) The Developmental Therapeutics program is new in the Cancer Center since the last review and developed from a plan initiated by our external advisor, Dr. Tempero. Many members were formerly in the Adult Clinical Oncology program while others, including the program leader, Dr. Kraft, were recruited to the UCCC. The scientific goal of the Developmental Therapeutics program is to develop and evaluate novel therapeutic compounds for the prevention and treatment of cancer and to reduce both the incidence and mortality from this disease. Through the establishment of close interactions between basic research laboratories, clinical scientists, NCI, and the pharmaceutical industry, the most rapid development and assessment of new treatment modalities will be accomplished. Compounds developed and advanced to clinical trials fall within the research foci of program members and are based upon investigator-initiated scientific hypotheses, or fulfill a need for therapeutic options within a specific disease area. The programmatic goals are to provide the infrastructure, including cores and clinics, to allow the scientific exploration of new treatment modalities. Additional recruitments will be undertaken to expand the investigation of novel therapy approaches. Seminars, discussion groups, training, and courses are provided to the members. This program is organized into three major interdisciplinary research areas: Early Clinical Trials, Clinical and Molecular Pharmacology, and New Drug Discovery. This program is under the leadership of Andrew S. Kraft, MD. Dr. Kraft has a strong commitment to work with program members to develop a scientifically based approach to the design and implementation of novel therapies. The program consists of 31 faculty members with a total of $6.8 million in annual direct costs. This program has grown rapidly over the last several years, which has resulted in the recruitment of key faculty. Dr. S. Gail Eckhardt (staff investigator) has instituted a phase I trial clinic and opened many new clinical studies. Dr. Kraft is the PI on an NCI training grant and a new Clinical Pharmacology Core provides essential services. The goals for the next five years involve the expansion of the faculty with recruitment of a translational gene therapist and the development of a viral production facility, and an additional core to measure biological markers of drug action in vivo.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30CA046934-15
Application #
6589980
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Project Start
2002-05-06
Project End
2003-01-31
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
15
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$250,404
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Colorado Denver
Department
Type
DUNS #
065391526
City
Aurora
State
CO
Country
United States
Zip Code
80045
Altieri, Lisa; Miller, Kimberly A; Huh, Jimi et al. (2018) Prevalence of sun protection behaviors in Hispanic youth residing in a high ultraviolet light environment. Pediatr Dermatol 35:e52-e54
Kwak, Jeff W; Laskowski, Jennifer; Li, Howard Y et al. (2018) Complement Activation via a C3a Receptor Pathway Alters CD4+ T Lymphocytes and Mediates Lung Cancer Progression. Cancer Res 78:143-156
Hoefert, Jaimee E; Bjerke, Glen A; Wang, Dongmei et al. (2018) The microRNA-200 family coordinately regulates cell adhesion and proliferation in hair morphogenesis. J Cell Biol 217:2185-2204
Kim, Seongsoon; Park, Donghyeon; Choi, Yonghwa et al. (2018) A Pilot Study of Biomedical Text Comprehension using an Attention-Based Deep Neural Reader: Design and Experimental Analysis. JMIR Med Inform 6:e2
Sclafani, Robert A; Hesselberth, Jay R (2018) O Cdc7 kinase where art thou? Curr Genet 64:677-680
Shearn, Colin T; Orlicky, David J; Petersen, Dennis R (2018) Dysregulation of antioxidant responses in patients diagnosed with concomitant Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis/Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Exp Mol Pathol 104:1-8
Kim, Jihye; Yoo, Minjae; Shin, Jimin et al. (2018) Systems Pharmacology-Based Approach of Connecting Disease Genes in Genome-Wide Association Studies with Traditional Chinese Medicine. Int J Genomics 2018:7697356
Riemondy, Kent A; Gillen, Austin E; White, Emily A et al. (2018) Dynamic temperature-sensitive A-to-I RNA editing in the brain of a heterothermic mammal during hibernation. RNA 24:1481-1495
Petersen, Dennis R; Orlicky, David J; Roede, James R et al. (2018) Aberrant expression of redox regulatory proteins in patients with concomitant primary Sclerosing cholangitis/inflammatory bowel disease. Exp Mol Pathol 105:32-36
Couts, Kasey L; Bemis, Judson; Turner, Jacqueline A et al. (2018) ALK Inhibitor Response in Melanomas Expressing EML4-ALK Fusions and Alternate ALK Isoforms. Mol Cancer Ther 17:222-231

Showing the most recent 10 out of 1634 publications