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Science Financier Jeffrey Epstein Funds Pivotal Breast Cancer Research at Mount Sinai
Breast cancer still affects 12% of women in the United States. Huge strides have been made in
the field of inhibitor drugs but long term survival beyond 5 years for stage IV breast cancer is still
only 22%. Early detection ofbreast cancer therefore, is essential. Recently, the Jeffrey Epstein VI
Foundation has backed critical new research in early diagnosis.
The research conducted at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City, under the direction of
surgeon Dr. Jess Ting, breast oncologist, Dr. Kevin Adelson and molecular biologist, Dr. Doris
Germain, shows how metastasis is not necessarily intrinsic to the tumor but to its micro-
environment. The shift in focus is critical Dr. Ting explains because it will be an effective way to
identify and stratify those at high risk of metastasis after surgery.
The Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation that funded this research was founded by New York financier
and science investor Jeffrey Epstein. Known for establishing the Program for Evolutionary
Dynamics at Harvard is 2003, the foundation backs a substantial amount of cutting edge cancer
research across the country.
To obtain a breast tumor's micro-environment, Dr. Ting and his team use a unique method of
analyzing the fluid emitted from a post-surgery wound site. To date, clinical analysis of a cancer's
environment has been the blood, a rich source of disease-related biomarkers. However, blood's
complex composition, amongst other factors, is a major challenge for biomarker assays. Other
body fluids, including urine, cerebrospina, bronchoalveolar lavage, synovial, amniotic, seminal
plasma and interstitial fluids are also rich in disease biomarkers. However, these fluids arc only
informative in advanced metastatic cancer patients and so their prognostic value in term of disease
progression is limited.
Dr. Tines team saw that wound fluid (emitted from a draining tube), contains all the proteins,
growth factors and cytokines that are secreted by the cells around the cancer and is an ideal way
of studying the microenvironment in vivo. Furthermore, wound fluid from a breast cancer patient
often has the tremendous advantage of having an exact control specimen since the non-cancerous
breast is often removed as a precaution and wound fluid from that breast can be compared.
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Over the last year, Dr. Ting and his team have found distinct differences between cancerous
wound fluid and non-cancerous both in test tubes and in mice. It is these differences that will be
critical biomarkers in determining risk of future metastasis.
"Identifying post-surgery patients at high risk of metastasis is vital," Jeffrey Epstein remarked. "It
will be a key factor in prioritizing them for constant vigilance."
Jeffrey Epstein is a former member of the Trilateral Commission, the Council on
Foreign Relations and the New York Academy of Science. He is actively involved
in the Santa Fe Institute and the Theoretical Biology Initiative at the Institute
for Advanced Study in Princeton. He recently sat on the Mind, Brain and Behavior
Advisory Committee at Harvard University.
SOURCE:
www.jcffrcycpstcinscicncc.com
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