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Cancer Biology Program - 01

$36,868P30FY2017CANIH

Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT02989636Trial NCT02516670Trial NCT02491411Trial NCT02489357Trial NCT02029950Trial NCT01935947Trial NCT01870596Trial NCT01783171Trial NCT01757639Trial NCT01578109Trial NCT01349972Trial NCT01349959Trial NCT01330173Trial NCT01264432Trial NCT01207726Trial NCT01207687Trial NCT01139970Trial NCT01132573Trial NCT01061749Trial NCT00971737Trial NCT00963807Trial NCT00899951Trial NCT00899548Trial NCT00898482Trial NCT00897338Trial NCT00897273Trial NCT00847171Trial NCT00795002Trial NCT00727441Trial NCT00673569Trial NCT00670917Trial NCT00660348Trial NCT00641303Trial NCT00641147Trial NCT00631137Trial NCT00616967Trial NCT00602771Trial NCT00588991Trial NCT00566098Trial NCT00524017Trial NCT00499733Trial NCT00499486Trial NCT00493025Trial NCT00492921Trial NCT00489281Trial NCT00478062Trial NCT00478010Trial NCT00471653Trial NCT00470093Trial NCT00469820Trial NCT00445484Trial NCT00433472Trial NCT00425477Trial NCT00407966Trial NCT00401024Trial NCT00389610Trial NCT00387465Trial NCT00381550Trial NCT00373191Trial NCT00369681Trial NCT00368914Trial NCT00363649Trial NCT00361296Trial NCT00356928Trial NCT00354640Trial NCT00343447Trial NCT00336063Trial NCT00334542Trial NCT00324870Trial NCT00313560Trial NCT00311623Trial NCT00305760Trial NCT00303927Trial NCT00293410Trial NCT00293397Trial NCT00293280Trial NCT00290732Trial NCT00287989Trial NCT00287872Trial NCT00281970Trial NCT00281866Trial NCT00278200Trial NCT00278161Trial NCT00278109Trial NCT00276744Trial NCT00276601Trial NCT00276588Trial NCT00274768Trial NCT00265915Trial NCT00265837Trial NCT00262834Trial NCT00258206Trial NCT00258180Trial NCT00255775Trial NCT00255710Trial NCT00245115Trial NCT00244959Trial NCT00242996Trial NCT00238368Trial NCT00238277

Abstract

ABSTRACT The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center (SKCCC) Cancer Biology (CB) Program's overall goal is to understand the cellular and molecular alterations that drive human tumorigenesis and to exploit the translational potential of this information for cancer diagnosis, therapy and prevention. The translational mission was accentuated in the current cycle through the addition of Program members with expertise in developing clinical trials, translating findings from the Program. The Program has been part of the CCSG for over 25 years and is composed of 39 SKCCC faculty members representing eight departments of the School of (Medicine, Oncology, Otolaryngology?Head and Neck Surgery, Pathology, Radiation Oncology and Molecular Radiation Sciences, Surgery, Molecular Biology and Genetics, Biophysics and Biophysical Chemistry), one from the Bloomberg School of Public Health (Biochemistry and Molecular Biology) and two from the Whiting School of Engineering (Biomedical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering). Faculty members hold appointments in five different graduate programs in the School of Medicine (Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Human Genetics and Molecular Biology, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Pharmacology, and Pathobiology) and one in the Bloomberg School of Public Health (Biochemistry and Molecular Biology). The Program is supported by $21 million in NCI and other peer-reviewed support and has 835 total publications? 228 (27%) are Intra-Programmatic, 327 (38%) are Inter-Programmatic and 317 (38%) were multi-institutional collaborations. Virtually all faculty members are housed in the SKCCC Research Complex Buildings, and there are more than 20 graduate students and over 60 Postdoctoral research fellows in the Program. Under the direction of Stephen Baylin, M.D., and Victor Velculescu, M.D., Ph.D., the specific aims of the CB Program are: Aim 1. To define genetic abnormalities that drive human cancer initiation and progression. Program members will continue to define the basic function of the genes and molecular mechanisms underlying human cancer, particularly those that may be amenable to therapeutic or diagnostic intervention. Aim 2. To define the molecular origins of epigenetic changes that underlie tumor initiation and progression and the signaling events they control, and harness this information to design therapeutic strategies and devise biomarker strategies. Aim 3. To translate basic and preclinical findings to investigator-initiated clinical trials led by CB Program members and members of other Programs throughout the SKCCC. The basic research in the Program has increasing translational significance that will continue to move to clinical testing by highly Inter-Programmatic teams in the areas of molecular marker strategies for cancer risk assessment, diagnosis and prognosis, and new strategies for cancer treatment and prevention. Members contribute significantly to the GI, Head and Neck, and Prostate SPOREs, and the leader of the Head and Neck SPORE is a Program member.

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