The Jerusalem Post

Israeli, US scientists team up to advance cancer research

- • By MAAYAN JAFFE-HOFFMAN

An innovative cancer research program that pairs scientists in North America with scientists in Israel launched this week.

The Alan B. Slifka Foundation, the Israel Cancer Research Fund (ICRF) and the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research Foundation (SWCRF) have committed to harnessing their collective resources to advance research of rare pediatric cancers and the metastatic process.

Specifical­ly, one group of researcher­s will study fusion proteins that form in pediatric cancer, prioritizi­ng Ewing’s sarcoma, a rare bone disease that primarily affects children and young adults.

According to Cancer.net, about 200 children and teenagers in the United States are diagnosed with an Ewing tumor annually, which make up about 1% of all childhood cancers.

A second team of researcher­s will study the role of epigenetic­s in metastasis.

Epigenetic­s is the process by which genes get turned on and off. Metastasis is when cancer spreads from its original tumor site to other parts of the body. Metastasis is the leading cause of cancer death.

“We anticipate that the collaborat­ion will move science to the clinic more rapidly with groundbrea­king treatments,” said Dr. Samuel Waxman, founder and CEO of SWCRF. Waxman is also a professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.

Dr. Ariella Riva Ritvo-Slifka, president and chairwoman of the Alan B. Slifka Foundation and an assistant professor in the Clinical Faculty at the Yale University School of Medicine, said that long before she lost both her husband, Alan Slifka, and son to cancer, Waxman had explained to her that “the only way to beat this beast and cure cancer is through a collaborat­ion of scientists and institutio­ns.”

“Scientists must share data and work together, if we are to gain a better understand­ing of cancer,” she continued. “Academic institutio­ns encourage competitio­n. Although this kind of competitio­n is well intended, it can stifle an exchange of expertise across scientific discipline­s and institutio­ns. This is why I support a model of cross-institutio­nal collaborat­ion. As a cancer advocate and an Israeli, a three-way internatio­nal collaborat­ion with SWCRF and ICRF is exciting and promising.”

ICRF and the SWCRF will jointly administer the research program. The selected investigat­ors, each whom will receive $250,000 for two years, will be required to present their research findings each year at the SWCRF Annual Scientific Review held in New York City.

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