Funding from Blood Cancer United can lead to scientific breakthroughs that will improve and save the lives of patients.
The Blood Cancer United Research Team oversees the organization's research strategy to support cutting-edge research for every type of blood cancer, including leukemia, lymphoma, and myeloma.
Take a look at all the currently active, extraordinary Blood Cancer United-funded research projects.
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Boston Children's Hospital
This grant proposal aims to uncover inherited resilience to clonal hematopoiesis (CH) and myeloid malignancies (MyMs). Our pilot work has identified a regulatory variant that significantly protects from CH/MyM through downregulation of MSI2 levels in human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). We seek to perform rigorous mechanistic studies to identify an RNA network that regulates human HSCs and is modulated through genetic variation to protect them from CH/MyMs.
Project Term: October 1, 2025 - September 30, 2028

Sloan Kettering Institute for Cancer Research
Mutations in the RNA splicing factor gene SRSF2 occur in 25% of patients with MDS, 50% of patients with chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMML), and 25% of AML patients over the age of 65. We recently developed a cell therapy directed against abnormal proteins on the surface of cells expressing mutant SRSF2. This proposal aims to improve this new form of immunotherapy and extend its benefit to the largest number of patients with myeloid blood cancers.
Project Term: October 1, 2025 - September 30, 2028

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Inc.
Certain genetic alterations in Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphomas (DLBCL) render these tumors highly aggressive. Aggressive DLBCLs may also form secondary lymphomas in the brain. The research proposed here will examine the role of a specific class of lipids in the growth of these lymphomas and assess the utility of strategies to lower these lipids or inhibit their production in halting tumor growth.
Project Term: October 1, 2025 - September 30, 2028

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
This project will identify and engineer strategies to improve the function of chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells in patients with relapsed/refractory large B-cell lymphoma. We will leverage our recent discoveries in lymphoma and CAR T cell therapy to (i) determine if the tumor influences the T cells that are harvested for CAR T manufacture, (ii) engineer T cells to be more resilient to suppressive signals in the tumor, and (iii) engineer T cells to have greater infiltration into tumors.
Project Term: October 1, 2025 - September 30, 2028

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Blood cancers called myeloproliferative neoplasms occur when one of the blood stem cells picks up a mutation. Some patients stay in the chronic phase of the disease for years whereas others rapidly progress with poor outcome. We recently measured when the cancer mutation first occurs and the rate of expansion of the cancer cells in individual patients. We will develop a method that uses the history of disease in each patient to identify those that are at risk of progression.

Columbia University Medical Center
We recently identified a pervasive, pathogenically relevant mutational mechanism that targets super-enhancers (SE) in DLBCL, leading to target gene deregulation. Here we will dissect the mechanistic role of 3 highly recurrent hotspots in the BCL6, BTG2 and CXCR4 SEs in driving lymphomagenesis and tumor dependency in vitro and in vivo using novel mouse models. These studies will significantly transform our understanding of DLBCL and identify novel therapeutic targets.
Project Term: October 1, 2023 - September 30, 2026

Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Survival rates for those afflicted with MDS have not improved despite extensive effort to identify the key genetic events in its pathogenesis. This project elucidates the contributions of aberrant NPM1 to hematological disorders, with a focus on mitochondrial fitness and inflammasome activation. The resulting insights into the metabolic, genetic and proteomic requirements of homeostasis that are critical to preventing aging will have a major impact on the treatment of hematological malignancies.
Project Term: October 1, 2023 - September 30, 2026

Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Myelodysplastic neoplasms are malignant disorders driven by expansion of diseased hematopoietic stem cells and progression to leukemia. Our investigations have identified the important role of the transporter of amino acid glutamine SLC38A1 in sustaining metabolic demands of rapidly growing malignant stem cells. The goal of this project is to genetically target this transporter to understand its role on tumorigenesis and progression; and to develop SLC38A1 inhibitors as novel therapeutic tools.
Project Term: October 1, 2023 - September 30, 2026

Emory University
Despite remarkable progress in the last 20 years, multiple myeloma remains an incurable disease. In recent years, 2 CAR T cell products that target BCMA on the myeloma cell have been approved. These products result in remarkable initial responses however the duration of these responses has been disappointing. In this proposal, we will take a novel approach to isolate and characterize myeloma cells that interact with CAR T cells but are not killed by them as a potential resistance mechanism.
Project Term: October 1, 2023 - September 30, 2026

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
The goal of our laboratory is to discover, study, and the translate new leukemia therapies to the clinic. In this project, we are studying a signaling pathway, called PI3 kinase gamma, that we believe is important in patients with AML and might lead to new treatments using drugs that target its activity.
Project Term: October 1, 2024 - September 30, 2027

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
CAR-T cells are made from a patient’s own immune cells, altered so that they specifically recognize and kill the patient’s cancer cells. They are effective in many but not all cases of B-acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), among other blood cancers. In this proposal we seek to better understand ways to select T cells that will make better CAR-T cells as well as to treat CAR T cells them in ways to make them work better in the cancer patient.
Project Term: October 1, 2024 - September 30, 2027
Columbia University Medical Center
Peripheral T-cell lymphomas are highly aggressive blood cancer that have very poor survival rate, highlighting the need for new therapies to improve patient survival. We aim to improve our understanding of the characteristics of the individual cancer cells and their interaction with surrounding cells in the tumor environment with the goal of identifying new drugs that we can validate in preclinical models and move into more efficient treatments for lymphoma patients.
Project Term: October 1, 2024 - September 30, 2027
Who we fund
Learn more about the inspiring blood cancer scientists we support—and leading biotech companies we partner with— who are working to find cures and help blood cancer patients live longer, better lives.
Research Grants
We award grants for studies that range from basic blood cancer research to pioneering clinical trials. For more than seventy years, Blood Cancer United support has been instrumental in the development of the vast majority of breakthroughs in blood cancer treatment.
Therapy Acceleration Program ®(TAP)
TAP is a mission-driven, strategic venture philanthropy initiative that seeks to accelerate the development of innovative blood cancer therapeutics and change the standard of care while also generating a return on investment for the Blood Cancer United mission. TAP collaborates with biotech companies to support the development of novel platforms, first-in-class assets addressing high unmet medical needs, emerging patient populations, and orphan indications.