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Research Initiatives at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center (JCCC) Cancer Center Overview caBIG TBPT/ICR Workspaces Judith Gasson, Ph.D. Professor and Director, UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center President, Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation Co-Director, Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research
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Research Initiatives at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center Overview of UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center (who, where, what) Research Partnerships –Translational therapeutics –Nano-technology –Imaging –Cancer stem cells New Opportunities
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Funding Base (direct plus indirect) : total funding: $195,000,000 NCI funding: $46,000,000 Location and Funding Base Funding Base (direct plus indirect) : total funding: $195,000,000 NCI funding: $46,000,000
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Goals for JCCC Maintain and enhance outstanding basic, clinical and population sciences research Develop dynamic environment necessary to support clinical trials based on JCCC research Develop innovative ways to promote and support bidirectional translational research from the bench to the bedside to the community.
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Research Initiatives at UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center –240 faculty from DGSoM, College, SoPH, Dentistry, Nursing, Engineering…… –Organized into 12 Scientific Program Area –Supported by 10 Shared Resources Translational Pathology (Dr. Sarah Dry) Gene Expression (Dr. Stan Nelson) Bioinformatics (Dr. Arash Naeim)
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JCCC Summary 36th year of funding “Comprehensive” designation by National Cancer Institute Excellence in all areas of cancer prevention, detection, treatment and survivorship research Education and outreach to geographic region served 283 actively accruing therapeutic clinical trials 45% institutional 16.5% new patients accrued to studies
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UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center Translational therapeutics Community- based UCLA Oncology Research Network Established in 1996 by DJ Slamon Allows oncology practices throughout the region and nation to participate in clinical research Offers highest quality of care available in a comprehensive & compassionate setting Translational Oncology International (TORI) Formed in 2003 Sites: California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Maryland, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas
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Herceptin FDA-approved in 1998 Breast cancer (Slamon) Gleevec FDA-approved in 2001 Chronic myeloid leukemia (Witte, Sawyers) Avastin FDA-approved 2004 Colon cancer (Kabbinavar) Tarceva FDA-approved 2004 lung cancer (Prager) Sprycel FDA-approved 2006 Chronic Myeloid leukemia (Sawyers, Shah) Tykerb FDA-approved 2007 for HER-2+ breast cancer How do we measure success?
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UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center Nano-technology partnerships with Engineering and Chemistry Institute for Cell-Mimetic Space Exploration (CMISE), Chih-Ming Ho, NASA-funded; NCI Nanomedicine Center California Nano-Systems Institute (CNSI) UCLA-UCSB, public/private funding Cal Tech/ UCLA Pharmacology/ JCCC/ ISB Consortium (Heath, Phelps, Hood) NCI-CCNE Center of Nanotechnology Excellence (7 funded, $18 million)
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UCLA’s Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center Imaging Crump Institute for Molecular Imaging- Mike Phelps –Developing imaging assays for the study of biological systems including cancer In vivo cancer molecular imaging centers- ICMIC Harvey Herschman, NCI funded 5 yrs X2 ($10M). –Translating basic science into improved ways to monitor cancer and it’s treatment through the marriage of molecular biology, chemistry and imaging.
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JCCC: clinical trial and regulatory expertise, research excellence and shared resources Gene Medicine Program: Cell-based therapeutics, research excellence and specialized facilities Broad Stem Cell Center: research excellence, shared resources and specialized facilities Broad Stem Cell Research Center Human Gene Medicine Program Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center ES Cells JCCC: clinical trial and regulatory expertise, research excellence and shared resources Gene Medicine Program: Cell-based therapeutics, research excellence and specialized facilities Broad Stem Cell Center: research excellence, shared resources and specialized facilities Integration
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Opportunities-Partnerships Broad Stem Cell Research Center (Witte, Director) –Faculty recruitment –Research space –Shared resources –Funding from CIRM and philanthropy UCLA Human Gene Medicine Program (Economou, Kohn) –48 trials; 340 patients; 85% cancer patients –FDA-compliant GMP suite –5% of all patients entered on gene therapy trials worldwide
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Provide Formal Classroom Training for authorization of users Individualized, secure Omni-lock access Assistance/ templates for the development of SoPs (standard operating procedures) Full monitoring of all equipment BSCRC-JCCC Core Stem Cell Laboratory Provide Formal Classroom Training for authorization of users Individualized, secure Omni-lock access Assistance/ templates for the development of SoPs (standard operating procedures) Full monitoring of all equipment
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Opportunities-Transdisciplinary Initiatives -Engineered Immunity Project -(JCCC, Gene Med, BSCRC, Cal Tech) –Tumor microenvironment/ stem cell niche (Mikkola, Wu) –Inflammation and cancer (Herschman, Braun, Dubinett) –Epigenetics and re-programming (Plath, Fan, Clark) –Diet and Nutrition (Arab, Heber, Liu, Estrin)
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Opportunities-Transdisciplinary Initiatives –Biomarker discovery/microfluidics for diagnostic (Tseng, Heath) –Cancer stem cells and novel inhibitors (Slamon, Witte, Wu, Kornblum, Pietras) –Cancer Genetics (Ganz, Nelson) –Anemia of cancer (T. Ganz, Dorigo, Lichtenstein, Finn, Dubinett) –High resolution sequencing and analysis of purified glioblastoma stem cells (Nelson, Kornblum, Mischel)
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Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center
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