GGrantIndex
← Search

Experimental Therapeutics

$252,828P30FY2015CANIH

Albert Einstein College Of Medicine, Inc, Bronx NY

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Paper 39499645Paper 39392861Paper 39378878Paper 39332920Paper 39259591Paper 39207105Paper 39193906Paper 39127153Paper 39081315Paper 39028768Paper 39025270Paper 38902475Paper 38898085Paper 38896451Paper 38863869Paper 38778498Paper 38753503Paper 38717519Paper 38700353Paper 38699331Paper 38679747Paper 38657656Paper 38645169Paper 38643166Paper 38608634Paper 38597673Paper 38571760Paper 38565851Paper 38559037Paper 38477945Paper 38463959Paper 38458178Paper 38436133Paper 38405931Paper 38402617Paper 38400039Paper 38387080Paper 38352476Paper 38334805Trial NCT05016622Trial NCT04514484Trial NCT04401670Trial NCT03648983Trial NCT02774291Trial NCT02649569Trial NCT02578888Trial NCT02575872Trial NCT02527304Trial NCT02507076Trial NCT02382419Trial NCT02277561Trial NCT02112552Trial NCT02073968Trial NCT02038153Trial NCT02009436Trial NCT01958580Trial NCT01939210Trial NCT01899326Trial NCT01899261Trial NCT01897454Trial NCT01897441Trial NCT01857271Trial NCT01772420Trial NCT01697293Trial NCT01695941Trial NCT01605032Trial NCT01408160Trial NCT01367301Trial NCT01351909Trial NCT01319539Trial NCT01231906Trial NCT01145430Trial NCT01142401Trial NCT01061606Trial NCT01041027Trial NCT01001910Trial NCT00950365Trial NCT00470301Trial NCT00450944Trial NCT00437034Trial NCT00392353Trial NCT00324740Trial NCT00182767Trial NCT00179348Trial NCT00121251Trial NCT00096317Trial NCT00066638Trial NCT00057863Trial NCT00055692Trial NCT00030706Trial NCT00019474Trial NCT00004864Trial NCT00004863Trial NCT00003867Trial NCT00002461Patent 9671391Patent 7709613Patent 6821725Patent 6013468Patent 5876979

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY (See instructions): Experimental Therapeutics is the programmatic home for basic and clinical investigators involved in a broad spectrum of studies in cancer therapeutics. The goals of the program are: (1) to develop novel agents for the treatment of cancer based upon targets identified in this and other programs, (2) to improve the activities of established classes of drugs by structural modification and/or enhanced understanding of their pharmacological properties, (3) to develop more effective clinical therapeutic regimens within the context of disease-focused working groups. Preclinical drug development continues in the areas of transition-state inhibitors, novel microtubule-stabilizing agents, and a diverse spectrum of immunotherapeutics. Two transition-state inhibitors are now in clinical trials, one advanced. A third is moving forward to the clinic. A monoclonal antibody (moab) to melanin linked to 188-rhenium completed Phase I clinical trials for the treatment of advanced melanoma. Other moab-radionuclides are being developed targeting cervical and pancreatic cancers. An agent for the prevention of the dermatitis due to EGFR inhibitors recently entered a Phase II clinical trial. The spectrum of agents studied has broadened to encompassing aptamers, high-affinity antibodies, agents to block apoptotic pathways or targeted to surface glycans. Research in biologicals is focused on co-inhibitory elements within the immune synapse with the objective of developing agents that modulate tolerance, research activities supported by the expanding capabilities in protein production, synthetic chemistry, x-ray crystallography, NMR, and mass spectroscopy with bioinformatics and systems and computational biology support. Disease-focused working groups encompassing basic and clinical investigators have been expanded in breast, gynecological, lung, and head/neck cancers and in the hematological malignancies. Neuro-oncology and neuroendocrine tumors groups were recently formed. Recruitment of clinical and translational researchers has been enhanced by a recently funded Paul Calabresi Career Development Award for Clinical Oncology Scholars. Access to patients for clinical trials has been enhanced at the affiliated Montefiore Medical Center by the creation of the multidisciplinary Montefiore-Einstein Center for Cancer Care and the recruitment of a cadre of clinician investigators. AECC members play important roles in ECOG-ATRIN, GOG, COG, and the AIDS Malignancy Consortium. There are currently 54 members from 23 departments, supported by 10 NCI grants ($2.6M Direct) and 21 other peer-reviewed cancer-relevant grants ($10.2M Direct). Since the last CCSG review there have been 537 cancer-relevant research papers by members of this program of which 29% represent intraprogrammatic, and 27% represent interprogrammatic publications.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →