Natalie Gassman, Ph.D. |
Recipients included Natalie Gassman, Ph.D., assistant professor of physiology; Michele Schuler, Ph.D., associate professor of comparative biology; Casey L. Daniel, Ph.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of family medicine; and Gary Piazza, Ph.D., professor of pharmacology.
Michele Schuler, Ph.D. |
Gassman and Schuler will test a novel combination of chemical inhibitors that are only modestly effective on their own but have the potential in combination to trigger death in triple negative cancer cells without cardiac side effects.
Casey Daniel, Ph.D. |
Daniel and Roque plan to quantify the trade-offs that breast cancer patients make during treatment decisions, with a focus on problems related to the cost of medical care. Their central hypothesis is that increased understanding of patient preferences, particularly those associated with medical care costs, through the evaluation of trade-offs, will optimize shared decision-making.
Gary Piazza, Ph.D. |
Piazza, who conducts research at the Mitchell Cancer Institute, and Clint Grubbs, Ph.D., of the O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center, received support for the collaborative research project, “A Novel Wnt/β-catenin Inhibitor for Breast Cancer Therapy.” The research is based on results from a two-year project funded in 2017 by the BCRFA. The most recent funding will support research to evaluate the activity of an experimental anti-cancer drug developed at MCI in animal models of metastatic breast cancer in combination with a standard-of-care drug, doxorubicin.
Other organizations receiving funds are the O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center, Southern Research and CerFlux in Birmingham.
The current donation brings the total to almost $10 million given for breast cancer research by BCRFA since 1996.