Exploring The Role Of The Bcl-2 Family In Haematopoiesis And Haematopoietic Malignancy
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$190,980.00
Summary
Chronic Lymphocytic Leukaemia and Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma comprise the majority of blood cancers and are both disease in which the cell death pathway plays a vital role in both the development of the cancer cell and the resistance to chemotherapy. This project aims to examine the mechanisms of cancer in these tumours focussing on lymphoid cancers, and examine the role of new treatments targeting this pathway.
A Phase I Study Of Autologous CD19 Specific Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cells For Therapy Of Relapsed And Refractory B-cell Leukaemia And Lymphoma (The Auto-CAR19 Trial).
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$584,666.00
Summary
Most people with leukaemia and lymphoma who relapse early after chemotherapy die of their disease. Inserting special genes into immune cells can enable them to kill leukaemia and lymphoma and has led to dramatic cures, but the cost of the viral vectors used to make these cells is prohibitively expensive. We will make leukaemia and lymphoma specific immune cells from patients using an inexpensive non-viral system, then administer the immune cells to patients to assess their safety and efficacy.
A Phase I Study Of PiggyBac CD19 Specific Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cells For Therapy Of Persistent And Relapsed B-cell Leukaemia And Lymphoma Post Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation (The CARTELL Study).
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$357,590.00
Summary
Most people with relapsed leukaemia and lymphoma after bone marrow transplant die of their disease. Inserting special genes into immune cells can enable them to kill leukaemia and lymphoma and has led to dramatic cures, but there is little experience in bone marrow transplant patients. We will make leukaemia and lymphoma specific immune cells from normal bone marrow transplant donors, then administer the immune cells to transplant patients to assess their safety and effectiveness.
Translating Advances In Molecular Oncology Into Improved Care For Patients With Haematological Malignancies
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$411,327.00
Summary
The purpose of my research is to develop and integrate into routine practice better treatment paradigms for patients with blood cancers – leukaemias, lymphomas, myeloma. My research seeks to (i) bring a new class of anti-cancer targeted therapy, inhibitors of Bcl-2, into routine care; (ii) discover the genetic changes that explain why slow growing lymphoid cancers change into rapidly fatal lymphomas; and (iii) integrate new molecular tests into the management of patients with acute leukaemia.
A New Model Of T Cell Lymphoma Induced By An Ets Transcription Factor
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$679,091.00
Summary
The identification of leukaemia-causing genes is crucial as once these are found new specific drugs can be developed. This is best exemplified by the new drug, Gleevec, that inhibits a leukaemia-causing gene in myeloid leukaemia. This has allowed a large reduction of high chemotherapy treatment but has induced remission in around 80% of patients. This proposal has identified a novel leukaemia-causing gene for T cell leukaemia. Therefore, new specific drugs can now be made to inhibit it.
CHARACTERISATION AND ANTIBODY-MEDIATED TARGETING OF A NOVEL SPECIFIC MARKER FOR T CELL ALL/LYMPHOBLASTIC LYMPHOMA
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$586,146.00
Summary
Improvements in treatment have seen some types of leukaemia (a cancer of white blood cells) being curable in up to 90% of patients with the disease; however, other types of leukaemia do not respond to these drugs and new approaches are needed. We have discovered that some leukaemia cells express a unique protein not made by any other cell type. This project will analyse how this aberrant protein is made and how this process contributes to the development of leukaemia. Also, since this protein is ....Improvements in treatment have seen some types of leukaemia (a cancer of white blood cells) being curable in up to 90% of patients with the disease; however, other types of leukaemia do not respond to these drugs and new approaches are needed. We have discovered that some leukaemia cells express a unique protein not made by any other cell type. This project will analyse how this aberrant protein is made and how this process contributes to the development of leukaemia. Also, since this protein is unique to the leukaemia cells, it offers the opportunity to develop magic bullets able to target specifically to the leukaemia cells and to kill them. This project aims to make one such drug and to conduct preliminary testing.Read moreRead less