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 121-140 of 2234 results

Alissa Martin M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Detroit, MI
Institution: Children's Hospital of Michigan affiliated with Wayne State University

This grant supports a Clinical Research Associate (CRA) to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure. At Children's Hospital of Michigan many patients are of minority background, and historically minorities have not always had the same access to health care. Funding from St. Baldrick's Foundation will help the institution continue to have excellent CRA support in the clinical trials office for every patient.

James Martin Johnston M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Reno, NV
Institution: Renown Regional 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.

Paul Harker-Murray M.D.

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 02-28-2025
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Milwaukee, WI
Institution: Children's Hospital of Wisconsin affiliated with Medical College of Wisconsin, Midwest Children's Cancer Center

This grant supports a specialist to ensure that more kids can be enrolled in clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Pinki Prasad M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: New Orleans, LA
Institution: Children's Hospital-New Orleans

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.

Ranjan Bista M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: El Paso, TX
Institution: El Paso Children's Hospital

The El Paso region faces unique challenges in terms of delivery of childhood cancer care due to its unique population in underserved border region. This grant supports Clinical Research Associates to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Susan Blaney M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2024
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.

Terrie Flatt D.O

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2025
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Kansas City, MO
Institution: The Children's Mercy Hospital

This grant supports a Spanish-speaking Clinical Research Assistant to ensure that more Hispanic children can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Wendy Woods-Swafford M.D., M.P.H.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 01-01-2024 through 12-31-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Des Moines, IA
Institution: Blank Children's Hospital

This grant supports a specialist to ensure that more kids can be enrolled in clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Melanie Comito M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 11-30-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Syracuse, NY
Institution: SUNY Upstate Medical University affiliated with Golisano Children's Hospital, Syracuse

This grant supports a pediatric-focused Clinical Research Coordinator to ensure that the children of central New York have a variety of clinical trials so that they do not have to leave the region to attain this level of care, often their best hope for a cure.

Jessica Geaney M.D.

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 11-30-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Albany, NY
Institution: Albany Medical Center

This grant supports a pediatric-focused 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.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 11-30-2024
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.

Mary Lou Schmidt M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 11-30-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Chicago, IL
Institution: University of Illinois - Chicago affiliated with University Of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System

This grant supports a the nurse researchers in the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), Rush University Medical Center, and John H. Stroger Hospital of Cook County COG Clinical Trials Program to ensure more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

This grant is named for the Do It for Dominic Fund which honors the memory of Dominic Cairo who battled non-Hodgkins lymphoma and was a hero to his school and community. His family and friends continue to raise funds and support research in the hopes that no child has to go through what Dominic endured.

Mark Souweidane M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 11-30-2024
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: New York, NY
Institution: Weill Medical College of Cornell University affiliated with Weill Cornell Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian

This grant supports a Clinical Research Coordinator to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Rishikesh Chavan M.D. 

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 11-30-2025
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Orange, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital of Orange County

This grant supports a Clinical Research Coordinator to ensure that more kids can be treated on immunotherapy clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Thomas McLean M.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2023 through 02-28-2025
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 Assistant to ensure that more kids can be treated on clinical trials, often their best hope for a cure.

Sujatha Venkataraman Ph.D.

Funded: 10-01-2023 through 03-31-2026
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Denver, CO
Institution: University of Colorado affiliated with Children's Hospital Colorado

Chimeric Antigen Receptor (CAR)-T cells have been clinically effective in patients with leukemias and lymphomas. Dr. Venkataraman’s goal is to bring similar success in treating a fatal brain tumor in children called DIPG (Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma). A major obstacle in treating brain tumors with CAR-T cell therapy is a lack of antigens which are tumor specific, or which are absent on normal vital tissues that can lead to off-target toxicities. To overcome this risk, Dr. Venkataraman and colleagues have successfully generated and tested the functionality of a novel “logic-gated” CAR-T cells targeting two distinct antigens, CD99 AND B7H3 that are highly expressed on DIPG but present singly on certain normal cells. This gated “AND” CAR-Ts will have full-activation against DIPG cells having both the antigens while sparing the single antigen expressing normal cells and will now investigate the safety, preclinical efficacy of these CAR-T cells against DIPG and evaluate its translational relevance to DIPG patients.

Mitchell Cairo M.D. 

Researcher Photo

Funded: 10-01-2023 through 09-30-2026
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Valhalla, NY
Institution: New York Medical College affiliated with Maria Fareri Children's Hospital at Westchester Medical Center

Children, adolescents and young adults with recurrent or refractory Osteosarcoma have a very poor prognosis, with a dismal 6mo overall survival of less than 5%. Presumably, this poor prognosis is in large part secondary to the development of resistance to chemotherapy and radiation. More recent studies employing therapies that release and activate the patients’ immune cells, called T-cells, and even targeted T-cells have not improved this poor prognosis. Dr. Cairo proposes to investigate novel and innovative methods of combinatorial immunotherapy to circumvent known mechanisms of resistance. Together with colleagues, he proposes to investigate at the bench (in the laboratory) and in models with osteosarcoma alternative methods of combination immunotherapy including natural killer cells (NK) that we have been engineered in the laboratory to also circumvent mechanisms of resistance and to additionally express a single or dual target that are present on the osteosarcoma cells.

