Providence cancer research laboratory receives major grants

12/06/2012

Research scientist Keith Bahjat, Ph.D., recently received two grants supporting work on new immunotherapy approaches to treating cancer. Dr. Bahjat is chief of the laboratory of immunologic monitoring at the Earle A. Chiles Research Institute at Providence Cancer Center.

Susan G. Komen for the Cure awarded Dr. Bahjat a three-year, $450,000 Career Catalyst Research Scholar grant. The award funds Dr. Bahjat's work on a vaccine that would prime the immune system to attack cancer cells with mutations causing the HER-2 gene to become overactive. “HER-2 positive” cancers represent about a fifth of breast cancer cases. The goal of the research is to develop and test a safe vaccine that will help prevent recurrences in breast cancer patients with HER-2 positive tumors, after surgery or other treatments.

The U.S. Department of Defense, through the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs, has awarded Dr. Bahjat a two-year, $296,000 Discovery Award. It will support the development of potential new immunological approaches to cancer treatment. Dr. Bahjat's lab will investigate how the protein SOCS-1 interferes with the body’s immune response to cancer vaccines, and how vaccines may be modified to avoid that interference. If successful, the studies will lead to improved methods of delivering cancer vaccines to treat a wide range of cancers.
 

Image Here

International partnership with Bristol-Myers Squibb

Providence Cancer Center joins global collaboration, taking cancer treatment research to a new level. More »

Image Here

Clinical trial offers great hope for metastatic melanoma patients.

Cancer researchers study a unique approach, combining radiation and immunotherapy treatments. More »

Image Here

Connecting Oregon communities to stroke expertise

Telestroke puts stroke experts “in the room” 24/7. More »

News


Events