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 41-60 of 236 results

Washington University in St.Louis Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-15-2025 through 07-31-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: St. Louis, MO
Institution: Washington University in St. Louis affiliated with St. Louis Children's Hospital

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. The team will identify factors for metastasis at primary childhood cancer diagnosis, as metastases account for 2/3 of cancer-related deaths. By uncovering these factors, they seek to promote early detection and ultimately reduce cancer mortality. Additionally, they aim to investigate factors influencing survival in pediatric patients with metastatic cancer, with a particular focus on socioeconomic determinants such as neighborhood income and education levels. The findings will help identify high-risk populations and inform strategies to prevent poor outcomes. Their approach will integrate traditional epidemiology methods with artificial intelligence techniques to develop an optimal predictive model. In the future, this model can be used to estimate an individual's metastasis risk before it occurs using patient information inputs. Overall, this study aims to advocate for more sophisticated methods to generate clinically meaningful insights and reduce pediatric cancer deaths in society. This work is being completed under the mentorship of Dr. Kim Johnson.

Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-12-2025 through 07-31-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Hershey, PA
Institution: Pennsylvania State University affiliated with Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Two highly aggressive brain tumors, Atypical Teratoid/Rhabdoid Tumors and Embryonal Tumor with Multilayered Rosettes have extremely low survival rates. These tumors arise from a change in normal brain cells that cause uncontrollable growth and tumor development. Inhibiting specific pathways that are important in tumor growth will prevent the tumor development. To test this hypothesis, the team will perform multiple tests using cells from patients tumor cells growing in the lab. Testing how healthy the cells are, how they grow in their life cycle, and how they respond to being treated with a drug. Further, looking at specific proteins a part of these tumors and how they can help inform treatment for patients. These results may lead to a possible early-stage treatment option for patients affected by these cancers. This work is being completed under the mentorship of Dr. Giselle Saulnier Sholler.

Boston University Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-01-2025 through 08-31-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Boston, MA
Institution: Boston University

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Neuroblastoma is a pediatric cancer that develops in immature nerve cells and accounts for 15% of cancer-associated deaths among children. The Feng laboratory has recently reported that MYCN-driven cancers secrete a signaling molecule to hijack the body's immune system to promote tumor development and aggressiveness. This proposal seeks to characterize whether this signaling molecule explores macrophages, a type immune cells, to foster the development of MYCN-driven neuroblastoma. Successful completion of this research will help researchers understand the crosstalk between the tumor and immune cells and may identify new therapeutic strategy to treat high-risk neuroblastoma and other MYCN-driven childhood cancers such as medulloblastoma and glioma. This work is being completed under the mentorship of Dr. Hui Feng.

Medical University of South Carolina Summer Fellow

Funded: 05-01-2025 through 08-31-2025
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Charleston, SC
Institution: Medical University of South Carolina affiliated with MUSC Children's Hospital

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Pediatric sarcomas are devastating childhood cancers. New therapies that have fewer side effects but can more effectively kill cancer cells are urgently needed. There are multiple factors that make pediatric sarcomas hard to treat. One of those reasons is that not all pediatric sarcoma cells are like each other. Some grow very fast, whereas some others grow more slowly but can migrate and form metastases. Dr. Langdon's laboratory is working on developing combination therapies that can limit the impact of all the different types of pediatric sarcoma cells. During the next summer, the St. Baldrick's Foundation Summer Fellow's project will be to discover reasons why these combinations work so well against pediatric sarcoma cells. They will also learn several new techniques and gain experience in mentoring and more effective communication strategies. This work is being completed under the mentorship of Dr. Casey Langdon.

University of Hawaii Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

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.

University of California, Davis Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

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.

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 06-15-2020 through 09-14-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Seattle, WA
Institution: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center affiliated with University of Washington, Seattle Children's Hospital

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. There has been little success in curing high risk AML patients, with survival rates remaining at < 25%. This highlights our current reliance on highly intensive cytotoxic therapies and stem cell transplant, and their inadequacies. This project studies the combination of novel target discovery with state-of-the-art stem cell expansion technology. Protein science provides a unique opportunity to generate one of the most impactful therapeutic discoveries in childhood AML in the last 40 years, with minimal toxicity. The summer intern will assist in investigating the impact of drugs on cancer targets while minimizing toxicity toward healthy cells. Results will be used to help identify critical genes involved in cancer growth and disease resistance, and to leverage future work in drug development.