They further plan to investigate the efficacy of adding other immunotherapies to enhance the function and persistence of these targeted NK cells with antibodies, and two different NK activating cytokines. They will also investigate the optimal combination of this immunotherapy in children, adolescents and young adults with recurrent or refractory osteosarcoma to determine the safety and efficacy of this approach. Finally, Dr. Cario and team will determine what are the genetic and immune mechanisms of resistance after these novel combinatorial immunotherapy approaches utilizing state-of-the-art laboratory techniques. The goal of this grant is to develop novel combinatorial immunotherapy that will significantly increase the overall survival in children and adolescents with poor risk osteosarcoma.

To make a significant impact for kids fighting osteosarcoma, five funders have banded together with St. Baldrick’s to support this grant – The Helping Osteosarcoma Patients Everywhere (HOPE) Super grant supported by Battle Osteosarcoma, the Faris Foundation, the Zach Sobiech Osteosarcoma Fund of Children’s Cancer Research Fund, the Children’s Cancer Fund NY (supporting the Maria Fareri Children’s Hospital and New York Medical College) and Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

Iannis Aifantis Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 09-01-2023 through 08-31-2025
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: New York, NY
Institution: New York University School of Medicine affiliated with NYU Langone Medical Center

CAR-T cell immunotherapies, treatments that use T cells constructed to recognize tumors and kill them, revolutionized how doctors treat children with B cell leukemia (B-ALL). These killer T cells recognize a specific protein expressed on the surface of the leukemic cells. Unfortunately, leukemia frequently relapses and often finds ways to "switch off" the expression of this protein, making T cells unable to track and kill them. This notion is called "antigen escape," as the tumor finds a way to escape the immune treatment. Dr. Aifantis plans to identify ways to avoid antigen escape by boosting the expression of the surface recognition protein. The study aims to validate such mechanisms in an organism using CAR-T cell models and sequencing patient cells. At the same time, Dr. Aifantis will design screens that will help identify surface antigen-specific regulators, so researchers can one day create combinatorial protocols using CAR-T cells and targeting specific antigen surface expression regulators.

Hari Narayan M.D., M.S.C.E.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2023 through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: San Diego, CA
Institution: University of California, San Diego affiliated with Rady Children's Hospital San Diego

Anthracycline chemotherapies are important, lifesaving medicines given to a majority of children with cancer. However, they can injure the heart and cause heart failure in up to 10% of children years later, during cancer survivorship. Unfortunately, with the current available tools, there is not much known about which children will develop heart failure and what treatments would work best for them, and by the time the problem is identified it may be too late to help them. Dr. Narayan seeks to address this problem by using state-of-the-art, in-depth imaging techniques in adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer to detect early changes in the heart. The goal is to develop new tools to provide early, personalized treatments to prevent heart failure.

This grant is named for TEAM ABBY Gives, a St. Baldrick's Hero Fund. Abby was diagnosed with Pre-B ALL when she was almost five years old. She had a successful bone marrow transplant, but battle battled graft vs. host disease (GVHD) and heart disease for years. Abby and her treatment team worked hard over many years to keep the GVHD in check. Sadly, Abby passed away on October 19, 2021. This fund unites the incredible support of family and friends in Abby's memory and inspires others to join the fight for cures and better treatments.

Jessica Tsai M.D., Ph.D.

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2023 through 06-30-2026
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Los Angeles, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is a deadly pediatric brain cancer, and there is a dire need to develop new therapeutic strategies to improve the terrible outcomes for these patients. Looking at genes that are turned on or off in a cancer can be helpful to figure out what is causing cancer growth. While looking at genes that are turned on in DIPG, Dr. Tsai found a gene called FOXR2 that is turned on at very high levels in a subset of DIPGs. FOXR2 is usually turned off, and turning on FOXR2 makes tumors grow very quickly. FOXR2 is actually capable of turning on an entire set of genes that are called ETS transcription factors (TFs). This is surprising as these genes have never been shown to be activated in DIPGs. Others have shown that ETS TFs can turn on the MAPK signaling pathway. Dr. Tsai also has found that FOXR2 is able to activate MAPK signaling. The goal is to determine exactly how FOXR2 and ETS TFs cooperate together to turn on MAPK signaling to make DIPGs grow. This grant was awarded at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and transferred to Children's Hospital of Los Angeles.

A portion of this grant is generously supported by Griffin's Guardians, a St. Baldrick's partner. Griffin's Guardians was created by the Engles in memory of their son, Griffin. Their mission is to provide support and financial assistance to children battling cancer in Central New York, raise awareness about pediatric cancer and provide funding for research.