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Showing 1921-1940 of 2234 results

Irene Cherrick M.D.

Funded: 12-01-2008 through 11-30-2009
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Syracuse, NY
Institution: SUNY Upstate Medical University affiliated with Golisano Children's Hospital, Syracuse

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

Jerry Finklestein M.D.

Funded: 12-01-2008 through 11-30-2009
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Long Beach, CA
Institution: Jonathan Jaques Children's Cancer Center affiliated with Miller Children's Hospital, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center (LA BioMed)

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

Vikramjit Kanwar M.B.B.S, M.R.C.P. (UK)

Researcher Photo

Funded: 12-01-2008 through 11-30-2009
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: Albany, NY
Institution: Albany Medical Center

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

Charles Scher M.D.

Funded: 12-01-2008 through 11-30-2009
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: New Orleans, LA
Institution: Tulane University Health Sciences Center affiliated with Tulane Hospital For Children

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

Jessica Pollard M.D.

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Funded: 10-15-2008 through 01-14-2016
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Portland, ME
Institution: Maine Medical Center affiliated with Barbara Bush Children's Hospital

Based on progress to date, Dr. Pollard was awarded a new grant in 2012 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Approximately 500 children are diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) each year, and 50% of these patients will not be cured. A drug has been identified as an innovative treatment for AML patients. This drug must attach to a particular protein found on the surface of most AML cancer cells, but not every patient's cells have this protein. Dr. Pollard is studying ways to improve the cure rate for these patients. Awarded at Seattle Children's Hospital and transferred to Maine Medical Center.

Anne E. Kazak Ph.D., ABPP

Funded: 10-01-2008 through 08-31-2010
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia affiliated with University of Pennsylvania

This grant funds a cutting-edge research project to find new and better cures for childhood cancer.

Sharon Gardner M.D.

Funded: 10-01-2008 through 09-30-2009
Funding Type: Infrastructure Grant
Institution Location: New York, NY
Institution: New York University School of Medicine affiliated with NYU Langone Medical Center

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

Simone Hettmer M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2011
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School

Dr. Hettmer is looking to better understand the development of rhabdomyosarcoma (a cancer of the muscle or soft tissue), its aggressive behavior and poor response to current therapies, by analyzing the differences between genetically altered muscle-associated cells and their normal counterparts. Her findings aim to clarify the cancer's early development and progression, and facilitate in the development of new, more effective treatments. Dr. Hettmer is funded by P.A.L.S. Bermuda with funds raised through the St. Baldrick's Foundation.

Sogol Mostoufi-Moab M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2011
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia affiliated with University of Pennsylvania

Dr. Mostoufi-Moab is investigating how intensive chemotherapy and radiation therapy affect normal bones in young children. Bone development is affected by puberty, nutrition and mechanical loading. Chemotherapy and radiation for leukemia can affect bone development and strengthening, resulting in osteoporosis and bone fractures as early as young adulthood. The goal of this study is to determine bone structure and strength in 50 survivors of childhood leukemia 4-6 years after bone marrow transplantation. The results will guide future intervention studies to help develop appropriate therapies to reduce and/or treat bone disorders in survivors of childhood leukemia after bone marrow transplantation.

Eric Raabe M.D., Ph.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2011
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: Baltimore, MD
Institution: Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine affiliated with Johns Hopkins Children's Center

Pediatric brain tumors form when the signals controlling normal brain development fail, and these remain one of the most difficult types of cancers to cure. Dr. Raabe is studying the process of how a neural stem cell turns into a normal brain cell, and investigating how to reprogram the out-of-control tumor cells into mature cells, to help to prevent and eradicate pediatric brain tumors.

Issai Vanan M.D., M.P.H.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2011
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Fellow
Institution Location: New Hyde Park, NY
Institution: Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center affiliated with The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

High grade gliomas, an aggressive type of brain tumor, have a survival rate of 1 to 3 years and are typically treated with radiation, surgery and chemotherapy. Dr. Vanan hypothesizes that the ionizing radiation (IR) used to treat the cancer activates a MRK protein that increases the invasiveness of the tumor cells, causing a high probability of relapse. By studying and understanding the causes of IR stimulated invasion and the recurrence of high grade brain tumors, he hopes to identify new drug targets to better treat and cure these aggressive tumors.

Shahab Asgharzadeh M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Los Angeles, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital Los Angeles

Based on progress to date, Dr. Asgharzadeh was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Brain tumors are the most common solid tumor of pediatrics and are a leading cause of cancer related deaths. Dr. Asgharzadeh's research is to use gene expression profiling to try to identify which medulloblastoma (a type of brain tumor) patients can be cured without the need for radiation, thus avoiding long-term effects like mental retardation.

