in understanding other similar types of childhood leukemias, broadening the impact of our work beyond B-ALL.

Quanyin Hu, PhD

Funded by the Dick Vitale Pediatric Cancer Research Fund

Pediatric Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) is a very tough brain tumor that affects kids. The chance of surviving for 5 years or more with this type of tumor is less than 15%. GBM causes many deaths each year in the U.S., and there isn’t a good treatment available right now. Surgery is the main way to treat GBM, but it’s really hard to get rid of all the tumor cells because they spread into nearby healthy brain tissue. This often causes the tumor to come back after surgery. The fact that GBM comes back is the main reason why survival rates are so low. In our previous study, we came up with a new way to stop GBM from coming back after surgery. We created a special immune cell called CAR-Macrophage that targets and kills any remaining GBM cells after surgery. Our early tests in mice with GBM showed very good results in keeping the tumor from returning. In this proposal, we want to make this method even better. Our new approach includes three main improvements: (1) nanoparticles that help deliver cell engineering tools to modify immune cells; (2) a gel that can fill the space left by the tumor after surgery; and (3) a better way to make the modified immune cells work more effectively and last longer. If this works, it could greatly improve treatment and survival rates for kids with GBM.

Courtney Jones, PhD

Funded by the Dick Vitale Pediatric Cancer Research Fund

Our goal is to find better ways to treat children diagnosed with a blood cancer called acute myeloid leukemia (AML). AML is a devastating illness that affects around 500 kids in the United States every year.  While many children respond well to current treatments, some don’t, and their cancer comes back, which can be very hard to treat. Our work focusses on a specific group of cells within the blood cancers called leukemia stem cells (LSCs). These cells can survive through treatment and cause the cancer to come back. So, we need new treatments that can specifically kill these LSCs. We’ve discovered that these LSCs rely on molecules called polyamines to survive. By decreasing the levels of polyamines using drugs, we can stop the LSCs from making proteins they need to stay alive. Our research suggests that a protein called eIF5A plays a big role in this process. Now, we want to test if drugs that block polyamine metabolism can stop AML from growing in models that mimic what happens in patients. We also want to understand exactly how eIF5A helps the cancer cells survive. If our experiments are successful, it could lead to new treatments for children with AML that have the potential to improve the outcomes for these children.

Yana Pikman, MD

Funded by the Dick Vitale Pediatric Cancer Research Fund with support from Hockey Fights Cancer

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.

John Prensner, MD, PhD

Funded by the Dick Vitale Pediatric Cancer Research Fund

Childhood brain tumors are a major cause of death for children.  Medulloblastoma is one of the most common brain cancers in children and also one of the most difficult to treat.  These children typically need extensive surgery, chemotherapy, and other treatments.  Unfortunately, even with these treatments, many children with this cancer die from their disease.  I am a pediatric neuro-oncologist, and it is my career hope to bring new therapies for medulloblastoma from the lab into the clinic.

My research studies why some children with medulloblastoma do not respond to treatment.  I have made several discoveries that point toward new biology within the cancer cells that promote its growth.  I have particularly focused on a new category of genes that we have recently described, called microproteins.  These are small proteins that were missed in prior research on this cancer, and we have found that they are important for the ability for cancer cells to survive.  I am optimistic that these discoveries are pointing towards new treatment options.  To grow this vision, this V Foundation award will allow me to focus on studying certain new genes that we hope will lead to new treatments.  Through this work, I hope to make new discoveries in medulloblastoma that are important for patients.

Nan Zhang, PhD

We are trying to find out why some ovarian cancer patients don’t respond to chemotherapy. Even though many patients start off well with the treatment, most eventually become resistant to it. When that happens, the only option left is to focus on making the patient comfortable, not curing the cancer.

To solve this problem, we need to understand what causes this resistance so we can develop new treatments. In our study, we found an important factor linked to this resistance by looking at patient data. Early tests suggest this factor might affect immune cells and cause resistance. We will investigate how this factor works and test new ideas using animals, patient samples, and state-of-the-art technologies.

