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Showing 381-400 of 2234 results
John Kuttesch M.D.
Funded: 01-01-2021
through 12-31-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Albuquerque, NM
Institution: University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center
affiliated with UNM Children's Hospital
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Stephanie Guarino M.D.
Funded: 01-01-2021
through 12-31-2022
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Wilmington, DE
Institution: Alfred I. Dupont Hospital for Children of the Nemours Foundation
This grant supports a dedicated Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Clinical Research Nurse to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
William S. Ferguson M.D.
Funded: 01-01-2021
through 12-31-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
St. Louis, MO
Institution: SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital
affiliated with Saint Louis University
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
James Fahner M.D.
Funded: 01-01-2021
through 12-31-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Grand Rapids, MI
Institution: Helen Devos Children's Hospital
affiliated with Van Andel Research Institute, Spectrum Health Hospitals
This grant supports a dedicated early phase clinical trail Clinical Research Coordinator to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Susan Blaney M.D.
Funded: 01-01-2021
through 12-31-2021
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 supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Anu Agrawal M.D.
Funded: 01-01-2021
through 12-31-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco
affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate for the Cellular and Immunotherapy program to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Zhihong Wang M.D.
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 11-30-2022
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Richmond, VA
Institution: Virginia Commonwealth University
affiliated with Children's Hospital of Richmond at VCU
This grant supports a Pediatric Neuro-Oncology Program Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more brain tumor patients can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Pinki Prasad M.D.
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 11-30-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
New Orleans, LA
Institution: Children's Hospital of New Orleans
This grant supports a dedicated Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Clinical Trials Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Thomas McLean M.D.
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 11-30-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Winston Salem, NC
Institution: Wake Forest University Health Sciences
affiliated with Brenner Children's Hospital
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Karen Fernandez M.D.
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 11-30-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Madera, CA
Institution: Valley Children's Healthcare
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Hal Crosswell M.D.
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 11-30-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Greenville, SC
Institution: Bon Secours St. Francis Health System Cancer Center
This grant supports a dedicated Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) Clinical Research Coordinator to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Melanie Comito M.D.
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 06-30-2022
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Syracuse, NY
Institution: SUNY Upstate Medical University
affiliated with Golisano Children's Hospital, Syracuse
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Kanyalakshmi Ayyanar M.B.B.S
Funded: 12-01-2020
through 11-30-2021
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location:
Albany, NY
Institution: Albany Medical Center
This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.
Melissa Mavers M.D., Ph.D.
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 06-30-2023
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location:
St. Louis, MO
Institution: Washington University in St. Louis
affiliated with St. Louis Children's Hospital
Many children with cancer cannot be cured with chemotherapy alone and must undergo stem cell transplantation (sometimes known as bone marrow transplantation). But this potential cure can also cause a very bad complication called graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) which can make children suffer miserably or even cause death. Studies have shown that a special type of white blood cell called an invariant natural killer T cell (or iNKT cell) is important in preventing GVHD. However, there are many different kinds of iNKT cells, some of which may be good to prevent GVHD and some of which may be ineffective or even cause harm. As the Rays of Hope St. Baldrick's Scholar, Dr. Mavers' research will study these different iNKT cells to identify ways we can separate out the good cells and use them to prevent GVHD, as well as ways we can modify the iNKT cells to make them even better at this job. The results from this project can help make stem cell transplantation a safer way to cure cancer and give survivors long, healthy lives.
This grant is funded by and named for the Rays of Hope Hero Fund that honors the memory of Rayanna Marrero by giving hope through research funding. She is remembered for her infectious smile and energetic spirit that continue to inspire so many.
This grant was awarded at Stanford University and transferred to Washington University, St. Louis.
