Grants Search Results

Need help? Call us at (888) 899-2253

Interested in applying for a St. Baldrick's Foundation grant? Learn more about the grant application process.

Showing 421-440 of 2234 results

Erik Dreaden Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 01-31-2022
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Atlanta, GA
Institution: Emory University affiliated with Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Children's Healthcare of Atlanta at Egleston, Aflac Cancer Center

The human immune system is astonishing in its ability to eliminate cells and organisms that give rise to disease. This process of immune surveillance is one of the last lines of defense that protect both adults and children from cancer; however, researchers have found that dysfunctional immune responses can permit cancerous leukemia cells to grow uncontrollably in the body. In this work, Dr. Dreaden will improve upon a drug that attempts to restore immune elimination to leukemia by redirecting a subset of immune cells, so-called T cells, to bind with and kill cancerous cells. By tethering such drugs with molecules that stimulate T cells to multiply, and possibly enable these cells to recognize leukemia cells again at a much later date, he aims to further improve both the strength and durability of responses to this promising class of immuno-therapy. Already, Dr. Dreaden and colleagues have made and screened more than 45 of these unique, multi-functional therapies and aim here to study the precise mechanics by these drugs act on immune cells, as well as their ability to impart memory-like immune responses to leukemia. Given the modular nature of this treatment approach, it could be rapidly extended to a range of other cancer cells, immune cells, and immune stimulating factors in the future.

Christine Eischen Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Philadelphia, PA
Institution: Thomas Jefferson University

As the recipient of the Jack's Pack - We Still Have His Back St. Baldrick's Research Grant, Dr. Eischen is focused on researching Burkitt lymphoma, a blood cancer that predominately develops in children and young adults. The goal of this proposal is to investigate a novel approach to eliminate Burkitt lymphoma cells, and particularly difficult to treat relapsed and refractory to treatment Burkitt lymphoma. Although five-year survival rates for Burkitt lymphoma is 85-90%, treatment is toxic with associated complications, and children that relapse or that are resistant to treatment have poor survival rates even with additional therapy. Therefore, more research and new treatments are needed for Burkitt lymphoma. This project stems from a paradigm-shifting discovery she recently made and will use an innovative approach that includes testing newly designed compounds to target a specific protein called Mdm2 in Burkitt lymphoma cells causing their death. This approach should also cause the death of Burkitt lymphoma cells that contain mutations in a gene that make them resistant to many current therapies and that reduces patient survival. Completion of the research will result in increased understanding of the role of Mdm2 in human Burkitt lymphoma cell survival, testing of new compounds that target Mdm2, and pre-clinical tests with the compounds on human Burkitt lymphoma cells. The long-term goal of these studies is to have an improved, more effective treatment approach for non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, and particularly those lymphomas that are resistant to current therapies.

This grant is funded by and named for Jack's Pack - We Still Have His Back, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. Jack Klein was a ten year old who loved life, laughing and monkeys. During his illness, his community of family and friends near and far rallied around him under the moniker "Jack's Pack". Their slogan was "We have Jack's Back". After Jack succumbed to Burkitt's Lymphoma, his "pack" focused their energy and efforts to funding a cure...just as Jack would have wanted.

Kristina Hardy Ph.D., Clinical Psychology

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 01-31-2022
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 acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), a cancer of the blood, who receive modern therapy have a high likelihood of being cured. A side effect of treatment in some survivors of ALL is lifelong troubles with learning and memory. One part of therapy that may increase the chance of having learning and memory problems is many exposures to anesthesia. Treatment for ALL includes painful procedures for which children routinely receive anesthesia. Understanding the connections between specific anesthesia medicines, their doses, and the length of time they are given and the chances of having learning problems later on will be important for patients, families and clinical teams in making the best choices for anesthesia use.

Rintaro Hashizume M.D., Ph.D

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2022
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Chicago, IL
Institution: Northwestern University affiliated with Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital

For a child is diagnosed with a diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma so called DIPG, the options for treatment are scarce and so are the chances for survival. This aggressive brain tumor generally strikes children who are 6 years old and younger, with most surviving less than a year after diagnosis. The only known effective treatment is the use of radiation. Yet, even with radiation therapy most children show tumor progression within the year after radiation therapy. Given this reality, there is a desperately need to identify the drug that increase the anti-tumor activity of radiation, as a mean to improve treatment outcome for these children. DNA damage is thought to be the most toxic effect caused by radiation, and Dr. Hashizume and others showed that the majority of the DNA damage caused by radiation are repaired within 24 hours of treatment. This DNA damage repair is possibly responsible for the tumor progression observed in DIPG after radiation therapy, thereby ultimately taking no survival benefits to the patients. As the recipient of the Just Do It...and be done with it St. Baldrick's Research Grant, Dr. Hashizume recently performed a genetic screening in DIPG cells collected from patient tumor and found specific therapeutic targets which is important for DNA damage repair. This research will study whether targeted inhibition of DNA damage repair increase DNA damage by radiation, leading to increased radiation toxicity in DIPG. Successful results from this research will find a new effective therapy which increases the anti-tumor activity of radiation, in turn, will ultimately leads to improved treatment outcomes for children with highly malignant and currently incurable cancer.

