Childhood Cancer Research

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Developing Personalized (precision) Medicine Strategies to Optimize Pediatric Brain Tumor Management

Background


Brain tumors (low-grade gliomas) arising in children do not represent a single disease, but rather comprise a heterogeneous collection of distinct cancer subtypes. Our ability to more effectively manage children with brain tumors is therefore limited by an incomplete understanding of the factors that contribute to this heterogeneity. In the common cancer predisposition syndrome, neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1), preliminary studies have suggested that the specific NF1 genetic mutation may be an underappreciated contributor to low-grade glioma formation, progression, and response to therapy.

Project Goals


To define the cause-and-effect relationship between the specific germline NF1 genetic mutation and low-grade glioma behavior, we propose to generate NF1-patient stem cell lines and mouse strains harboring different germline NF1 gene mutations. These proposed studies establish a new conceptual framework for developing and testing therapies tailored to specific children as an initial step towards personalized treatments for pediatric low-grade glioma.

Institutions
Project Type
Cancer Research Categories
Date Funded
2014

Project Team

Washington University