Gala of Hope Foundation donation will help shape future of pediatric cancer research
December 15, 2016
December 15, 2016
The Gala of Hope Foundation donated $198,870 to Dayton Children鈥檚 Hospital, providing for the next step in furthering cancer research in the Dayton region. Bob and Barbara Mills, Gala of Hope Foundation co-founders, presented a giant check to pediatric neurosurgeon Robert Lober, M.D., Ph.D., in the Mills Family Lounge at Dayton Children鈥檚 on Dec. 14.
鈥淭here is nothing closer to my heart than finding new ways to fight cancer, and ultimately end it, before any child has to go through what my granddaughter did,鈥 said Mills, whose granddaughter, Ally, successfully battled cancer at Dayton Children鈥檚. 鈥淚 believe the research going on right now, right here in our community could do that.鈥
Through Dayton Children鈥檚 affiliation with the , Lober, assistant professor of pediatrics at the , is researching brain tumors in children and using high-level imaging to find out what is going on inside them.
This donation will be used to create a research tissue bank, purchase specialized freezers that store, code and organize the tissue samples, and hire a research-level scientist to coordinate the work.
Tumors might appear to be blobs of tissue, but they are actually the body鈥檚 own cells turned into renegades, bent on destruction. Just like healthy cells, they have their own metabolism. They need energy to grow, and they also give off energy. Lober wants to better understand that process at the molecular level.
To begin the research, Lober started with test samples he brought with him when he came from Stanford University.
鈥淲hat we are doing is setting up a tissue study pipeline,鈥 Lober said. 鈥淲e created an imaging infrastructure to bring data to a cloud-based server for our researchers. We are using the highest level of technology you can find anywhere to study the metabolism of tumors.鈥
This initiative bridges the gap between pediatric neurosurgeons, pediatric oncologists, physicists, mathematicians, radiologists, pathologists, biochemists and many others within Dayton Children鈥檚 and the Neuroscience Institute.
鈥淭he amazing thing is we have come further in one year with this collaboration than you could at a larger research institution in many years,鈥 Lober said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about being nimble and being able to move quickly. We are demonstrating the capabilities that we have by leveraging our smallness.鈥
Robert E.W. Fyffe, Ph.D., vice president for research and dean of the Graduate School at 糖心原创, said the Neuroscience Institute brings strong interdisciplinary teams together to speed the transfer of research discoveries from bench to bedside.
鈥淲e know we have some of the best minds right here in Dayton, and they are eager to dive into projects like this,鈥 Fyffe said. 鈥淭his research will make a difference and change lives.鈥
Lober works closely with 糖心原创 researchers at the Neuroscience Institute, including Debra Mayes, Ph.D., assistant professor of neuroscience, cell biology and physiology, and Thomas Brown, Ph.D., associate chair for research and professor of neuroscience, cell biology and physiology and professor of obstetrics and gynecology.
Lober is now starting a process allowing other institutions to donate tissue. Each tumor review will add to the pool of knowledge, down to the molecular level, of not only what the tumor cells are, but also how they breathe, eat and reproduce. The use of the 3T MRI at Dayton Children鈥檚, with twice the quality and clarity of most current MRI scanners, helps him in this research.
鈥淭his process will be an incredibly powerful tool for cancer research,鈥 Lober said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 see a gene on an MRI, but you can see how a tumor uses and gives off energy. We are seeing unique patterns of this type of behavior with different tumor types based on their gene expression profiles. Eventually we should be able to reverse engineer this process. One day we might be able to take an MRI of a child鈥檚 brain and know, without a biopsy, without any invasive procedures, what kind of cancer it is and how to best defeat it.鈥
Deborah Feldman, president and CEO of Dayton Children鈥檚, said this type of research could not be done without the generous support of the community.
鈥淭his is our third grant from the Gala of Hope Foundation, and we thank Bob and Barbara Mills for continuing to believe in and support our mission to care for each child as if they were our own child,鈥 Feldman said.