The Cancer Therapeutics Program has been continuously approved by the NCI CCSG since 1993. The Program seeks to improve patient outcomes through the rapid development of novel research ideas which are translatable to the clinical arena and ideally can be individualized to disease and patient-specific settings. The Programmatic goals are as follows: 1) Bring forward novel preclinical breakthroughs from the bench to the bedside and bring relevant cancer therapeutics from the clinic to the lab in order to enhance the mechanistic understanding of cancer therapeutics; 2) Take new drugs from first-in-human Phase I trials to disease-specific clinical trials that will have a significant impact on establishing new standards of care; and 3) Develop pharmacodynamic and predictive markers to select the best drugs for the patients most likely to respond. These goals are applied across four research themes: targeted therapies, combinations to overcome resistance, immunotherapy, and predictive and pharmacodynamic biomarkers. This Program, which was rated as ?Excellent? at the time of the prior CCSG renewal application, is led by Program Co-Leaders Drs. Ravi Amaravadi and Naomi Haas, who were jointly appointed in September 2013. They succeed Drs. Peter O'Dwyer and Corey Langer, who were asked to become leaders of new cross-Programmatic translational research Initiatives in pancreatic and lung cancer, respectively. The new Co-Leaders were chosen because they have complementary skill sets that match the future directions of the Program. Dr. Amaravadi has expertise in the preclinical-to-translational space, and Dr. Haas has expertise in taking Phase I studies into disease-specific studies and developing multi-institution clinical trials. Drs. Amaravadi and Haas are NCI- funded researchers who bring their scientific vision, innovativeness and energy to this Program, which includes an emphasis on basic and translational research. The 25 Program members represent 10 departments in the Perelman School of Medicine. During the current project period, translational research has continued to be a major focus. Members currently have $6.7M in annual research grant funding (direct costs), of which $3.6M is peer-reviewed and $2.4M is NCI-funded. There have been a total of 361 cancer-related publications authored by Program members during the project period. Of these, 12% are intra-Programmatic, 39% are inter- Programmatic and 57% are multi-institutional.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30CA016520-41
Application #
9359396
Study Section
Subcommittee I - Transistion to Independence (NCI)
Program Officer
Marino, Michael A
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2016-12-01
Budget End
2017-11-30
Support Year
41
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Type
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Garfall, Alfred L; Stadtmauer, Edward A; Hwang, Wei-Ting et al. (2018) Anti-CD19 CAR T cells with high-dose melphalan and autologous stem cell transplantation for refractory multiple myeloma. JCI Insight 3:
Jang, Jeong Hoon; Manatunga, Amita K; Taylor, Andrew T et al. (2018) Overall indices for assessing agreement among multiple raters. Stat Med 37:4200-4215
Scheel, John R; Kim, Eunhee; Partridge, Savannah C et al. (2018) MRI, Clinical Examination, and Mammography for Preoperative Assessment of Residual Disease and Pathologic Complete Response After Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer: ACRIN 6657 Trial. AJR Am J Roentgenol 210:1376-1385
Romero, Sally A D; Brown, Justin C; Bauml, Joshua M et al. (2018) Barriers to physical activity: a study of academic and community cancer survivors with pain. J Cancer Surviv 12:744-752
Hinderer, Christian; Katz, Nathan; Buza, Elizabeth L et al. (2018) Severe Toxicity in Nonhuman Primates and Piglets Following High-Dose Intravenous Administration of an Adeno-Associated Virus Vector Expressing Human SMN. Hum Gene Ther 29:285-298
Li, Jinyang; Byrne, Katelyn T; Yan, Fangxue et al. (2018) Tumor Cell-Intrinsic Factors Underlie Heterogeneity of Immune Cell Infiltration and Response to Immunotherapy. Immunity 49:178-193.e7
Raghunathan, Nirupa Jaya; Korenstein, Deborah; Li, Qing S et al. (2018) Determinants of mobile technology use and smartphone application interest in cancer patients. Cancer Med 7:5812-5819
Hordeaux, Juliette; Wang, Qiang; Katz, Nathan et al. (2018) The Neurotropic Properties of AAV-PHP.B Are Limited to C57BL/6J Mice. Mol Ther 26:664-668
Echevarría-Vargas, Ileabett M; Reyes-Uribe, Patricia I; Guterres, Adam N et al. (2018) Co-targeting BET and MEK as salvage therapy for MAPK and checkpoint inhibitor-resistant melanoma. EMBO Mol Med 10:
Torre, Eduardo; Dueck, Hannah; Shaffer, Sydney et al. (2018) Rare Cell Detection by Single-Cell RNA Sequencing as Guided by Single-Molecule RNA FISH. Cell Syst 6:171-179.e5

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