Applying Discoveries Through Translational Research
Kate Lathrop, MD, explains the advantages of being able to collaborate as an NCI- designated Cancer Center and produce translational research to improve patient care.
Kate Lathrop, MD, explains the advantages of being able to collaborate as an NCI- designated Cancer Center and produce translational research to improve patient care.
Executive Director Ruben Mesa, MD, shares the impact investigators at the Mays Cancer Center have made playing a lead role in drug development to treat chronic illnesses in cancer patients.
Mark Bonnen, MD, chief medical officer at Mays Cancer Center, announces bone marrow and stem cell transplants will be offered to patients at the new UT Health San Antonio Multispecialty and Research Hospital opening in 2024.
Kate Lathrop, MD, defines the value of having a National Cancer Institute-designated cancer center that serves San Antonio and South Texas.
Find out how Mays Cancer Center is leading cancer research for Latinos and why it’s important for the future of cancer care in South Texas.
Hear what one expert from Mays Cancer Center is saying about the UT Health San Antonio’s Multispecialty and Research Hospital coming to #SanAntonio in late 2024 to meet the community’s #cancer care needs.
Hear medical oncologist, Kate Lathrop, MD, share the value of offering clinical trials to patients and the potential it has to playing a key role in survivorship.
Chief Medical Officer Mark Bonnen, MD, talks about an innovative device used at Mays Cancer Center to help personalize a patient’s radiation treatment and decrease the amount of radiation exposure.
Kate Lathrop, MD, highlights how the cancer center has shifted the paradigm in care for breast cancer patients and the positive impact it has made in their lives.
TLI and UTHSCSA will be participating in projects 2 and 4 ,To examine cirrhotic patients and their risk factors for developing liver cancer . Researchers hope to improve ability to prevent liver cancer , and to better identify patients at higher risk for developing liver cancer at an early stage. C. Early detection of HCC in patients with cirrhosis remains suboptimal. The efficacy of HCC surveillance for the early detection of HCC is a subject of intense debate due to the lack of sensitive and specific biomarkers that are well validated in prospective studies. Further, implementation of surveillance in practice is very low. The MIRA aims to develop novel, urgently needed, and highly effective surveillance biomarkers of patients with cirrhosis, and improve the utilization of currently available surveillance strategies. Project 2: Metabolic Syndrome and Risk Prediction of Hepatocellular Carcinoma (PI: H El-Serag). This project will develop risk stratification algorithms based on demographic, clinical, molecular and epidemiological risk profiles to identify cirrhotic patients who might benefit from chemoprevention or intensive surveillance. Our proposed multicenter prospective cohort study of >4000 patients with cirrhosis and up to 4 year follow up (a conservative estimate of 300 new HCC cases) will be the largest cohort study of cirrhotic patients assembled in Texas (and U.S). We will evaluate phenotypic (including molecular endophenotypes) and genotypic aspects of MetS as well as established risk factors.Project 4: Novel Biomarkers for Hepatocellular Carcinoma (PI: L Beretta). This project will identify and validate novel biomarkers for risk stratification and early HCC detection. Although several biomarkers have supporting pre-clinical (phase 1) and case-control (phase 2) data, few have been evaluated in retrospective cohort (phase 3) or prospective cohort (phase 4) studies. The prospective Texas multicenter cohort study of cirrhosis patients (i.e. Phase 3) in which 300 HCC cases will be compared to 600 controls nested in this cohort. We will validate several promising existing markers as well as aim to discover novel biomarkers for HCC detection.