📄 Extracted Text (372 words)
Largest Private Fonder of Melanoma Receives Vital Support from the Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation
The Melanoma Research Alliance (MRA) has just received a pivotal donation from The Jeffrey Epstein VI
Foundation to further its support of melanoma research around the world.
The MRA is the largest private hinder of melanoma research worldwide. The Alliance funds programs
that show significant advances in the prevention, diagnosis, staging and treatment of melanoma, including
progress in the causes of carcinogenesis, skin screening, biomarkers, imaging, immunotherapy, molecularly
targeted therapy and combination therapy. Since 2008, the MRA has granted approximately $38 million to
over 134 programs and 65 institutions in more than 10 countries.
What is unique about the MRA though is that it aims to support not just the most effective research it can
find but the most efficient. Furthermore, all funding goes directly to sponsoring research, as opposed to a
large administrative staff.
"Efficiency in medical research is critical," Jeffrey Epstein remarked, whose own foundation focuses on
supporting cutting edge science. Scientists have to have financial autonomy to prioritize their goals. Too
many of our best institutes are handicapped by bureaucratic directives which don't always foster the best
results."
Today, melanoma is the deadliest of all skin cancers. It also has the highest rate of occurrence as
compared to other cancers in the US. The rate of long term survival however, has remained static over the
last forty years at an appallingly low rate of 15%.
Some of the promising programs that received funding from the MRA via The Jeffrey Epstein VI
Foundation include, Rockefeller University for therapeutic targeting of novel metastatic microRNAs in
human melanoma, Georgetown University for kinetics and effects of vemurafenib on intratumoral
immunity, the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Melbourne-Austin Branch for targeting inducible
invasive cells in melanoma and Yale University, School of Medicine for regulatory macrophages: a new
therapeutic target in melanoma.
"These new grants address critical issues in the prevention, detection, staging and treatment of melanoma
that are central to making further clinical advances against this disease", said MRA Chief Science Officer
Dr. Suzanne L. Topalian. "This is a time of unprecedented opportunity in melanoma research, and these
projects arc anticipated to result in near-term benefits for patients."
EFTA_R1_00475456
EFTA01985129
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