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Personalized medicine
GPEC receives $250,000 from
sanofi-aventis
VANCOUVER – Located at Vancouver
General Hospital and a partner of the BC Cancer Agency, the Genetic
Pathology Evaluation Centre, led by three prominent pathologists, is a
recognized world leader in cancer research in the area of biomarker
technology. Now, with an additional unrestricted grant of $250,000 from
sanofi-aventis, GPEC is ready to make even more scientific
breakthroughs.
GPEC is responsible for a number of important cancer related
discoveries, including a genetic change in a tumour previously thought
to be an aggressive form of arthritis, that ovarian cancer is at least
five distinct diseases and new methods for diagnosis of breast cancer
subtypes in hospital pathology laboratories. The value and the impact of
these and other accomplishments has allowed this relatively small but
productive centre - which has published more than 200 peer-reviewed
articles in the last five years - to establish itself as a worldwide
leader in its field.
“The results of our research have changed the way cancers are either
diagnosed or managed,” said Blake Gilks, one of the three lead
investigators at GPEC. “However, promising discoveries are dependent on
sustained sources of funding from organizations like sanofi-aventis, who
has been behind us for seven years now. This additional funding is the
lift we need to help us continue to move away from a one-size-fits-all
to a personalized approach to cancer treatment.”
The centre now wants to focus on building on the important work it has
already accomplished in the realm of breast cancer. GPEC played a
leading role in defining the molecular subtypes of breast cancer in 2004
- their first paper on the topic became the fourth most cited paper ever
in the Clinical Cancer Research journal. Today, they are at the cutting
edge in determining the response of different breast cancer subtypes to
different treatments. Subtype specific treatments for breast cancer,
which are tailored to the molecular abnormalities in each subtype, are
saving lives.
Another GPEC project concerns a little understood and difficult to treat
tumour of the ovary. After having helped decode ovarian cancers with
state-of-the-art genome sequencing technologies, in collaboration with
the BC Cancer Agency’s Genome Sciences Centre, they identified a
recurring mutation in granulosa-cell tumours of the ovary, and GPEC is
now working on new diagnostics and treatments for this cancer.
With the work already accomplished and the many projects ahead, the
centre is well-positioned to play a critical role in translating
fundamental research into clinic practice.
“Sanofi-aventis believes that research into personalized medicine is a
great way to deliver value to the Canadian healthcare system,” said Hugh
O’Neill, President and CEO of sanofi-aventis Canada . “By identifying
the appropriate and inappropriate patients for various treatments,
organizations like GPEC are reducing costs for the Canadian healthcare
system and realizing the true value of innovative medicines.”
About the Genetic Pathology Evaluation Center (GPEC)
The Genetic Pathology Evaluation Centre (GPEC) is a laboratory
specialized in the assessment of novel cancer biomarkers by means of
tissue microarray technology. The Centre was founded in 2001 and is a
collaborative research venture of the Prostate Research Centre at the
VGH, the Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute (VCHRI) and the BC
Cancer Agency. GPEC is Canada’s top tissue-based research centre and is
one of the world’s leading centres in its field. The laboratory’s
ultimate goal is improved patient outcomes, brought about by
personalized cancer treatments through molecular subclassification of
tumours using biomarkers. For more information, please visit:
http://www.gpec.ubc.ca.
Posted Dec.10, 2009

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