1. Children’s Brain Tumour Drug Delivery Consortium
- Author
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Dr Emma Campbell, Prof David Walker, Dr Ruman Rahman, Prof Richard Grundy, Prof Henry Brem, Dr Monica Pearl, Dr Jordan Green, Dr Miroslaw Janowski, Prof Kenneth Cohen, Dr Piotr Walczak, Dr Katherine Warren, Dr Stephen Lowis, Prof Alexander Mullen, Dr Marie Boyd, Dr Gareth Veal, Prof Darren Hargrave, Dr Dannis Van Vuurden, and Dr Steven Powell
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Abstracts ,Oncology ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: There is an urgent need to expedite the development of new or repurposed drugs for children’s cancer. An additional challenge in the developing brain is to ensure the drug is delivered to the tumour at therapeutic and non-toxic concentrations for sufficient duration to achieve the biological effect. Children’s brain tumours account for over 20% of childhood cancers and differ significantly in their biological characteristics from their adult counterparts. METHODS: The authors participated in an international CNS drug delivery workshop funded by the charity Children with Cancer UK in February 2016, where different experimental techniques aimed at optimising CNS drug delivery in children’s brain tumours were discussed. RESULTS: The workshop was reported by e-cancer (http://ecancer.org/journal/10/full/630-highlights-of-children-with-cancer-uk-s-workshop-on-drug-delivery-in-paediatric-brain-tumours.php; http://ecancer.org/conference/831-drug-delivery-in-paediatric-brain-tumours.php). We were encouraged to develop a proposal to establish an international research consortium to raise awareness and promote collaboration in the field. This is now funded for two years by Children with Cancer UK. The Children’s Brain Tumour Drug Delivery Consortium seeks to strengthen collaborative developments by working closely with the international children’s brain tumour community, encouraging and facilitating discussions between a multi-disciplinary network of clinicians and researchers within pharma and academia as well as a range of funders and stakeholders. As of March 2018, we have 94 individuals from 11 nations registered as members, with diverse stakeholders represented by academics, clinical academics, charities, public/patient groups, industry and regulatory bodies. CONCLUSION: We present this abstract to the BNOS conference to raise awareness of this initiative with the large number of relevant stakeholders who will be attending the event, and to extend our invitation for collaborators to join the consortium.
- Published
- 2018