University of California, San Diego Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 06-01-2020 through 08-31-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: San Diego, CA
Institution: University of California, San Diego affiliated with Rady Children's Hospital San Diego

This grant funds an undergraduate student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Children with aggressive neuroblastoma have poor cure rates despite intensive treatment, and new therapies are needed. Treatments that inhibit important proteins and pathways in neuroblastoma tumors are likely to be more effective with fewer side effects. Kinases are proteins that control signals in cancer cells, leading to cancer cell growth and spread. This study proposes to test a certain inhibitor to determine its effectiveness against neuroblastoma cells and tumors. The results of these studies will determine whether BLU-667 is effective against neuroblastoma, potentially leading to clinical trials using BLU-667 for treatment of children with neuroblastoma.

The Pennsylvania State University Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 06-01-2020 through 05-31-2021
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Hershey, PA
Institution: Pennsylvania State University affiliated with Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital

This grant funds an undergraduate student and medical student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia is a deadly childhood cancer that affects blood cells. The current treatment uses highly toxic medications. The goal of the proposed project is to test the efficacy of a novel, less toxic, targeted treatment for T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. This award will train the student to perform experiments to test the efficacy of the novel treatment in T-cell leukemia and to determine the mechanisms of drug action against leukemia cells.

Children's Cancer Therapy Development Institute Summer Fellow

Funded: 06-01-2020 through 08-31-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Beaverton, OR
Institution: Children's Cancer Therapy Development Institute

This grant funds an undergraduate student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. This project will validate a drug for the medulloblastoma, a type of brain tumor, specifically tumors that spread from the original cerebellar location to the covering of the brain and spine (the meninges). 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.

The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 06-01-2020 through 09-30-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Philadelphia, PA
Institution: The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia affiliated with University of Pennsylvania

This grant funds an undergraduate student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Children diagnosed with leukemia are often effectively treated in the beginning, but later relapse with their disease. Scientists now feel that this is in part due to the sanctuary that the bone marrow (BM) provides the leukemia cells. This prevents complete elimination and can set children up for relapse. This study aims to understand how the BM protects leukemia cells. Once we have identified the mechanisms by which that happens we can then begin to develop drugs to prevent it. This lab has recently identified an inflammatory process by which leukemia cells change the BM function and think this is a root cause of disease persistence and relapse. The project will test this hypothesis and find out how to prevent the leukemia from changing the BM and causing relapse.

Case Western Reserve University Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-26-2020 through 01-31-2021
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Cleveland, OH
Institution: Case Western Reserve University

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common and highly lethal bone cancer affecting children and adolescent populations. New therapies are desperately needed for this highly aggressive disease, as outcome for metastatic OS has not improved over the past few decades despite the utilization of aggressive combination chemotherapy. The summer fellow will focus on testing a novel CA-IX small molecule inhibitor using syngeneic OS tumors in vitro and in vivo. Activities generated through this Summer Fellowship grant will lay the foundation for pre-clinical data for the use of CA-IX inhibitor in future clinical trials.

University of Colorado Summer Fellow

Funded: 05-26-2020 through 07-02-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Aurora, CO
Institution: Children's Hospital Colorado affiliated with University of Colorado

This grant funds a student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. This lab specializes in harnessing the power of a particular type of immune cells called macrophages and microglia which are the body's scavengers. This is done by blocking a "don't eat me" signal called CD47. The CD47 protein acts as a "don't eat me" signal to macrophages which normally engulf and devour cancer cells and other diseased and dying cells. It turns out that nearly every kind of cancer uses CD47 to evade these macrophages. Covering up the CD47 a "don't eat me" protein allows the immune cells to find and swallow cancer cells. Here we will test whether the ability of macrophages to eat tumor cells can be increased by blocking another immune dampening molecule called adenosine which is rapidly increased by tumor cells as they grow.

Creighton University Summer Fellow

Funded: 05-18-2020 through 02-28-2021
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Omaha, NE
Institution: Creighton University

This grant funds two undergraduate students to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Tumors have extensive mutations in their DNA which play important roles in cancer development. Particular mutations that are frequently found in tumors are likely important for promoting cancer development. BubR1 is a protein that regulates the proper separation of DNA during cell division, and therefore plays an important role in suppressing cancer formation. A mutation in BubR1 (R249Q) is specifically observed in approximately 15% of pediatric cancers and is not found in adult cancers. Researchers will study this mutation and results may identify a unique mechanism of tumor development controlled by BubR1 specifically during developmental processes, uniquely promoting pediatric cancer. This project will provide an opportunity for these two students to spend the summer performing biomedical science research utilizing well-established and easy to learn techniques, to enhance their excitement in pediatric cancer research.