This grant is funded by and named for the “Just Do It…and be done with it” Hero Fund created in honor of Sara Martorano who was 4 when she was diagnosed with Stage IV Wilms tumor. Despite a grueling treatment protocol of surgeries, radiation and chemotherapy, Sara didn’t let anything dim her sparkle. Thanks to life-saving research, today she is cancer free. This fund celebrates the courage of all cancer kids enduring treatment and the support of their family and friends.

Awarded at Northwestern University and transferred to Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago.

Scott Hiebert Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 12-31-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Nashville, TN
Institution: Vanderbilt University Medical Center affiliated with Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt

Alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is one of the most aggressive and difficult to treat tumors in children. If not caught early, metastatic disease has a dismal 5-year survival of less than 5%, even after the most intensive chemotherapy possible. Even in the rare circumstances when these children do well, the long-term side effects of the intensive chemotherapy are debilitating. We can, and must, do better. We have known for some time that the cause of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma in 60% of the most aggressive cases is a specific genetic abnormality. This genetic mistake creates a new gene, and Dr. Hiebert will determine how this new gene causes cancer and determine what would happen to these sarcoma cells if we had a drug specific for this new gene. To do this, he has engineered alveolar sarcoma cells grown in the lab so that this cancer gene can be quickly turned off by an existing drug. This allows, for the first time, the treatment of these sarcoma cells with a specific drug to define all of the events that occur in the first few minutes to several days of drug treatment to establish that inhibition of this new cancer gene is a viable therapeutic strategy.

This grant is generously supported by Rachael Chaffin’s Research Fund, a Hero Fund created in memory of a young girl who loved life. Rachael loved people, animals and the outdoors. It was heartbreaking when she was diagnosed with Rhabdomyosarcoma in the summer of 2013 at the age of 11. With a positive attitude and determination, Rachael began her long battle with cancer. She truly believed she would beat cancer so she could go on to help others. In 2014, Rachael organized a team of family and friends called “Kicking Cancer with Ray Ray” to raise funds for St. Baldrick’s and they continue the tradition today. This Hero Fund honors Rachael’s passion to find a cure for kids’ cancer and carries on her legacy of increasing awareness of childhood cancer to find better treatment options and cures through research.

Alex Huang M.D., Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Cleveland, OH
Institution: Case Western Reserve University

Rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is the most common malignant soft tissue tumor in childhood. Despite intensification of aggressive therapy involving combination chemotherapy, radiation and surgery, the overall outcome of RMS is among the least improved in childhood cancer. Dr. Huang and colleagues aim to explore a novel concept of applying a clinical available technique of tumor-reduction cryoablation, whereby tumors are damaged by ultra-cold argon gas or liquid nitrogen to release endogenous immune adjuvants, to enhance an efficacious systemic anti-tumor immunity against distant RMS metastasis. He seeks to procure preclinical efficacy and mechanistic data that will enable a rapid translational clinical trial targeting metastatic sarcoma within 3 years.

Adam Resnick Ph.D.

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 02-28-2022
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia affiliated with University of Pennsylvania

Dr. Resnick's research project focuses on how to cure one of the deadliest brain tumors in children called diffuse midline gliomas (DMGs), previously also known as diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas (DIPGs). No available cancer treatments work against DMGs and children die from this lethal disease within 8-11 months of diagnosis. To improve survival and develop better treatment against DMGs, he assessed genes being turned on or off in DMG tumor cells. Together with colleagues, he has identified novel gene products common in multiple DMG tumors that arise when two unrelated genes join and become expressed as one novel protein entity. Here, he will study the role of these gene products, or gene fusions, in DMGs, specifically those involving a known cancer-causing gene called MET. He will test drugs that target the MET gene fusions in DMGs by performing experiments on models that accurately represent human DMG tumors. The results from this project will help identify new drug treatment strategies to target DMG tumors in children. Successful therapy options from this study will be made available to children with DMGs in real-time through our partnership with a clinical trial consortium that brings new treatments to children with brain tumors.

