Led by Marjan Boerma, PhD, a team of University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) researchers has received a five-year $11.4 million grant to continue research into the side effects of cancer therapies, including radiation and chemotherapies.
The Centers for Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE), a program of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, awarded the grant. The COBRE researchers at UAMS work in the Center for Studies of Host Response to Cancer Therapy. Boerma is the center’s director and director of the Division of Radiation Health in the College of Pharmacy Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences.
The first of its type in the United States, the center was established in 2015 under the leadership of Martin Hauer-Jensen, MD, PhD, with a $10.5 million COBRE grant. The center is administered within the College of Pharmacy.
“We are grateful for the renewed funding from COBRE at a higher level than even five years ago,” said UAMS College of Pharmacy Dean Cindy Stowe, PharmD. “The center still is one of the very few research centers studying the side effects of cancer therapies like chemo and radiation and looking for ways to minimize or eliminate those side effects. This grant is confirmation to us that NIH also sees the value in the work being done by the center.”
The center’s primary objectives are to study how and why side effects occur and to develop prevention strategies. These objectives are accomplished by established center investigators but also by supporting junior scientists to establish themselves as independent scientists in this research area.
“In preparation for Phase 2, we have recruited four promising new independent investigators,” Boerma said. “To increase the likelihood that project leaders successfully will secure independent funding, each of them will have mentors and a plan for their development as faculty.”
The center will integrate its research efforts into the other research programs on campus, including the programs of the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute, the Translational Research Institute, and other COBRE centers.