News Release

Research consortium at CHLA receives $410,000 to study leukemia and lymphoma

Award will fund Phase I study targeting specific genetic mutations in children with leukemia or lymphoma

Grant and Award Announcement

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES (July 19, 2010) – J. Eric Bubbers, PhD, of the Saban Research Institute at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles, has received a $410,000 grant from Phase One Foundation. The award will fund a "first in childhood leukemia" multi-site study in children with relapsed or refractory acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) or acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). Dr. Bubbers is the administrative director of Therapeutic Advances in Childhood Leukemia and Lymphoma (TACL), an academic research consortium consisting of 33 member institutions in four countries.

"Both ALL and AML are cancers of the blood and bone marrow, with ALL being the most common cancer occurring in children," explains Dr Bubbers. "These diseases begin when a single cell changes from a normal cell to a cancer cell. Patients receive treatment – chemotherapy and/or radiation – with the hope of achieving remission. But sometimes that doesn't happen, or the remission doesn't last."

A child is in remission when he or she is not showing any signs or symptoms of disease. But sometimes the cancer cells return. This condition is called relapse. Other patients undergo treatment but not all the cancer cells are gone from their body. In this case, the patient has refractory disease. When a child has relapsed or refractory disease, different treatments may be required.

The TACL consortium is studying a new alternative treatment for these patients. Gene-targeted therapy, a type of personalized medicine, is based on the specific type of chromosomal changes occurring in a patient's cells. Certain genetic mutations, those of FLT3 and c-Kit, are associated with a particularly poor prognosis. This multi-center study will use a new drug that has been expressly optimized to inhibit FLT3 and c-Kit and has been effective in treating adults with these diseases. The goal of the phase I study is to determine a safe and biologically-active dose in young patients.

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The TACL study chair is Todd Cooper, DO, of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta, Emory University, and the vice-chair is Pat Brown, MD, of Johns Hopkins University. TACL can be reached at their website: www.tacl.us.

The Phase One Foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting phase I clinical research and treatment programs for patients with cancer. Federal funding is often only available after viable early results, so this type of early-stage funding is crucial in the development of innovative therapies.

The Saban Research Institute at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles is among the largest and most productive pediatric research facilities in the United States, with 100 investigators at work on 186 laboratory studies, clinical trials and community-based research and health services. The Saban Research Institute is ranked eighth in National Institutes of Health funding among children's hospitals in the United States.

Founded in 1901, Childrens Hospital Los Angeles is one of the nation's leading children's hospitals and is acknowledged worldwide for its leadership in pediatric and adolescent health. Childrens Hospital Los Angeles is one of only seven children's hospitals in the nation – and the only children's hospital on the West Coast – ranked for two consecutive years in all 10 pediatric specialties in the U.S. News & World Report rankings and named to the magazine's "Honor Roll" of children's hospitals.

Childrens Hospital Los Angeles is a premier teaching hospital and has been affiliated with the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California since 1932.


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