Sung Won Choi M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 12-31-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Ann Arbor, MI
Institution: University of Michigan affiliated with C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital

Based on progress to date, Dr. Choi was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Stem cell transplants using bone marrow from matched donors (not embryonic stem cells) are the only hope for many childhood cancer patients. But graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is a life-threatening complication many of these patients experience as a result of transplant. Dr. Choi's research is to find better treatment for GHVD, particularly one not using steroids which cause further complications.

Sinisa Dovat M.D., D. SC.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Hershey, PA
Institution: Pennsylvania State University affiliated with Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital

Based on progress to date, Dr. Dovat was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. His research focuses on learning what leads to the transformation of a normal cell to a malignant one, specifically in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) - a type of leukemia that requires severe chemotherapy and has a low cure rate compared to other childhood cancers. He is focusing on how elevated activity of a particular enzyme in a particular protein (associated with a severe type of AML) affects normal cells to make them prone to becoming malignant. Results will help in the design of more specific and less toxic drugs for the treatment of acute myeloid leukemia. Dr. Dovat began his research at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and moved to Pennsylvania State University in 2010.

Jonathan Fish M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: New Hyde Park, NY
Institution: Steven and Alexandra Cohen Children's Medical Center affiliated with The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

Based on progress to date, Dr. Fish was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Since over 75% of children with cancer can now be cured, the population of 250,000 survivors of childhood cancer in the USA is rapidly growing. Over 60% of survivors have a chronic medical problem, and 27% a severe or life-threatening problem as a result of their treatment. Research into problems faced by survivors is critical to improving their care. Dr. Fish investigates whether care in a specialized center will improve: 1) patient awareness of treatments they received and risks they face because of those treatments; and 2) the ability of survivors to follow medical recommendations and referrals.

Michelle Hermiston M.D., Ph.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital

Based on progress to date, Dr. Hermiston was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Almost all patients who have relapsed leukemia or lymphoma will die. Dr. Hermiston's research is to find a way to predict which of these patients with T-cell malignancies are likely to relapse, so those children can be given the aggressive treatments they need upon diagnosis, and those not likely to relapse can avoid the long-term side effects of unnecessarily aggressive treatments.

Katherine Janeway M.D.

Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: Dana-Farber Cancer Institute affiliated with Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School

Based on progress to date, Dr. Janeway was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Osteosarcoma is the most common primary bone tumor in children, yet 80% of metastatic cases remain incurable. (Metastatic means it has "spread" beyond the primary site, in this case the bones.) No therapeutic advances have been made for two decades. Dr. Janeway's research is to find drugs that cause osteosarcoma to act more like normal bone than like cancer; find ways to halt the progression to metastatic osteosarcoma; and develop a useful testing ground for drugs to treat metastatic osteosarcoma.

Nina Kadan-Lottick M.D., M.S.P.H.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 12-30-2014
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: New Haven, CT
Institution: Yale University affiliated with Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital

Based on progress to date, Nina Kadan-Lottick, M.D., M.S.P.H., TeamBrent St. Baldrick's Scholar, was awarded a new grant in 2012 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. About 25-30% of survivors of childhood cancer will experience long-term impairment in cognitive abilities and emotional regulation. Dr. Kadan-Lottick's research is to identify the reasons for the considerable variation in outcomes among children who received identical therapy, possibly inherited factors that affect how chemotherapy is metabolized or that result in a general vulnerability to these outcomes.

This grant is named for TeamBrent, created in 2005 to fight childhood cancer alongside then three-year-old Brent who was battling stage IV neuroblastoma; TeamBrent has since raised more than $3.5 million for childhood cancer research through the St. Baldrick's Foundation.

Amy Keating M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2014
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Denver, CO
Institution: University of Colorado affiliated with Children's Hospital Colorado

Based on progress to date, Dr. Keating was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Brain tumors are the most common solid tumor of pediatrics and are a leading cause of cancer related deaths. Astrocytoma is a brain tumor that has no effective chemotherapies and the survival rates for high-grade astrocytoma remain well below 10%. Identification of new potential treatment targets is the goal of Dr. Keating's project.

Ido Paz-Priel M.D.

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Funded: 07-01-2008 through 06-30-2013
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Scholar
Institution Location: Baltimore, MD
Institution: Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine affiliated with Johns Hopkins Children's Center

Based on progress to date, Dr. Paz-Priel was awarded a new grant in 2011 to fund an additional two years of this Scholar award. Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) is the third leading cause of cancer related mortality in children. Only about half of the children with AML are cured with current approaches. Dr. Paz-Priel is working to identify how these cancer cells resist chemotherapy and survive, with the ultimate result of helping to find ways to cure these children.