Funding from The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS) can lead to scientific breakthroughs that will improve and save the lives of patients.
The LLS Research Team oversees the organization's research stray to support cutting-edge research for every type of blood cancer, including leukemia, lymphoma, myeloma.
Take a look at the current active, extraordinary LLS-funded research projects.
337 results
Refine Your Search
Stanford
Coming soon.
Project Term: July 1, 2025 - June 30, 2028
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
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
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
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