The capability to develop new anti-cancer agents is essential to the mission of the Cancer Center. The Translational Pharmacology and Early Therapeutic Trials (TPETT) Program accomplishes this by: 1)supporting the preclinical development of anti-cancer agents identified by DF/HCC investigators, and 2)defining the toxicity, pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of new agents from the Center, NCI and pharmaceutical companies In Early Phase trials. The overall objective of the TPETT Program is, thus, to foster a coordinated effort: through which promising new leads and agents are developed for evaluation in Early Phase clinical trials and then in Phase 11 in conjunction with the Clinical-based Programs. The Program facilitates the development of anti-cancer agents by combining basic science and clinical resources at the DFCI, MGH, BWH, BIDMC and CHB.
Its Specific Aims are to: 1) strengthen and expand preclinical drug discovery and development efforts;2) perform translational studies to identify responsive subsets of tumors and confirm mechanism of action in the clinic;3) conduct Phase I, l-ll pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic trials of new anti-cancer agents with correlative laboratory and imaging studies to define biological endpoints and mechanisms;and 4) develop biomarkers for drug response, resistance and toxicity. The 49 members of this program represent six DF/HCC institutions and eight departments of HMS. In 2009, members received $10.4 million (total costs) in cancer-relevant funding, including $2.7 million from NCI and $370,000 from other peer-reviewed sponsors. In addition, members published 500 papers during the project period (2006 to 2010), of which 12.4% were intra-programmatic, 50% were inter-programmatic, and 25.4% were inter-institutional. The Program has been continuously funded as a CCSG Program for ten years. At the time of the last competitive renewal in 2005, the Program received Excellent merit.
Agoston, Agoston T; Pham, Thai H; Odze, Robert D et al. (2018) Columnar-Lined Esophagus Develops via Wound Repair in a Surgical Model of Reflux Esophagitis. Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol 6:389-404 |
Barber, Lauren; Gerke, Travis; Markt, Sarah C et al. (2018) Family History of Breast or Prostate Cancer and Prostate Cancer Risk. Clin Cancer Res 24:5910-5917 |
Kwee, Brian J; Budina, Erica; Najibi, Alexander J et al. (2018) CD4 T-cells regulate angiogenesis and myogenesis. Biomaterials 178:109-121 |
Madsen, Thomas; Braun, Danielle; Peng, Gang et al. (2018) Efficient computation of the joint probability of multiple inherited risk alleles from pedigree data. Genet Epidemiol 42:528-538 |
Chen, Jingjing; Guccini, Ilaria; Di Mitri, Diletta et al. (2018) Compartmentalized activities of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex sustain lipogenesis in prostate cancer. Nat Genet 50:219-228 |
Li, Andrew G; Murphy, Elizabeth C; Culhane, Aedin C et al. (2018) BRCA1-IRIS promotes human tumor progression through PTEN blockade and HIF-1? activation. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E9600-E9609 |
McBrayer, Samuel K; Mayers, Jared R; DiNatale, Gabriel J et al. (2018) Transaminase Inhibition by 2-Hydroxyglutarate Impairs Glutamate Biosynthesis and Redox Homeostasis in Glioma. Cell 175:101-116.e25 |
Stopsack, Konrad H; Gonzalez-Feliciano, Amparo G; Peisch, Samuel F et al. (2018) A Prospective Study of Aspirin Use and Prostate Cancer Risk by TMPRSS2:ERG Status. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 27:1231-1233 |
Kamareddine, Layla; Wong, Adam C N; Vanhove, Audrey S et al. (2018) Activation of Vibrio cholerae quorum sensing promotes survival of an arthropod host. Nat Microbiol 3:243-252 |
Schilit, Samantha L P; Morton, Cynthia C (2018) 3C-PCR: a novel proximity ligation-based approach to phase chromosomal rearrangement breakpoints with distal allelic variants. Hum Genet 137:55-62 |
Showing the most recent 10 out of 411 publications