
Nanoparticle Delivery System for Ewing Sarcoma TreatmentAward last edited on: 11/13/2019
Sponsored Program
STTRAwarding Agency
NIH : NCITotal Award Amount
$240,750Award Phase
1Solicitation Topic Code
102Principal Investigator
Jon O NagyCompany Information
Phase I
Contract Number: ----------Start Date: ---- Completed: ----
Phase I year
2016Phase I Amount
$240,750Public Health Relevance Statement:
Public Health Relevance:
Toxicity of drugs used to treat cancer is the major limiting factor in effective chemotherapy. The collateral damage to bone marrow, GI tract, liver, heart, and other normal tissues limits the amount of chemotherapeutic agent a patient can receive. This project seeks to develop a method to encapsulate cancer drugs inside tiny particles and deliver these loaded particles directly and efficiently to cancer cells. This will widen the window of treatment by getting more drug to the tumor, preventing drug uptake by normal tissue, thereby reducing toxic side effects and saving patients' lives.
NIH Spending Category:
Bioengineering; Biotechnology; Cancer; Nanotechnology; Orphan Drug; Pediatric; Pediatric Cancer; Pediatric Research Initiative; Rare Diseases
Project Terms:
Address; Adverse effects; Antibodies; Antineoplastic Agents; Area; base; Binding; Biological Availability; Bone Marrow; Bypass; cancer cell; Cancer Patient; cancer therapy; Cause of Death; Cell surface; Cells; chemotherapeutic agent; chemotherapy; Clinical Trials; Cytotoxic agent; Data; Disseminated Malignant Neoplasm; Dose; Doxorubicin; Drug usage; effective therapy; Effectiveness; efficacy testing; Encapsulated; Endocytosis; Ewings sarcoma; Formulation; Gastrointestinal tract structure; Goals; Grant; Heart; high risk; Human; Human Resources; Hybrids; Implant; improved; In Vitro; in vitro testing; innovation; Kidney; killings; Label; Legal patent; leukemia; Liposomes; Liver; Malignant Neoplasms; Methods; Mission; Modification; mouse model; Mus; nanoparticle; Nanotechnology; Neoplasm Metastasis; neoplastic cell; Normal tissue morphology; novel; novel therapeutics; particle; Patients; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Phase; prevent; Production; public health relevance; Recurrence; Relapse; relapse patients; Research Project Grants; Resistance; response; Small Business Technology Transfer Research; small molecule therapeutics; Staging; System; Systemic Therapy; systemic toxicity; targeted delivery; targeted treatment; Technology; temozolomide; Testing; Therapeutic; Therapeutic Agents; Time; Toxic effect; tumor; Tumor Burden; uptake; Work; Xenograft procedure
Phase II
Contract Number: ----------Start Date: ---- Completed: ----