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2023 PCRF grant recipients announced for exploring new, safer treatments for pediatric cancers



The Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation (PCRF), a nonprofit focused on transforming pediatric cancer care by accelerating research breakthroughs, today announced the 19 recipients of its 2023 research grants. The researchers will receive $1,730,000 in funding to explore new and safer treatments for pediatric cancers. Of the recipients, six scientists are receiving PCRF funding for the first time.

For the balance, PCRF funding will support the continuation of ongoing research projects. Grant recipients will conduct their research at top institutions across the U.S, studying various types of childhood cancers. Many past researchers funded by PCRF have gone on to receive NIH funding after proving their initial concepts with the support of philanthropic dollars. “These grants encourage visionary researchers to advance science and develop the next generation of treatments to cure pediatric cancers and enhance quality of life,” said Jeri Wilson, Executive Director, Pediatric Cancer Research Foundation.

“The proposals we received this year are some of the most exciting we have ever had the privilege to consider and show great potential for moving us closer to desperately needed cures. Our only regret is that we didn’t have more money to invest.”

The 2023 grant recipients include:

• Susann Brady-Kalnay, PhD

Case Western Reserve University Hospital

Use of magnetic resonance fingerprinting for determining response to immunotherapy in pediatric brain tumors

• Mitchell Cairo, MD

New York Medical College, Marie Fareri Children’s Hospital

Cancer genetics, tumor immunology, and targeted treatments for childhood and adolescent hematological malignancies and solid tumors

• Brian Crompton, MD

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

Prospective validation of a prognostic liquid biopsy approach for pediatric Ewing Sarcoma

• Gregory Friedman, MD

University of Alabama at Birmingham

Directed drug delivery for pediatric High-Grade Glioma

• Josephine HaDuong, MD

Children’s Hospital of Orange County and University of California Irvine

Establishing a pediatric Medulloblastoma testing “pipeline”

• Alex Kentsis, MD

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center

Curative epigenetic therapies of refractory pediatric Sarcomas

• Eugenie Kleinerman, MD

MD Anderson Cancer Center

A novel dendritic cell vaccine and anti-PD1 for Osteosarcoma therapy

• Audrey Lasry, MD

New York University School of Medicine

Modulating the immune microenvironment in pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)

• John Ligon, MD

University of Florida

Investigating the immune response to RNA-nanoparticle vaccines and use of these vaccines in combination with immune checkpoint inhibitors for metastatic Osteosarcoma

• Michelle Monje, MD, PhD

Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford Therapies for High-Grade Glioma

• Theodore Moore, MD

Mattel Children’s Hospital, UCLA

Phase I/II therapeutic research trials and development of new treatment modality for incurable brain tumors

• Marie Nelson, MD

Children’s Research Institute (CNMC)

Neoadjuvant checkpoint inhibition and cryoablation therapy in relapsed or refractory pediatric solid tumors

• Cody Nesvick, MD

Mayo Clinic

Understand how SMARCB1 loss makes Atypical Teratoid Rhabdoid Tumor (ATRT) cells more vulnerable to treatment

• Ashley Plant-Fox, MD

Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago

Combination immunotherapy for Diffuse Intrinsic Pontine Glioma (DIPG)

• Kathleen Sakamoto, MD, PhD

Lucille Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford

Targeting mitochondrial pathways in pediatric Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)

• Surojit Sarkar, PhD

Seattle Children’s Research Institute

Designing self-driving CAR T cell immunotherapies for metastatic solid tumors

• Elliot Stieglitz, MD

University of California, San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital

Innovative tests to determine treatment responsiveness for Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia (JMML)

• Masataka Suzuki, PhD

Baylor College of Medicine

Immunotherapy and CAR NK cell therapy for pediatric Sarcomas

• Rajkumar Venkatramani, MD

Texas Children’s Hospital

Molecular characterization of undifferentiated Sarcomas

Sixty-seven applications were evaluated. The selected grant recipients were determined using the following criteria:

• Probability of an advance in prevention, diagnosis or treatment for the near-term

• Novelty of the concept and strategy

• Clarity of presentation

• Overall plan for bringing the research findings to clinical application

• Experience, background, and qualifications of the investigators

• Adequacy of resources and environment (facilities, patients, etc.)

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