Charles James Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Chicago, IL
Institution: Northwestern University affiliated with Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGGs) are a fatal childhood cancer of the brain. Deregulation of specific histone modifications, both with and without a direct link to specific mutations, have been identified in these tumors. This project will investigate histone H3 post-translational modifications (PTMs) in pHGGs to advance our understanding of tumor development and understanding of biologic characteristics, and to promote the identification of effective therapies for improving the outcomes for patients with these tumors.

This grant is generously supported by The Benicio Martinez Fund for Pediatric Cancer Research, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund created in honor of Benny's fight with cancer and supports cures and better treatments for kids like him. Weeks after being the top fundraiser in his 6th grade class and shaving his head at his school’s event, Benny was diagnosed with medulloblastoma. Since then he has had brain surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. Despite complications from treatment and setbacks, Benny has an amazing can-do attitude and is battling the cancer with courageous determination.

Paul Jedlicka M.D., Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Denver, CO
Institution: University of Colorado affiliated with Children's Hospital Colorado

Rhabdomyosarcoma is a common cancer in kids. It can be a very aggressive disease, especially a type that is caused by a genetic change that creates an abnormal cancer-driving protein in the cell, called "P3F". P3F-driven rhabdomyosarcoma shows a strong tendency to spread to other parts of the body, which is what typically leads to death from the disease. P3F is a very hard drug target. However, P3F works together with other machinery in the cell to cause rhabdomyosarcoma. Such machinery could be targeted to interfere with P3F effects, but is not well understood. Dr. Jedlicka and colleagues have recently found new parts of this machinery that help P3F cause rhabdomyosarcoma to spread to other parts of the body. In this project he will better understand how this new machinery works and how it could be targeted to interfere with rhabdomyosarcoma spread. This work could identify new ways to inhibit the aggressive nature of this disease and improve patient outcomes.

This grant is generously supported by Marlee’s Smile, a St. Baldrick's partner, founded in honor of 12-year-old, Marlee Pack. Diagnosed with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma; she relapsed three times in four years. After the final relapse, Marlee had to make a decision no child should have to: continue painful, toxic treatments or enter hospice care. She passed away on February 23, 2019. Our mission at Marlee’s Smile is to change the lives of kids with cancer, one smile at a time in two ways. We give a custom Build-A-Bear to every child fighting cancer, as well as their siblings to honor Marlee’s giving heart as she knew the comfort of a furry friend. We fund targeted research of pediatric cancers, specifically sarcomas to honor Marlee’s dying wish that no child should have to suffer the pain and hopelessness of current cancer treatments.

Lauri Linder Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2022
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Institution: University of Utah affiliated with Huntsman Cancer Institute

Pain is one of the most common and distressing symptoms that children with cancer face. Pain can persist between clinic visits but may not be reported unless the child is specifically asked. Dr. Linder's team co-designed a game-based symptom reporting app, Color Me Healthy, with elementary school-age children with cancer. In the initial test of the app among children receiving chemotherapy, more than half of children's symptom reports included a report of pain. Parents reported that the app helped them better understand their child's symptoms. Children and parents also gave important feedback to improve the app. During the first phase of the study, Dr. Linder will use feedback from children and parents to make important changes to the app to enhance how children report pain using the app and how children's data can be understood by parents and clinicians. In the second phase of the study, she will ask children to use the newly enhanced pain assessment feature and ask how parents and clinicians used children's data to help relieve their pain. Completing this study will allow Dr. Linder to use the app in a larger study to improve pain management and quality of life among children receiving cancer treatment.

Donna Murdaugh Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2022
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Birmingham, AL
Institution: University of Alabama at Birmingham affiliated with Children's of Alabama

A growing number of childhood cancer survivors have been treated with high-dose chemotherapy. This high-dose chemotherapy places the survivors at risk for cognitive problems, affecting their thinking skills, processing speed, attention, and memory. Downstream effects of cognitive impairment include difficulties with independent living as they transition into adulthood. Currently, there is limited information as to whether cognitive remediation interventions can improve cognitive functioning in childhood cancer survivors. Cognitive remediation is important for teaching effective decision-making and reasoning skills to enhance self-management and self-advocacy, which in turn could result in improvement in other areas, such as employment and independent living. In particular, given the barriers to accessing medical care (e.g., distance to medical center, reliable transportation), Dr. Murdaugh will use telemedicine to deliver this intervention. This study aims to assess the efficacy of a 4-week intervention delivered via telemedicine that teaches strategies to improve decision-making and reasoning skills in cancer survivors between the ages of 10 and 18 years old.

