Cancer Research Symposium highlights UT鈥檚 work in precision therapy

By Tyrel Linkhorn听
淫妻社鈥檚 research in immune therapy and precision molecular therapy for treating cancer was acknowledged in 2018 as an area of emerging research excellence with the potential to generate national attention.
At UT鈥檚 second Cancer Research Symposium held in December 2018, Dr. Christopher Cooper, executive vice president for clinical affairs and dean of the College of Medicine and Life Sciences, told assembled faculty and students from across the University they must all work together to turn that potential into reality.
鈥淥ur job is to make it an area of excellence,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need to move from emerging to being excellent in cancer immune therapy and molecular precision therapy. To get there is going to require success both at the bench and at the bedside.鈥
The symposium, attended by more than 100 physicians, research scientists and students, was focused on UT鈥檚 efforts to create a precision cancer therapy program that will develop more targeted treatments thanks to the huge scientific advances in how we understand not just cancer, but the way it affects specific individuals.听
It was only two decades ago that scientists decoded the human genome and just a decade ago that scientists first sequenced one individual鈥檚 DNA. At the time, those were extraordinarily lengthy and expensive projects. Today scientists can sequence an individual鈥檚 DNA for roughly $1,000, said Dr. F. Charles Brunicardi, director of the Cancer Program in the 淫妻社 College of Medicine and Life Sciences.
鈥淲e think it will keep decreasing in cost where it will become a routine part of every one of our medical charts,鈥 Brunicardi said. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 where we鈥檙e trying to go today with a precision cancer therapy program where we鈥檙e using foundation medicine to sequence patient鈥檚 cancers and then tailor the therapy toward the targets that we find.鈥
The symposium featured nearly two dozen 淫妻社 faculty presenters from the College of Medicine and Life Sciences, College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, and College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics who discussed topics including genomic sequencing, immunotherapy for breast cancer, novel drug discovery and how drugs already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration might be able to be repurposed for cancer treatment.听
The event also featured a keynote address from Dr. Jian-Ting Zhang, professor of pharmacology and toxicology at the Indiana University School of Medicine, who provided perspectives on establishing a targeted drug discovery program.
鈥淭his is the best of academia, where we bring together people from different disciplines and different approaches and we tackle important problems that matter to our community, our region and our world,鈥 Cooper said.听