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Cancer Pharmacology

$29,643P30FY2020CANIH

Rbhs -Cancer Institute Of New Jersey, New Brunswick NJ

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT05639972Trial NCT05483491Trial NCT05296421Trial NCT04929015Trial NCT04920344Trial NCT04871516Trial NCT04751747Trial NCT04445844Trial NCT04294264Trial NCT04285268Trial NCT04253483Trial NCT04211259Trial NCT04179227Trial NCT04163952Trial NCT04146038Trial NCT04081688Trial NCT03902379Trial NCT03725449Trial NCT03677739Trial NCT03456843Trial NCT03448224Trial NCT03441321Trial NCT03428802Trial NCT03272633Trial NCT03257163Trial NCT03233555Trial NCT03229278Trial NCT03228147Trial NCT03112668Trial NCT03108911Trial NCT03102060Trial NCT03061175Trial NCT03028948Trial NCT02949284Trial NCT02885649Trial NCT02748564Trial NCT02699996Trial NCT02688517Trial NCT02688192Trial NCT02621398Trial NCT02526511Trial NCT02526498Trial NCT02458716Trial NCT02421575Trial NCT02420652Trial NCT02324621Trial NCT02324608Trial NCT02315196Trial NCT02295540Trial NCT02294617Trial NCT02250781Trial NCT02203604Trial NCT02203578Trial NCT02177838Trial NCT02144701Trial NCT02144675Trial NCT02105116Trial NCT01828476Trial NCT01694589Trial NCT01652014Trial NCT01649947Trial NCT01480154Trial NCT01417286Trial NCT01407562Trial NCT01303341Trial NCT01251172Trial NCT01032590Trial NCT01018836Trial NCT01009931Trial NCT01006369Trial NCT00996359Trial NCT00991315Trial NCT00966667Trial NCT00962845Trial NCT00946283Trial NCT00943709Trial NCT00939380Trial NCT00934895Trial NCT00909909Trial NCT00905918Trial NCT00900120Trial NCT00899808Trial NCT00899639Trial NCT00895115Trial NCT00891969Trial NCT00878657Trial NCT00866840Trial NCT00853125Trial NCT00813423Trial NCT00786682Trial NCT00770419Trial NCT00770055Trial NCT00769652Trial NCT00765765Trial NCT00749437Trial NCT00740805Trial NCT00728845Trial NCT00726596Trial NCT00669734Trial NCT00667901

Abstract

CANCER PHARMACOLOGY PROGRAM PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT The Cancer Pharmacology (CP) Program has the overall goal to discover and develop more effective cancer treatments through pharmacology-based preclinical research. The ultimate aim is to improve patient outcomes through innovative and integrative research in cancer target biology, chemical biology, medicinal chemistry, pharmaceutics and biomedical engineering. Defining molecular functions of cancer targets and leveraging this knowledge to drive translational bench-to-bedside and bedside-to-bench research in drug discovery and delivery are signature Program features that span the Rutgers/Princeton Consortium. CP provide a platform for productive, collaborative and impactful science and discoveries. CP has 37 members from 18 Departments, 7 Schools, 2 Universities. The Program is well funded with $16.5M annual direct peer-reviewed grant support, $6.1M of which is cancer-focused (13 R01 equivalent, and 6 Multi-PI). CP members published 746 papers (up from 522 in 2004-10), 29% of which are collaborative (18% intra- and 18% inter-programmatic) with 22% in top-tier journals and 53% collaborative with other institutions. This represents an increase in both total and collaborative publications compared with last project period. Impactful science includes regulation of growth pathways by GRM1 in melanoma, novel mechanisms of amino acid signaling by mTOR in colorectal cancer, and epigenetic regulation in pediatric glioblastomas/sarcomas. CP members revealed key roles of mTOR and antioxidant pathways in cardiac protection and chronic pain management, which have implications for reducing cardiac toxicity, a dose-limiting side effect of chemo-therapy, and for improving analgesia in advanced stage cancer patients. Based on fundamental insights into the biology of molecular targets, CP members determined the mode of action for riluzole (a repurposed ALS drug) targeting GRM1 in melanoma and identified determining factors for therapeutic response for rapamycin. CP members focused on development of novel therapeutics and drug delivery technologies, and identified novel anticancer agents including a compound that restores mutant p53 function, BMI-1 inhibitors, and prodrugs for riluzole and the CINJ-developed topoisomerase 1 inhibitor Genz-644282. They developed innovative tumor-targeting nanocarriers containig multiple therapeutic modalities (small molecules, toxins, nucleic acids, and peptides/antibodies) and imaging enhancers (e.g., rare earth elements and Mn3O4), enabling cancer detection and treatment. CP members work with other CINJ Programs, particularly the Clinical Investigations and Precision Therapeutics Program (CIPT), to translate bench discoveries to clinical trials, contributing significantly to CINJ?s translational pipeline. They also use feedback from trials to gain further insight into target biology and mechanisms of treatment response for agents such as riluzole to improve therapeutic approaches.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →