Cancer researchers team up against deadliest brain tumors in children
Experts from Children's National, Virginia Tech, and Columbia University join forces to explore new tactics to fight lethal childhood brain cancer.
By John Pastor 19 MAY 202 5 minute read
Virginia Tech
researchers with the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC have joined a
Children’s National Hospital effort to treat deadly brain tumors with ultrahigh
frequency sound waves.
The scientists are
studying how to use an emerging technology called focused ultrasound to fight diffuse
midline glioma (DMG), one of the most lethal childhood brain cancers with a
nearly 100 percent rate of mortality within five years of diagnosis.
A
multi-institutional team led by Javad Nazarian, a principal investigator
with Children’s National Hospital, will study how to use
focused ultrasound to create a temporary gateway through the body’s protective
blood-brain barrier to deliver cancer medicine.
Virginia
Tech Cancer Research Alliance investigators Eli Vlaisavljevich, a designer and
developer of focused ultrasound technology, and Jennifer Munson, who creates 3D
models to study brain tumors, bring expertise
in focused ultrasound instrumentation and tissue engineering to the team.
Joining them is Columbia
University’s Cheng-Chia Wu, principal investigator for the world’s first
clinical trial using focused ultrasound in children with relapsed DMG. Wu is
experienced in combining focused ultrasound with radiation and immunotherapy
for both pediatric and adult brain tumors.
DMG tumors often begin
in the base of the brain near the spinal cord and travel through the central
nervous system via cerebrospinal fluid, which makes surgery, radiation and
chemotherapy difficult. What’s more, the tumor can invade nearby tissue and
extend beyond what can be seen on MRI or by the surgeon during surgery,
according to the National Cancer Institute.
“Our portion of the
project is to conduct fundamental science,” Vlaisavljevich said. “We can look
at how to tailor this therapy to have the most effectiveness against cancer
cells, with minimal off-target effects and reduced toxicity.”
Research to find solutions
for pediatric cancer is desperately needed, according to Oscar Ortiz, who
founded the SebastianStrong Foundation
in 2017 in memory of his
son Sebastian, who died of cancer.
“Only a handful of drugs
have been specifically created for fighting childhood cancer since 1980, while
in that same time period hundreds have been made for fighting cancer in
adults,” Ortiz said. “Kids deserve so much better.”
The study will take
place at Virginia Tech labs on the Blacksburg campus and at the Fralin
Biomedical Research Institute in Roanoke, with ongoing research for the project
under way at the Children’s National Research & Innovation Campus in
Washington, D.C.
whose research programs
are housed at the Children’s National Research & Innovation Campus, are
pursuing research strategies for identifying new leading edge approaches to identifying
and delivering new therapeutic interventions at a molecular level to treat
childhood brain cancers.
Yu explores the
epigenetic and molecular foundation of diffuse midline glioma to find
potentially new therapies, while Mulvaney seeks to exploit weaknesses in two
rare but lethal cancers that affect children: glioblastoma and malignant
peripheral nerve sheath tumor. Their goal is to develop together and in
parallel therapeutic approaches that can treat a range of pediatric brain
cancers.
May is Brain
Tumor Awareness Month and National Cancer Research Month.
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