Mario Suva, MD, PhD

Glioblastoma is the most common and aggressive type of brain cancer, and sadly, most people only survive 12 to 18 months after being diagnosed. This hasn’t changed in the last 20 years. One of the reasons it’s so hard to treat is that glioblastoma is very complex and different from one patient to another.To improve treatment, we need to better understand this complexity and figure out how to target each part of the cancer. The Suva lab has spent the last decade studying glioblastoma in depth using advanced genetic tools to understand how it varies. We’ve discovered that glioblastoma can be broken down into four important parts, and each part is essential for the cancer to grow.In this research, we will develop strategies to target each of these four parts. We’ll use new technologies developed by the Bar-Peled lab that can target elements of the cancer that were once thought too hard to treat. Our first step will be to analyze tumor samples from patients to find new drug targets. From there, we will work on drug development to eventually test them in clinical trials.

Location: The General Hospital Corporation d/b/a Massachusetts General Hospital - Boston
Proposal: A chemical proteomics drug discovery campaign for glioblastoma
Mailing list button
Close Mailing List