Jillian’s Dream is thrilled to announce our partnership with Prelude to a Cure, the non-profit arm of Moffitt Cancer Center’s Lung Cancer Center of Excellence. With the direction and vision from the founders Dr.’s Lary Robinson and Scott Antonia we are working together to increase our visibility, advocacy efforts and fundraising goals. Together we are stronger than lung cancer. With your continued support, together, we can make a difference in the lives of lung cancer patients, their families and caregivers. Together we hope that one day surviving lung cancer will be expected and not the exception.
Prelude to a Cure – Shines a Light on Cancer Research
Meet Dr. Boyle
Dr. Theresa Boyle is a pathologist – a self-described doctor’s doctor. Her role is to analyze and interpret biopsied tissue samples for thoracic oncologists and surgeons to develop patient treatment plans. Her career at Moffitt Cancer Center began two and a half years ago and she divides her efforts between the Thoracic and Pathology Departments. Dr. Eric Haura, leader of the Lung Cancer Center of Excellence, is one of her mentors. Boyle believes there is a big need to identify and study biomarkers. The goals in cancer research include discovering biomarkers that can be used to identify underlying processes leading to more effective treatments.
Research Focus
Pathology is like detective work. Normally the body’s immune system attacks invaders like tumor cells, but cancer likes to hide. Immunotherapy is able to “unmask the tumor,” explains Boyle. There is a sub-set of people who respond and get better with current lung cancer treatments, however there are many who don’t. Dr. Boyle wants to focus on the underlying reasons some patients don’t experience positive outcomes from these treatments.
She has developed an interest in mass spectrometry which allows researchers to view proteins in a tumor on a grand scale. The hypothesis which awarded Boyle the Barbara Bauer Research Grant asked,
“Is it feasible to develop technology to look at all of the markers associated with cancer?”
She acknowledges that this is a vast undertaking and comments, “If it were easy everyone would be doing it.”
The Ripple Effect
Dr. Boyle discussed the impact of being chosen to receive The Barbara Bauer Innovative Lung Cancer Research Grant which made her principal investigator of a grant project for the first time in her career. She has participated in a number of research projects and clinical trials but appreciates the intellectual challenge of taking the lead. Perhaps her enthusiasm is contagious. Kiah Bowers, a member of the Koomen mass spectrometry core, says this project is her favorite because it is so exploratory and challenging in a meaningful way.
The grant enabled Boyle to create a pilot protocol using 30 samples dedicated to her research study. She explained that many times there isn’t much tissue left from patient samples for research purposes. Ten of these samples had already been tested using staining techniques to determine protein content. For the other 20 samples she is utilizing mass spectrometry to get a closer look at the immune protein profile of tissue from patients treated with immunotherapy to learn why they did or did not respond to the drug. Her second mentor, Dr. John Koomen, Director of Mass Spectrometry at Moffitt, was a natural fit for Boyle’s project thanks to her choice of technology.
“Without this funding I would never have met Dr. Koomen and now we meet once a week,” she says.
Recently Dr. Koomen encouraged Boyle to write an abstract for a conference in California – “Mass Spectrometry Applied to Clinical Labs.” Her abstract was accepted, and she received an all-expense paid invitation to present her project at the conference attended by over one thousand colleagues. Boyle was thrilled to be there (in spite of becoming terribly ill with the flu) and managed to participate in basic courses about mass spectrometry before getting sick. She plans to return to present more results about this project next year.
Boyle’s research is ongoing thanks to additional funding from the Lung Cancer Center of Excellence. Dr. Lary Robinson, co-founder of Prelude to a Cure, spoke at a fundraiser about the importance of cultivating seed grants which allow researchers to parlay their findings into higher levels of support.
Dr. Boyle is getting closer to testing patient samples again armed with what she learned from the first round. Stay tuned.
What makes Moffitt Special?
Boyle talked about what it feels like to be a member of Florida’s only NCI designated Comprehensive Cancer Center by sharing that she “has never before felt such team spirit.” We discussed the sometimes-competitive nature of scientific research and she assures me that everyone at Moffitt is clear that, “The enemy is cancer, not other colleagues.”
There is a sense of pride and urgency that goes along with Moffitt’s dual mission of providing outstanding patient care while participating in cutting edge research. The focus is always on “getting to work” finding answers to get closer to a cure. Boyle is quick to point out the tremendous support Moffitt receives from the Tampa Bay community as another source of inspiration to continue their pursuits.
It takes time and money to develop successful treatments like immunotherapy and she’s grateful to work in an environment that understands this. Moffitt doctors use conservative approaches mixed with open mindedness about new technologies.
Lung Cancer Research Challenges
Two of the greatest challenges researchers face today are STILL the smoking stigma associated with this deadly disease and the huge disparity between funding/awareness devoted to lung versus other forms of cancer. The stark reality is that lung cancer remains the number one cancer killer of men and women in the United States while receiving the least amount of funding for research and awareness campaigns. There is plenty of room for improving this imbalance and Prelude to a Cure is committed to providing support for scientists working hard to find innovative ways to improve patient outcomes while moving toward a cure.
Theresa Boyle believes the more people know, the more they will care. “Every droplet makes a difference.”
The Ribbon is White – Join the Fight!
– Interview conduction with Dr. Theresa Boyle by Prelude Board Member Kathrine King – June 19, 2018
Interview with Jillian’s Dream Founder – Ros Miller
Lung Cancer Awareness Month
Lung Cancer Awareness Month is over. Or is it…? It doesn’t matter how you got this terrible disease. But when a person says they have lung cancer the reaction is: Did you smoke? To that end, I learned to turn around their question/statement to “Can I ask you why you asked that?” moment. It goes back to that nagging stigma that so many of us are trying to change.
World Lung Cancer Day
World Lung Cancer Day, August 1, 2016. Four years ago was the very first World Lung Cancer Day. It isn’t a silly day like National Pizza Day or Hammock Day……World Lung Cancer Day isn’t there to celebrate—just the opposite. We are trying to raise awareness for the deadliest of all cancers—worldwide!
One part nuts, one part bolts
Nuts and bolts—the necessary connection….another way to think of this metaphor: researchers, patients, survivors, oncologists need advocates to help make the connections they can’t do on their own. We are the nuts (no pun intended); they are the bolts.
The Day my elephant became an Elephant
I was going to start off with who I am: wife, mother, military spouse, volunteer and ending up with who I’ve become—advocate…….I thought that with my “Google MD,” “Band-Aids,” hugs and kisses I could give Jillian life and dreams. That’s what moms do!
I can’t remember. Did we Talk?
I know that no one is comfortable talking about lung cancer. It’s the elephant in the room, about “moving the needle” and, of course, “white is the new pink”—all efforts to talk about lung cancer.
Dealing with the Elephant one slice at a time
What is it about lung cancer? I know it’s that elephant in the room again, still. From time to time, I get that knot in my stomach when I think about Jillian, especially now, when there is so much going on in this lung cancer community.
Is it time to talk about lung cancer?
For the first 10 months I didn’t want to talk. When I did, I asked questions—lots of questions. I was better at note-taking and writing to myself than talking. In July 2012, at age 28, my daughter Jillian was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer, adenocarcinoma with metastases.