James Palis M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 09-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Rochester, NY
Institution: University of Rochester affiliated with Golisano Children's Hospital, Rochester, Strong Memorial Hospital

Young children with Down Syndrome are at very high risk of developing cancer of the blood (leukemia) before the age of 4. These leukemias arise from abnormal blood cells that are first detected in newborns with Down Syndrome. Studies suggest that the abnormal blood cells arise in the early embryo before a permanent blood system is set up. Dr. Palis has developed a unique way to study the biology of these abnormal blood cells. Researchers can now study the path from abnormal blood cell to leukemia in a dish. Using this system, he will learn how certain genes drive the change from 'abnormal blood cell' to 'cancer blood cell' that occurs specifically in very young children with Down Syndrome. Long-term goals are to prevent leukemia from forming and to develop safer treatments for those children with Down Syndrome who develop leukemia.

Robin Parihar M.D., Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
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

Doctors have been testing ways to boost the immune system to fight cancer in clinical trials over the last ten years. Although these approaches have led to very impressive results in patients with blood cancers, they have not worked well in patients who have tumors in their solid organs. Solid tumors have specialized cells that act as bodyguards, protecting the cancer cells from the immune system. Dr. Parihar has developed a strategy to selectively remove these 'bodyguard' cells from tumors, which will then allow the immune system to enter tumors and kill the cancer cells. He will test a new and selective nano-medicine he has created to kill 'bodyguard' cells. If successful, the new nano-medicine can help the immune system of patients with a range of childhood solid tumors, including neuroblastoma, one of the most common extra-cranial solid tumors in children where response rates remain low.

Grant Rowe M.D., Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: Boston Children's Hospital affiliated with Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School

Dr. Rowe is applying stem cell biology to understanding childhood leukemia. Overall, pediatric oncologists have made remarkable progress in treating children with leukemia with chemotherapy, but some children have forms of leukemia that don't respond well. Dr. Rowe is interested in better understanding what makes this subset of leukemias resistant to treatment. To do this, he is developing new models of these unfavorable forms of leukemia so that he can understand precisely how normal blood cells become leukemic blood cells. If Dr. Rowe can achieve this, then researchers can find new ways to more effectively treat these forms of leukemia.

Joshua Rubin M.D.,Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2023
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: St. Louis, MO
Institution: Washington University in St. Louis affiliated with St. Louis Children's Hospital

Over the past 10 years, we have made great strides in the diagnosis of Medulloblastoma, the most common malignant brain tumor of childhood. These advances have come from widely collaborative efforts to perform DNA sequencing on tumor specimens. This effort led to the identification of major subtypes of Medulloblastoma and a recognition that these subtypes are associated with differences in response to standard treatments and survival. Lagging behind, has been an understanding of the molecular mechanisms that drive relapse of Medulloblastoma. This occurs in 30-40% of Medulloblastoma patients and as yet, there are no curative options. As the recipient of the Thumbs Up Fund to Honor Brett Haubrich St. Baldrick's Research Grant, Dr. Rubin and his team members are proposing a novel clinical trial to address this pressing unmet need. Their trial, brings together what has been learned from sequencing Medulloblastoma and the recently developed ability to test the sensitivity of an individual patient's Medulloblastoma cells to hundreds of drugs simultaneously. The long-term goal is to use the combination of drug testing and DNA sequencing to design personalized treatments for relapsed Medulloblastoma patients. Success in this effort would not only provide new treatments for relapsed Medulloblastoma, but would also provide a new paradigm for personalized approaches to the treatment of all pediatric brain tumors.

A portion of this grant is funded by and named in honor of The Thumbs Up Fund to Honor Brett Haubrich, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. Brett is remembered for his kindness, his joy in making others happy and his faith even through his 3 ½ year battle with anaplastic astrocytoma, a difficult to cure brain cancer. Brett was diagnosed at the age of 11 and endured treatments and laser surgery which impacted his motor and speech functions. Yet he was always positive, often giving his signature “thumbs up” as a symbol of hope. In his honor, Team Brett began participating in St. Baldrick’s head shaving events in 2015 and each year, raised over $10,000. This Hero Fund hopes to raise funds for childhood cancer research for brain tumors like Brett’s so other families would have more options for cures.

