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Showing 81-95 of 95 results

Richard Heideman M.D.

Funded: 01-01-2012 through 12-31-2012
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Albuquerque, NM
Institution: University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center affiliated with UNM Children's Hospital

This grant helps provide necessary resources and staff support at this institution to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, their best hope for a cure.

Karol Kerr M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2011 through 11-30-2012
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Syracuse, NY
Institution: SUNY Upstate Medical University affiliated with Golisano Children's Hospital, Syracuse

This grant helps provide necessary resources and staff support at this institution to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, their best hope for a cure.

Dina Hankin Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2011 through 11-30-2012
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Oakland, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital and Research Center Oakland

This grant funds the expansion and sustainability of a comprehensive long-term follow-up program to monitor and treat secondary cancers and the many other health issues that young cancer patients face as they enter into adulthood.

Jennifer C. Kesselheim M.D.

Funded: 12-01-2011 through 11-30-2013
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: American Society of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology

This grant develops, implements, and evaluates a novel curriculum in humanism and professionalism for pediatric oncology fellows.

David G. Poplack M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2011 through 03-30-2013
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: McAllen, TX
Institution: Vannie E. Cook Jr. Children's Cancer and Hematology Clinic affiliated with Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Children's Hospital

This grant helps provide staffing to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, their best hope for a cure, at this institution.

Kathleen Ruccione Ph.D., M.P.H., R.N.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2011 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Los Angeles, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Transfusions with packed red blood cells (PRBCs) are commonly used when children treated for cancer develop anemia (low red blood cell count). PRBC transfusions carry iron that can be deposited in various body tissues, such as the heart. The body cannot remove this iron overload by itself, and if it stays in the heart, it can cause damage (cardiomyopathy). At this time, we do not know how often patients have extra iron in their heart after PRBC transfusions. This study uses a magnetic resonance image (MRI) test that can measure iron and learn about other things that might affect the heart, such as anthracycline chemotherapy and what effect iron-related cardiomyopathy has on daily life. The overall goal is to increase the length and quality of survival for people successfully treated for cancer during childhood.

Lauri Linder Ph.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2011 through 10-31-2013
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Institution: University of Utah affiliated with Huntsman Cancer Institute

Adolescents with cancer experience many symptoms resulting from their disease and its treatment. Recognizing and managing these contributes to improved quality of life during treatment and on into survivorship. This study uses an approach that allows adolescents to identify clusters describing their symptom experience from their perspective. The purpose is to develop and test the use of a computer-based tool exploring symptom clusters among adolescents with cancer. The goal of these findings is to provide data to support use of the tool in a larger group of adolescents and to enhance communication between them and healthcare providers.

Rachel Thienprayoon M.D. 

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2011 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: Dallas, TX
Institution: University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas

Pediatric palliative care is a comprehensive system of care aimed at preventing or relieving symptoms and suffering caused by a life-threatening illness. At the end of life, hospice is an important provider of palliative care. The goal of this study is to identify factors that are associated with hospice use in pediatric oncology, about which little is known. Although cure rates have dramatically increased in pediatric cancer, palliative care and hospice are an integral part of caring for the patients who do not survive. A better understanding of why parents and patients choose hospice can help improve the care of pediatric oncology patients at the end of life.

Thomas Loew M.D.

Funded: 01-01-2011 through 12-31-2011
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Columbia, MO
Institution: University of Missouri-Columbia affiliated with MU Women's and Children's Hospital

This grant helps provide staffing to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, their best hope for a cure, at this institution.

Kristina Hardy Ph.D., Clinical Psychology

Funded: 09-01-2010 through 12-31-2013
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Washington, DC
Institution: Children's National Medical Center and Children’s National Research Institute (CNRI) affiliated with George Washington University

Children with brain tumors and acute lymphoblastic leukemia are at risk for developing learning and memory problems as a result of their disease and treatments. Since we currently cannot prevent this, difficulties are addressed after they appear, with only modest improvements. A computerized cognitive training program, easily used at home with little oversight from parents or professionals, has been tested in survivors of pediatric cancer with memory problems; this project tests it on children during treatment, before the problems develop. If effective, the program has considerable potential to improve the quality of life in pediatric cancer patients.

Peter Cole M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2010 through 06-30-2011
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Bronx, NY
Institution: Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University affiliated with Montefiore Medical Center, Children's Hospital at Montefiore

Generously sponsored by Markit. Treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia can be particularly devastating to a child's developing brain, leading to deficient short-term memory and attention or more serious events like seizures or strokes. This research focuses on how the cough medicine dextromethorphan may help reverse severe, stroke-like neurotoxicity among children treated with chemotherapy drug methotrexate and could possibly also prevent such side effects before they occur. The most promising drugs will be rapidly advanced into clinical trials for children with leukemia, designed to decrease the neurotoxic effects of chemotherapy.

Jonathan Espenschied M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2010 through 12-31-2012
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Duarte, CA
Institution: Beckman Research Institute of the City of Hope

Cancer affects every part of patients and their families' lives. Self-image, thinking clearly, anxiety, depression, social isolation and fear of recurrence are all problems that teens and young adults with cancer face, while resuming normal development and being monitored for many problems caused by cancer and its treatment. This research is to create developmentally sensitive information and make it available through touch-screen technology, connecting teens and young adults with their health care team and community resources in real-time. This helps identify, communicate and maximize the benefits of clinical care while helping them reintegrate into school and work.

Mary Hooke Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2010 through 10-31-2013
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Minneapolis, MN
Institution: Children's Hospitals and Clinics of Minnesota affiliated with Children's - St. Paul

Fatigue is a pervasive, distressing symptom for children and teens with cancer. Decreasing fatigue and improving physical activity are important to provide energy for the normal activities of childhood that are important to ongoing development. A small, cost-effective device called the FitBit measures motion and provides daily feedback to the wearer. Children ages 6 to 18 in maintenance treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia use the FitBit, and researchers determine if it is accurate, if it helps childhood cancer patients to be more active, and if more active patients have less fatigue when getting steroids during treatment.

Jennifer Mack M.D., M.P.H.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2010 through 06-30-2011
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School

Little is known about the long-term impact of communication about prognosis on children with cancer and their families. The goal of this project is to increase parents' ability to make value-driven decisions for care of their children with cancer and to adjust to this life-changing event in the best way possible. A longitudinal observational study evaluates long-term outcomes, using questionnaire-based parent interviews to assess parental decision- making and psychological and medical outcomes of disclosure. The cohort involves 194 children diagnosed between April 2003 and May 2005, so long-term assessment of their outcomes is now possible. Dr. Mack is funded by P.A.L.S. Bermuda with funds raised through the St. Baldrick's Foundation.

Ilanit Brook M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2010 through 06-30-2012
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: Los Angeles, CA
Institution: University of California, Los Angeles affiliated with Mattel Children's Hospital

With every new pediatric cancer diagnoses, a family is given the most unexpected and stressful news of their lives. This kind of stress makes people more susceptible to post-traumatic stress and depression, and also diminishes the immune system, allowing the body to become sick more often. This project examines the level of chronic stress felt by the parents of children and the factors involved. It is vital that we work to improve the outcomes for both patients and their families.