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SPORE Grant Boosts Breast Cancer Research Behind the Cancer Headlines® The grant will provide $2.5
million in the first year, with total recommended funding over the five-year
period of more than $13 million. The grant recognizes VICC's
researchers for their innovative leadership in the development of new ways to
treat and prevent breast cancer. The NCI began the SPORE program 11
years ago to bridge the gap between the laboratory and the clinic and to foster
innovative research with clear potential to make improvements in cancer
treatment and prevention. Currently, 55 SPOREs are
distributed among 24 institutions, according to the list provided at the recent
11th SPORE Investigators' Workshop hosted by the NCI. "To be awarded a SPORE,
centers have to be doing research that the NCI believes will really make an
impact on the disease," said Dr. Carlos L. Arteaga,
Professor of Medicine and Cancer Biology, Ingram Professor of Cancer Research
and director of the new SPORE. "It is wonderful to have a seat at the
table with the top breast cancer research centers in the country." SPOREs
are organized at cancer centers around a specific type of
cancer. Each project must involve both basic and clinical scientists, must include
a population-based research component, and must focus on translational
research. This translational focus includes not only bringing discoveries in
the laboratory to the clinical setting for investigation but also bringing
clinical phenomena back to the laboratory to understand them and potentially
develop novel ways to intervene. "The SPOREs
have been extraordinarily successful at accomplishing just what the
Comprehensive Cancer Centers are all about – bringing basic scientists and
clinicians together and providing a mechanism that ensures their
collaboration," said Dr. Harold Moses, director of SPOREs
fund specific scientific projects as well as core
resources to be shared by the SPORE investigators. These cores provide
sophisticated equipment and expertise vital to the success of the SPOREs. The SPOREs also provide
important funding for career development and pilot projects, which are
supplemented by matching funds from Vanderbilt-Ingram's breast cancer
SPORE will support four scientific projects: ·
HER (erbB) tyrosine kinase inhibitors
in treatment-naďve, operable breast cancer. One goal is to identify which
breast cancers respond to these types of drugs as well as surrogate markers
predictive of EGF receptor inactivation in situ. ·
Predictive markers of
clinical response to paclitaxel therapy in Stage
II/III breast cancer. This project will test the hypothesis evidence of tumor
cell arrest in the M phase of the cell cycle to predict response to paclitaxel. This study and the EGFR inhibitor project will
use mass spectrometry in pre- and post-therapy biopsies to discover proteins
that predict for drug sensitivity and resistance. ·
Molecular imaging of
breast carcinoma and its therapeutic response. This highly innovative project
will use cutting-edge mass spectrometry approaches to analyze protein
expression in breast tumors compared to normal tissue, with the aim of
identifying protein profiles associated with different disease states as well
as response to therapy. ·
Molecular epidemiology
of proliferative breast disease. This project will
define the role of the transforming growth factor beta type II receptor and
additional components of the TGF beta and EGFR signaling pathways in the
development of pre-cancerous lesions of the breast. SOURCE: DISCLAIMER!Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) is a service of Willis-Knighton Cancer Center.The articles in Behind the Cancer Headlines (TM) are written by national medical editorsand writers who review current literature and develop timely articles in non-technicallanguage. Sources of information are cited for each article. If you have questions, referto the sources listed or to your physician. Willis-Knighton Cancer Center is notresponsible for content. Articles are updated on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. This information is provided for information only and is not a substitute for informationfrom or care by a physician. |
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