Frederick Varn, PhD

Glioblastoma is a fast-growing and deadly brain cancer. Current treatments, like brain surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation, help, but most patients live for only about one year. Older patients with glioblastoma tend to do worse than younger patients, but we do not fully understand why. We believe that changes in the brain as people get older might help the cancer grow faster. Our project will explore whether changes in a part of the brain called white matter make it easier for glioblastoma to grow in older patients. Studying this in humans is difficult because it’s not safe to measure these changes in the brain while a patient is alive. To solve this, we will study mice, which have brains that change in similar ways as they age. We will examine whether tumors grow in the white matter more often in older mice compared to younger ones and try to identify the cells that allow this growth. To confirm our results, we will also study the white matter of human patients who died from glioblastoma to check if older patients are more likely to develop tumors in this area. The results from our study will help explain why glioblastoma is worse in older patients. This knowledge could help us find new treatments that slow tumor growth and help patients live longer.

Yuxuan Wang, MD, PhD

Immunotherapy works by boosting the immune system to attack cancer cells and has improved the survival of many patients. An increasing number of cancer patients are now receiving immunotherapy, but there is no reliable way to predict who would have a good response. In addition, patients can experience a common side effect of immunotherapy, when the activated immune system attacks healthy organs, known as immune-related adverse events (irAEs). These side effects are often hard to diagnose until they have caused significant organ damage and can be life-threatening if not treated promptly. We have developed a new method, MethylSaferSeqS, that can provide an accurate measurement of the amount of remaining cancer in the body and detect early irAEs – all with a single blood test. MethylSaferSeqS can be applied to improve the care of cancer patients in several ways. First, it provides an early readout of treatment response and can identify the patients for whom immunotherapy is not working. These patients should be promptly switched to another therapy that could be more effective. Second, an accurate measurement of the remaining tumor in the body after completion of immunotherapy can identify the patients who should undergo additional treatments, such as surgery or chemotherapy, that would improve their chance of a cure. Lastly, an early detection of irAEs will allow timely treatments before serious damage is done to healthy organs. We will apply MethylSaferSeqS to samples collected from colorectal cancer patients who are receiving immunotherapy to test these goals.

Gianpietro Dotti, MD

Funded by the V Foundation’s 30th Anniversary Gala Event

Pancreatic cancer is the 4th most common cause of cancer death in the United States with one of the worst survival rates of any cancer. Patients with pancreatic cancer struggle to find clinical trials given the lack of options, the lack of any promising findings, the lack of functionality to tolerate many trials. Our research directly impacts cancer patients providing an innovative and promising therapy that has had success in other cancers. Our clinical trial will study pancreatic cancer patients receiving treatment with their own immune cells that we will have taken from their blood, re-engineered the cells to fight their cancer, and injected their re-engineered immune cells back into their body.Our research will study the blood from these patients and look for markers that are associated with treatment response in similar clinical trials. We will also study their tumor tissue before and after treatment and look to see if the injected, re-engineered immune cells were able to travel to the tumor, grow and thrives and kill cancer cells.

Katherine Cook, PhD

Funded by the V Foundation’s 30th Anniversary Gala Event

There is a new kind of cancer treatment called immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) that helps the body fight cancer by making the immune system stronger. Doctors use ICB with chemotherapy to treat triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), but it doesn’t always work for everyone, so we need to find better ways to help these patients.

Scientists are studying tiny living things called microorganisms, like bacteria, that live in and on our bodies. These microorganisms can help us stay healthy and fight diseases. New research suggests that the gut microbiome—the collection of microorganisms in the digestive tract—might influence how well these treatments work. Some types of bacteria can help people respond better to the ICB treatment because they release beneficial metabolites.

In this project, scientists want to see if probiotics (which are good bacteria) or the beneficial metabolites they make can make the cancer treatment work better. They will look at samples from patients before and after treatment to see if these good bacteria and metabolites are helping.

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