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Active RESEARCH CENTERS NIH (US)

Research Project 2 Proteogenomic-guided therapeutic targeting of breast cancer patient-derived xenograft metastases


Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Virginia Commonwealth University
Country United States
Start Date Jul 19, 2023
End Date Jun 30, 2028
Duration 1,808 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10733315
Grant Description

Project Summary/Abstract Breast cancer is diagnosed in 1-of-8 women and is the most common type of cancer diagnosed at VCU. There are several genetically distinct subtypes of human breast cancers defined largely based on proliferative status and expression of targetable receptors such as estrogen receptors and the HER2 oncogene. The majority of

the cell lines and PDX models used for breast cancer research arise from White patients of European Ancestry, however, all ancestral groups are affected by breast cancers. Over the past twenty years, there has been a clear disparity identified in the subtype of breast tumors found based on genetic ancestry, with Black

patients being diagnosed more frequently with Basal-like Triple-Negative Breast Cancers, which are highly metastatic. Therefore, in these studies, we are (1) focused on developing PDX models from breast cancer patients. With these models we will (2) quantitatively determine their genetic ancestry and then (3) select

models that are genetically Basal-like and obtained from Black patients so that we can (4) use these models to determine the organs that the colonize, (5) determine the genomic and proteomic profile of the tumors and metastases, (6) define efficacy of NCI-INDs of interest, with a focus on selinexor based drug combinations on

cells obtained from the PDXs, and (7) identifying new therapeutic drug combinations that are effective in the metastatic setting. At the conclusion of these studies, we may have identified a new effective two-drug approach that could be useful for Basal-like patients that have exhausted the current standard-of-care

approaches for treatment of metastatic breast cancer.

All Grantees

Virginia Commonwealth University

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