University of California, Davis Summer Fellow
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 09-30-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location:
Sacramento, CA
Institution: University of California, Davis School of Medicine
affiliated with UC Davis Children's Hospital
This grant funds a medical student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. JMML is a rare type of childhood cancer that is really hard to cure. Right now, even our best treatments only stop this cancer for a year or so before it starts to come back. Cancers can be studied in specific models, which allow researchers to try out different drugs and treatments to see what works. The goal of this project is to use these models to find new treatments for JMML. This grant is named for the St. Baldrick's Foundation Staff whose generous gifts have helped fund this opportunity and may encourage students to choose childhood cancer research as a specialty.
University of Hawaii Summer Fellow
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location:
Honolulu, HI
Institution: University of Hawaii Cancer Center
This grant funds an undergraduate student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Raman spectroscopy (RS) is used to characterize different types of cancer tissue. Usually RS fingerprints are obtained when a slice of cancer tissue is examined under a microscope. With a new design as a portable hand-held RS probe, the St. Baldrick's Foundation Summer Fellow will use the probe to determine RS fingerprints in cancer cell cultures. If successful, the project results could be used to design uses of the probe in the clinic setting to detect cancer cells in blood or other fluids.
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.
Shannon Conneely M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 06-30-2023
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
Based on progress to date, Dr. Conneely was awarded a new grant in 2022 to fund an additional year of this Fellow award. Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is the second most common blood cancer in children and is difficult to cure. About one quarter of children with AML have a form of the disease called core binding factor (CBF) AML. Despite intense therapy, cancer will come back in one out of three children with CBF-AML. We want to find new ways to treat this common form of AML by learning how the specific combination of mutations in the cancer cells affect their ability to grow and survive. Some patients with CBF-AML have unique mutations that can stop cells from correctly fixing damage, allowing them to grow too quickly. The project will study how these mutations contribute to CBF-AML cells' development, growth, and survival, affecting the cancer cells' ability to grow using cancer cells with these unique mutations. This will help in understanding how this type of AML develops, and may lead to new ways to treat children with this disease.
This grant is generously supported by Double Deckers Destroy AML, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. Joel and Seth were not only identical twins but best friends. In an ironic twist of fate, both boys were diagnosed with Acute Myeloid Leukemia just three months apart. With the overlapping diagnoses and treatments, the family was separated for months at a time and looked forward to days when they could be together at home. Joel and Seth both received bone marrow transplants and endured complications from the procedures. Sadly, both boys relapsed. Surrounded by their loving family, Joel died in November 2017 at the age of three, followed by Seth in May, 2019 when he was four years old. The twins were named as 2020 Ambassadors for St. Baldrick's so their story can continue to inspire many. The Double Deckers Destroy AML Hero Fund was established because the Decker family strongly believes more research is needed for AML, especially when the disease has relapsed. They want to support research so other families won’t have to say goodbye too soon.
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.
Anya Levinson M.D.
Funded: 07-01-2020
through 06-30-2022
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 is the most common form of childhood cancer. While most children with leukemia can be cured, patients whose leukemia comes back after an initial response to therapy are very difficult to treat and often die of their disease. As the Ty Louis Campbell Foundation St. Baldrick's Fellow, Dr. Levinson studies one of the classes of medicines used to treat leukemia called "glucocorticoids" (a type of steroid), in a type of leukemia called T-cell ALL. Though glucocorticoids are usually very good at killing leukemia cells, some patients have been found to not respond (or be "resistant") to glucocorticoids, while others develop resistance over time, making their disease far more difficult to treat. Dr. Levinson's research is focused on understanding how and why such resistance develops in an effort to identify ways to overcome it and, ultimately, increase the percentage of children with T-cell ALL who can survive their disease.
This grant is funded by and named for the Ty Louis Campbell Foundation, a St. Baldrick's partner, created in memory of Ty Louis Campbell who lost his battle with brain cancer at the age of five. The Foundation seeks less toxic, more effective treatments that are specifically designed for children fighting cancer. Their ultimate mission is to help fund the intelligence and technology that will uncover new ways to cure children with cancer.