Dara Steinberg Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 12-31-2021
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: New York, NY
Institution: Columbia University Medical Center affiliated with Morgan Stanley Children’s Hospital, New York-Presbyterian

Brain tumors are one of the most common and deadliest forms of pediatric cancers. Those who do survive may experience late effects including cognitive, emotional, and social difficulties. Additionally, Columbia University Medical Center in New York, New York has some of the highest rates of COVID-19 cases in the U.S. Thus, the children and their families facing diagnoses of pediatric brain tumors, and the health care providers treating them, were faced with incredibly difficult decisions, at a time when the entire medical system was in a state of upheaval, and questions were being raised as to who should be treated and saved. In medicine shared decision making involving parents, children (when possible) and health care providers is recommended in situations where there is not a clear superior treatment, which may be the case for many pediatric brain tumors. This study aims to understand the factors parents, healthcare providers, and the children themselves considered when making health care decisions. This includes how they balanced potential short-term and long-term challenges with quality of life and longevity of life, what information informed their decisions, and how the COVID-19 pandemic influenced the decisions they were making. This information will provide important insight into how decisions are made, particularly in times of heightened crisis. This will make us better able to help families, patients, and children.

Mallory Taylor M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2022
Funding Type: Supportive Care Research Grant
Institution Location: Seattle, WA
Institution: Seattle Children's Hospital affiliated with Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, University of Washington

We know that mental health and physical health are closely connected. For example, teenage cancer patients who receive bone marrow transplants have high rates of anxiety, depression and other mental health issues, which have in turn been associated with relapse and even death rates. Researchers have recently discovered that the immune system may be an important link between the mind and the body -- psychological stress can create a specific pattern of molecular responses in immune cells, which causes inflammation and may produce poor outcomes in cancer. To see if the molecular response pattern indeed associates with altered immune cell function and with mental health symptoms, Dr. Taylor will study blood samples and quality-of-life surveys that are collected from teenage patients undergoing bone marrow transplant. If we can understand the biology of how a teen's mental state affects the cancer in their body, we can develop better ways to improve both psychological and medical outcomes in these vulnerable patients.

William Weiss M.D., Ph.D. 

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital

The proto-oncogene MYCN is amplified in approximately half of patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. At relapse, tumors from high-risk patients typically activate a pathway called "MAP kinase signaling" through genetic mutations including loss of NF1, which normally dampens MAP kinase function. Since relapsed neuroblastoma is generally therapy resistant, these data suggest that MAP-kinase activation contributes to therapy resistance. Does MAP kinase signaling contribute to therapy resistance in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma at diagnosis? Dr. Weiss proposes that dependence on increased MAP kinase signaling in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma enables rare cells within this heterogeneous tumor to evade chemotherapy. This therapy-resistant population then undergoes selection for further activation of MAP-kinase signaling, reinforcing therapy resistance. How does MYCN drive MAP kinase? The NF1 tumor suppressor blocks MAP kinase signaling. Mis-splicing of the NF1 messenger RNA in neuroblastoma cells results in NF1-23a, a protein with decreased ability to block RAS. Inclusion of NF1 exon 23a is regulated by the RNA splicing proteins "T-cell intracellular antigen 1" (TIA1) and "TIA1 Like gene" TIAL1, both of which are MYCN target genes. If activation of TIAL and TIAL1 (TIA/L1) in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma activates MAP-kinase signaling in primary tumors at diagnosis, does traditional treatment of these tumors select for further flux through MAP-kinase signaling, to enhance resistance at relapse? This is the issue that Dr. Weiss' proposal addresses. Successful completion clarifies the importance of MYCN-TIA/L1 axis as a driver of resistance in neuroblastoma, and suggests a a translational path to improve outcomes in neuroblastoma.

Dr. Weiss' grant is generously supported by 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.

Xiaoyang Zhang Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2021
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Institution: University of Utah affiliated with Huntsman Cancer Institute

Therapies that only inhibit tumor cells but not normal cells are missing for the deadly childhood brain tumor medulloblastoma. As the recipient of the Miracles for Michael Fund St. Baldrick's Research Grant, Dr. Zhang has identified a promising drug target in medulloblastoma. This project aims to study the role of the target in medulloblastoma and evaluate the therapeutic potential of inhibiting this target using cutting-edge technologies and models.

This grant is funded by and named for the Miracles for Michael Fund, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund created in memory of Michael Orbany who was diagnosed with medulloblastoma when he was 6 years old. After completing initial treatment, his cancer relapsed within a year and he passed away at the age of nine. Michael had unwavering faith and perseverance, wanting most of all to make others happy. This fund honors his tremendous strength to never ever give up.

Consortium for Childhood Cancer Predisposition Member

Funded: 07-01-2020 through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: Consortium Research Grant
Institution Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Institution: University of Utah affiliated with Huntsman Cancer Institute

This institution is a member of a research consortium which is being funded by St. Baldrick's: Consortium for Childhood Cancer Predisposition. For a description of this project, see the consortium grant made to the lead institution: Emory University, Atlanta, GA.