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 1-2 of 2 results

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.

Rintaro Hashizume M.D., Ph.D

Researcher Photo

Funded: 07-01-2018 through 06-30-2019
Funding Type: Research Grant
Institution Location: Chicago, IL
Institution: Northwestern University affiliated with Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital

Atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor (AT/RT) is a highly malignant brain tumor that has a very poor prognosis despite aggressive treatment. The development of new, effective therapeutic approaches for AT/RT has been hindered by a lack of specific therapeutic targets. It is necessary to find effective therapeutic targets, preferably based on the understanding of the molecular mechanisms that promote this highly malignant brain tumor. A tumor suppressor gene (SMARCB1) is absent in the majority of AT/RT and loss of this gene leads to factors that promote tumor growth. This research involving genetic and pharmacologic inhibition of histone binding proteins (EZH2 and BRD4) is of high importance for developing effective therapies for pediatric patients with AT/RT. Dr. Hashizume will determine whether therapeutic combination of targeting two histone binding proteins, BRD4 and EZH2, provides synergistic benefits, and will inform how best to maximize the clinical potential of combination therapy for effective treatment of children with AT/RT. This research will also test how tumors adapt to this molecular targeted therapy, to ultimately inform clinicians how to treat tumors that have resistance to molecular targeted therapy. Finally, this project will explore how this combination therapy interacts with radiation in treating AT/RT, which is important due to the frequent use of radiation in treating AT/RT.

This grant is generously supported by the “Just Do It…and be done with it” St. Baldrick’s Hero Fund created in honor of Sara Martorano who was four years old when she was diagnosed with Stage IV Wilms tumor. Thanks to research, today she is cancer free. This fund celebrates the courage of cancer kids through treatment and the support of their family and friends.