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SARC Career Development Award Program. Richard Gorlick, MD Lee Helman , MD. SARC Career Development Award. Fund established 2007 Initial award granted 2009 Incorporated into the SARC sarcoma SPORE in 2013 Purpose
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SARC Career Development Award Program Richard Gorlick, MD Lee Helman, MD
SARC Career Development Award • Fund established 2007 • Initial award granted 2009 • Incorporated into the SARC sarcoma SPORE in 2013 • Purpose • To help prepare and support scientists working in sarcoma as they begin their careers as independent researchers
Committee R. Gorlick, Co-Chair L. Helman, Co-Chair J. Crowley J. Fletcher M. Thornton F. Hornicek D. Lev C. Mackall M. van de Rijn S. Schuetze L. Schwartz SARC Career Development Award
SARC Career Development Program 2014 • SARC Sarcoma SPORE Career Development Award • Requires awardees to be US citizens • SARC is interested in continued support of researchers internationally • Two funding opportunities • US based researcher • International researcher
SARC SPORE CDA • Criteria • Final year of clinical fellowship or postdoctoral fellowship, or within five years of first faculty appointment • Demonstrated track record of interest and productivity in research relevant to sarcoma • US citizen • Funding Level • $100,000 per year, for up to two years
International CDA • Criteria • Final year of clinical fellowship or postdoctoral fellowship, or within five years of first faculty appointment • Demonstrated track record of interest and productivity in research relevant to sarcoma • Citizenship outside US • Funding Level • $100,000 per year, for up to two years
Application Process • Two step process • Letter of Intent • Full application • Letter of intent due • January 3, 2014 • Contact SARC with any questions • sarc@sarctrials.org
2009 Career Development Award Recipients Sandra Strauss, MD, PhD University College London Joseph Ludwig, MD University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center • Anchorage-independent conditions as a model for micrometastatic disease in osteosarcoma • Targeted therapy of Ewing’s Sarcoma via IGF-1R signaling cascade
2010 Career Development Award Recipients Patrick J. Grohar, MD, PhD Fellow, National Cancer Institute Joshua D. Schiffman, MD Assistant Professor, University of Utah • Novel genomic approach to risk-stratify and identify relapse-associated copy number alterations in Ewing’s sarcoma • Development of a Small Molecule Therapy Targeting EWS-FLI1
2011 Career Development Award Recipients Keila Enitt Torres, MD, PhD University of Texas, MD Anderson Cancer Center Seth M. Pollack, MD University of Washington/Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center • The role of the P13K/AKT/mTOR pathway in radiation associated sarcoma (RAS) • Adoptive T-cell therapy for patients with metastatic sarcoma
2012 Career Development Award Recipients AdriánMariño-Enríquez, MD Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Department of Pathology Brian A. Van Tine, MD, PhD Washington University, Division of Medical Oncology Director, and Assistant Professor, Division of Medical Oncology • Genome-wide functional characterization of GIST: Strategies to maximize kinase-inhibitor response • Exploiting ArgininosuccinateSynthase 1 Deficiency in Sarcoma.
2013 Career Development Award Recipients CigallKadoch, PhD Broad Institute Simone Hettmer, MD, Dana Farber Cancer Institute John Shern, MD National Cancer Institute • Identifying novel therapies in pediatric RMS using high-throughput screening for inhibitors of the PAX3-FOX01 Oncogenic transcription factor • Evaluation of the contributions of candidate RMS-relevant genes/pathways in RMS malignancy • Reversing the roles of misdirected chromatin remodeling in human synovial sarcoma
2014 Career Development Application Key Dates • January 3, 2014 • Letter of Intent • March 31, 2014 • Submission of Grant Proposal • July 1, 2013 • Funding Period Begins