University of California, San Francisco Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-18-2020 through 08-17-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: San Francisco, CA
Institution: University of California, San Francisco affiliated with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital

This grant funds an undergraduate student and a medical student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Neuroblastoma is a pediatric tumor in which a large subset has very poor survival. Researchers are trying to understand what makes this subset so deadly and have developed a system to test combinations of genes apart and together to determine how they could make certain neuroblastoma more aggressive. They will test whether certain mutations may make the neuroblastoma tumor cells more invasive and if these mutations could cause other critical gene expression changes in high risk neuroblastoma.

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-15-2020 through 02-15-2021
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Blacksburg, VA
Institution: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

This grant funds a medical student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Pediatric glioblastoma (p-GBM) is a lethal brain tumor that can affect children. This cancer is difficult to treat due to several factors, including the tumor's resistance to conventional therapies as well as the sensitivity of the surrounding healthy brain tissue. Children who undergo surgery to remove the brain tumor live an additional three to six years on average, though the quality of life may be low. Phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) is a protein family that normally regulates cell replication and survival. However, when it functions incorrectly, cells can experience unchecked growth and cause cancer. Inhibiting this protein family is a viable treatment option for cancer but blocking the whole PI3K family has severe side effects. It is imperative to understand each member of the PI3K family to better develop treatments that involve them.

Georgetown University Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-15-2020 through 10-30-2021
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Washington, DC
Institution: Georgetown University affiliated with MedStar Georgetown University Hospital

This grant funds an undergraduate student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. Ewing sarcoma is a cancer that primarily occurs in children, adolescents, and young adults. While we don't know why certain people get Ewing sarcoma, we do know that most patients have the same problem with genes in their cancer cell. Just as genes affect your eye color, the Ewing sarcoma cells have a special gene, EWS-FLI1, that keeps the cancer growing. EWS-FLI1 is critical for Ewing sarcoma cells to survive. If you turn off EWS-FLI1, Ewing sarcoma cells die. This project will study exactly how YK-4-279, a chemical in a new drug in clinical trials, affects key survival processes, called transcription and splicing, to enable design of optimized drugs. 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.

Children's Hospital, Los Angeles Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-01-2020 through 10-31-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Los Angeles, CA
Institution: Children's Hospital Los Angeles

This grant funds two students to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. The experience may encourage them to choose childhood cancer research as a specialty. Project 1: Neuroblastomas are an enigmatic cancer of childhood with subtypes that have extremely good or poor survival. Poor prognosis neuroblastomas contain normal immune cells that help tumors grow. Important questions are 1) what is the repertoire of immune cells in neuroblastomas at time of diagnosis, 2) how the interplay between normal and tumor cells changes when tumors recur. The Summer Fellow will analyze images of tumors at recurrence and compare to the diagnosis images. These findings will provide insights into the types of immune cells that cancer cells rely on and may allow identification of new targets of therapy. Project 2: Decline in brain function may happen after irradiation to the brain in children. It is hard to predict the extent and speed by which it happens. There is suggestion that more rapid injury happens in areas with iron deposition. Using a novel MRI method that allows chemical identification and quantification of iron in the brain, the Summer Fellow will characterize the imaging changes in white matter of the brain in children who have been treated with radiation for their brain tumors. This will allow to then correlate the changes with future outcome of their cognitive function.

University of Wisconsin-Madison Summer Fellow

Researcher Photo

Funded: 05-01-2020 through 12-31-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Madison, WI
Institution: University of Wisconsin-Madison affiliated with American Family Children's Hospital

This grant funds an undergraduate student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. High risk neuroblastoma remains a challenge to cure with only 50% survival, despite multi-modality treatment. Natural killer (NK) cells have been previously shown to have activity versus neuroblastoma but have not been consistently successful in clinical trials. In similar fashion to how people receive flu shots, this project will treat bone marrow transplant recipients with 3 doses of a vaccine, with or without anti-PD1 therapy to stimulate T and NK cells, to introduce their immune system to what neuroblastoma looks like, so in the event this tumor tries to grow, the immune system will stop it and kill it before making the patient sick. 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.

The University of Tennessee Summer Fellow

Funded: 05-01-2020 through 09-30-2020
Funding Type: St. Baldrick's Summer Fellow
Institution Location: Memphis, TN
Institution: University of Tennessee Health Science Center

This grant funds a medical student to complete work in pediatric oncology research for the summer. This year it is estimated that 800 children will be diagnosed with osteosarcoma (bone cancer). The lab has identified a gene (WNT5B) that is too high in a subset of osteosarcomas. By making a cell line that removes WNT5B, the lab will compare its growth to the original cells and target this gene in those cancers that have it to design a specific targeted therapy.