Unprecedented $100 Million from Susan G. Komen for the CureŽ
Now Committed to Immediate Patient Help
Determined to fast track research
into help for breast cancer patients who can't wait, Susan G.
Komen for the CureŽ is distributing an unprecedented $100
million in grants to American and international scientists this
year alone, the organization announced in unveiling its 2008
grants portfolio today.
View a list of grants by state (includes the institution and
state dollar totals) - PDF
View a list of Research Topic Descriptions - PDF
Producing results for patients
It is the largest commitment of breast cancer research
funding by a single nonprofit organization, targeted to 81
universities and hospitals in 27 states and five countries.
These grants represent research with the highest likelihood of
producing results for patients during the next decade.
"There's a tremendous urgency to
translate what we're learning in the lab into treatments for
patients, particularly patients with very aggressive cancers who
don't have years to wait," said
Dr. Eric P. Winer,
Chief Scientific Advisor to Susan G. Komen for the Cure and
director of the Breast Oncology Center at Dana-Farber Cancer
Institute.
"The grants we are funding focus
on safely and effectively bringing treatments to cancer patients
in a more timely way than we have been able to in the past,"
Winer added.
"We've revamped Komen's research
program, challenging the best minds to solve the most difficult
issues in breast cancer," said
Hala Moddelmog,
president and CEO of Susan G. Komen for the Cure. "These grants
are geared to results - finding cures, tailoring treatments and
resolving the issues that have stymied the search for a breast
cancer cure."
Some of the biggest questions
to be tackled by the Komen-funded research include:
1. Why do some breast cancers respond to certain treatments, and
others don't?
2. How can we prevent the spread
of breast cancer to other organs?
3. Does diet and/or obesity play
a role in cancer development and treatment?
4. Can we predict who is most at
risk for developing breast cancer?
5. Can we develop a cancer
"vaccine?"
6. What technologies will help
detect breast cancer at its earliest possible stage?
7. What treatments can prolong
the lives of those women living with advanced breast cancer?
During the past 25 years, Komen
for the Cure has raised and distributed $1.2 billion for
research and community health programs. And Komen is pledging to
invest another $2 billion during the next 10 years.
Promise Grants designed to get
scientists and doctors to work together in new ways
This year, Komen introduces new research programs called Promise
Grants, which are worth millions of dollars and last for five
years. They are designed to get scientists and doctors to work
together in new ways to bring treatments out of the laboratory
to patients as quickly as possible. Komen also is funding new
and bigger grants to attract and retain young cancer
researchers.
Moddelmog noted that research and
awareness funding has helped ease suffering from breast cancer.
"In the past 20 years, we've gone from a time when breast cancer
was not even discussed, to a new era with higher survivor rates
and less invasive treatments than existed even just a decade
ago," Moddelmog said.
"Even so, we have so much more to
do. Almost 200,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer in
the U.S. this year and more than 40,000 women and men will die
of this disease. That adds urgency to our mission to end breast
cancer forever."
The Komen grants undergo a
rigorous peer-review process by groups of laboratory scientists,
clinicians and advocates.
These grants fall into the
following categories:
Promise Grants: These are
large-scale grants, up to $7.5 million each during a five-year
period, targeted to research that brings science to the bedside
quicker than ever before. Komen will provide $35 million in
Promise grants to seven, multi-year projects in 2008.
Post-Doctoral Research: To
attract and retain promising young researchers, annual grants of
$60,000 will be distributed to these scientists nationwide and
internationally. Forty-six scientists will share grant funding
that totals $7.7 million over three years.
Career Catalyst Research:
Grants of $150,000 per year for three years to fill a critical
gap in support and stimulate the transition from training to
independence among promising cancer investigators. Total
funding: $10.9 million to 26 researchers.
Investigator Initiated
Research: Grants of up to $200,000 per year for three years
to explore new ideas and approaches leading to reductions in
breast cancer mortality and/or the incidence within the decade.
Total funding: $35.3 million for 60 grants.
Affiliate Grants: Special
grants co-funded by 15 Komen Affiliates to institutions in their
hometowns or states.
In addition, Komen has directed
$13 million to other cancer research organizations to fund
collaborative projects.
A complete list of the grants can
be found on
www.komen.org/grants.