UCI cancer center gets $18 million...
UCI cancer center gets $18 million in grants
UC Irvine will soon begin testing a possible cervical cancer
vaccine, evaluating a failed chemotherapy drug’s ability to prevent
colon cancer and placing a greater emphasis on discovering new
anti-cancer drugs will begin soon, thanks to three National Cancer
Institute grants given to UC Irvine.
The Chao Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, the only center in
Orange County to carry the cancer institute’s “comprehensive”
designation, received more than $18 million in grants:
* $11.5 million to renew for 4.5 years the cancer center’s
central focus of treating patients with cancer; educating the public
about the risks and treatments and preventive measures against
cancer; and finding new ways to combat these diseases;
* $4.4 million to study how well two chemicals combine to prevent
colon cancer; and
* $2.2 million to test a proposed cervical cancer vaccine.
“The increase in the [grant] will allow us to develop new
therapeutic trials for a number of different cancers based on
scientific advances made by our investigators and faculty at UCI. The
awards for the colon and cervix studies demonstrate how UCI Medical
Center has continued to evolve into a major academic medical center
in the last few years,” said Dr. Frank Meyskens, center director and
professor of medicine at the College of Medicine.
The colon cancer trial will test whether two chemicals -- DFMO and
sulindac -- can prevent cancer in 400 people who are at risk of
developing the disease. Meyskens and his colleagues have worked with
DFMO for the past 12 years. The chemical showed promise in smaller
tests as an agent that could prevent colon cancer from developing.
Each year, about 135,000 Americans are diagnosed with colon cancer
and 56,000 people die from the disease.
The cervical cancer trial will test how well an experimental
vaccine prevents the most common form of the disease. The vaccine
works directly against the virus HPV, which is associated strongly
with cervical cancer. The trial will enroll about 130 women. While not as prevalent as colon cancer, it is still deadly: 15,000 women
develop cervical cancer each year and about 3,000 die from it.
The National Cancer Institute awarded the center its most
prestigious designation of “comprehensive” in 1997. Health care
providers there treat and diagnose cancers and offer educational and
research programs for more than 5 million people in Southern
California.
The center includes 152 faculty members from UCI. About 2,000
persons take part in research each year. The center works closely
with UCI’s General Clinical Research Center on developing and
conducting clinical trials.
People interested in either study should call (888) 456-7067.
Approved trials, including those involving cancer, are available on
UCI Medical Center’s Web site at www.ucihealth.com/trials.
Top immunologist to join UCI in 2003
Dr. Paolo Casali, one of the nation’s top immunologists, whose
research has revealed key information about human immune response to
cancer and viral diseases, has joined the UC Irvine faculty as the
Donald Bren Professor of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry and
Medicine.
At UCI, Casali will direct the new Center for Immunology, a joint
and integrated program created by the School of Biological Sciences
and the College of Medicine.
The center, which will be in the new Hewitt Hall, is designed to
consolidate and expand immunology research efforts in the biological
sciences and medicine throughout the UCI campus. Casali will hold a
joint appointment in the Department of Molecular Biology and
Biochemistry and the Department of Medicine.
Casali comes to UCI from Cornell University Weill Medical College
and Graduate School of Medical Sciences in New York, where he has
been a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and a professor
of microbiology and immunology.
“This is terrific news for the campus,” said Sue Bryant, dean of
the School of Biological Sciences. “Immunology is a core discipline
that affects our ability to make progress in other fields, including
cancer, and diseases of the nervous system and vasculature. With the
strong program in immunology that Dr. Casali will develop, our
ability to recruit excellent clinician/scientists in other
disciplines will be greatly enhanced.”
Casali discovered how certain viruses such as measles and
influenza impair the function of various immune cells. This
observation revealed the mechanisms that suppress immune response to
certain viral infections. In another finding, he identified a group
of B cells that generate specific self-binding antibodies linked with
autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus
A native of Italy, Casali received his medical degree from the
University of Milan in 1974. He came to the United States in 1980 to
become a research associate at the Scripps Research Institute in La
Jolla, before joining the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services as a senior staff fellow. In 1990, he was named the Kaplan
Cancer Scholar at the New York University School of Medicine, and he
joined the faculty at Cornell University Weill Medical College in
1994.
Casali’s appointment starts at the beginning of 2003.
Internet voting expert will speak at UCI
UC Irvine will begin its fourth annual Chancellor’s Distinguished
Fellows Series on Tuesday with a presentation on the transition to
electronic and Internet voting.
The presentation will be given by David R. Jefferson, who has
served as chair of the technical committee of the California
secretary of state’s task force on Internet voting and has been
conducting research on Internet and electronic voting since 1994.
Jefferson also played a major role in convincing California, as
well as other states, to pass laws requiring campaign finance
disclosure information to be filed electronically instead of on
paper.
The presentation will start at 5 p.m. Tuesday and will be held in
the McDonnell-Douglas Engineering Auditorium at the UCI campus.
Newport schools will host fund-raisers
Lincoln Elementary School will hold its “Calypso on the Coast”
fund-raiser from 7 p.m. to midnight on Friday at the Hyatt Newporter.
The evening will include live and silent auctions, dinner and
dancing.
Harbor View Elementary School will hold a silent/live auction,
dinner and dancing event on Nov. 9. The theme is Viva Las Vegas. For
more information, contact Jan Varner at (949)644-4022.
Grant allows UCI to focus on schizophrenia
Brain images from hundreds of people with schizophrenia will be
shared among 10 research sites nationwide, partially coordinated by
UC Irvine, in a first-of-its-kind research project funded with $10.9
million from the National Center for Research Resources, a branch of
the National Institutes of Health.
The project will create an extensive and unique database of brain
information that is expected to expand our understanding of disabling
brain illnesses such as schizophrenia and speed the development of
new treatments.
The federal grant was awarded to the joint General Clinical
Research Center of UC Irvine and UC San Diego. The center will
coordinate the nationwide effort to link and share vast amounts of
computerized data from brain images of people who have schizophrenia.
In addition, researchers participating in the project will create
standardized, powerful discovery tools for future large population
brain studies.
Although brain imaging technology has generated remarkable
progress in understanding how mental and neurological diseases
develop, it has been nearly impossible for one laboratory to share
and compare findings with other labs. A lack of coordinated networks
for sharing data, plus limitations in compatible computer hardware
and software, have isolated scientists, barring them from
collaborative efforts that could provide the large database of brain
images needed for a comprehensive look at brain dysfunction.
Dr. Steven G. Potkin, UCI professor of psychiatry, will lead the
new three-year investigation.
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