August 15, 2012

 

Chemotherapy research gets critical investment

 

Hamilton, Ont. August 15, 2012McMaster University’s Anna Dvorkin-Gheva received a $119,000 grant from the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation to study drugs that can be combined with current chemotherapy to make it more effective.

 

The post-doctoral fellow in the Department of Biochemistry and Biomedical Sciences was among eight McMaster researchers, who received nearly $1.8 million in grants from the foundation to support research projects and fellowships. Across the province, $9.9 million in grants was awarded.

 

Dvorkin-Gheva will study the effects chemo-sensitizers have on breast cancer tumours. Instead of looking at new treatment options that would take time before becoming the preferred therapy by practitioners, she is looking to modify existing therapies in order to bring better care to patients sooner.

 

“I know people who are currently living with breast cancer and it has been hard to see friends go through such difficult treatments,” Dvorkin-Gheva said. “What I really want to do is to provide hope by making established treatments more effective and increase survival rates.”

 

The drugs Dvorkin-Gheva is looking at within her research are already established compounds with a lot of information compiled about them, which will hopefully be a strong base of knowledge to work from and help to develop improvements faster.

 

Current anti-cancer drugs don’t provide a complete cure and patients with a subtype breast cancer that is particularly aggressive (triple-negative) have much lower survival rates in the years following treatment, with only 30 per cent of patients treated surviving more than five years.

 

The other McMaster researchers to receive funding through the CBCF’s fellowship program are:

 

Punam Rana

McMaster University – Hamilton

Chemoprevention in Breast Cancer

Area of focus: Prevention

Funding approved: $143,000 over 2 years

 

Robin Hallett

McMaster University – Hamilton

Identification of agents that overcome endocrine resistance

Area of focus: Treatment

Funding approved: $47,500 over 1 year

 

Hanxin Lin

McMaster University – Hamilton

Screening for novel inhibitors to block breast cancer-induced bone pain

Area of focus: Biology of Breast Cancer

Funding approved: $142,500 over 3 years

 

Justin Kale

McMaster University – Hamilton

Characterization of Bax Activation Mechanism in Human Breast Cancer

Area of focus: Biology of Breast Cancer

Funding approved: $112,500 over 3 years

 

McMaster researchers to receive research projects grants are:

 

Anita Bane
McMaster University - Hamilton
Prognosis in Basal-like Breast Cancer (BLBC)
Area of focus: Early Detection, Diagnosis, Prognosis
Funding approved: $380,918 over 3 years

 

John Hassell
McMaster University - Hamilton
Role of acetylcholine receptors in breast cancer
Area of focus: Biology of Breast Cancer
Funding approved: $449,400 over 3 years

 

Tim Whelan
McMaster University - Hamilton
Prospective Cohort Study Evaluating Risk of Local Recurrence Following Breast Conserving Surgery Alone in Low Risk Luminal A Breast Cancer
Area of focus: Early Detection, Diagnosis, Prognosis
Funding approved: $444,752 over 3 years

 

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For further information and to arrange interviews, please contact:

Veronica McGuire

Media Relations

Faculty of Health Sciences

McMaster University

905-525-9140, ext. 22169

vmcguir@mcmaster.ca