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    • What is cancer?
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      • Blood cancers
      • Breast cancer
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      • View 45 other cancers
    • Coping with a diagnosis
      • Coping with emotions
      • Tests and scans
      • Talking to kids about cancer
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      • Radiation therapy
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      • Immunotherapy
      • Targeted therapy
      • Hormone therapy
      • Clinical trials
      • Palliative treatment
    • Managing side effects
      • Fatigue
      • Taste and smell changes
      • Heart health and cancer
      • Hair loss
      • Pain and cancer
      • Peripheral neuropathy
      • Changes in thinking and memory
      • Lymphoedema
      • Mouth health
      • Nutrition and cancer
      • Breast prostheses and reconstruction
      • Fertility
      • Sexuality
    • Supporting someone with cancer
      • Caring for someone with cancer
      • Caring for someone with advanced cancer
      • Family and friends
      • Supportive schools
      • Supportive workplaces
      • Caring for mob with cancer
    • Living well during and after treatment
      • Nutrition and cancer
      • Exercise and cancer
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      • Caring for someone with advanced cancer
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    • Fact sheets, podcasts and more
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      • Cancer Council Podcasts
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    Our cancer helpline consultants are ready for your call to support all people impacted by cancer. We may be able to assist with direct support services or by putting you in touch with other people who can support you.
    • 13 11 20 – Speak to a cancer professional
    • How can we help you
      • Accommodation during treatment
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    • Coping with a diagnosis
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    • Meditation and relaxation podcasts
  • Preventing Cancer
    Discover lifestyle choices to minimise your risk of getting cancer and the importance of screening and early detection for cancer survival.
    • Healthy diet and exercise
      • Limit alcohol
      • Be a healthy weight
      • Move more, sit less
      • Healthy Made Tasty
      • Our Kids Our Call
    • Quit smoking and vaping
      • Quit smoking
      • Tackling Tobacco
      • Smoke free environments
      • Electronic cigarettes
      • Generation Vape
    • Sun protection
      • Slip on a shirt
      • Slop on sunscreen
      • Slap on a hat
      • Seek shade
      • Slide on sunglasses
      • SunSmart NSW website
      • Improve your long game
      • Outdoor workers
      • Sporting groups
      • Buy sun protection products online
    • Screening and early detection
      • Cervical screening
      • Bowel cancer screening
      • Breast cancer screening
      • Lung cancer screening
      • Testicular cancer
      • Prostate cancer
      • Ovarian cancer
      • Liver cancer and hepatitis B
      • Check for skin cancer
    • CanAct – campaigning for better policies
    • Cancer Council shops
  • Research
    Research programs save lives, improve treatments and quality of life for cancer survivors.
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      • Fundraise your way – Do It For Cancer
      • Australia’s Biggest Morning Tea
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  • Exploiting a new epigenetic regulatory mechanism for sustaining leukaemia-initiating activity

Exploiting a new epigenetic regulatory mechanism for sustaining leukaemia-initiating activity

Dr Jenny Wang The University of Sydney $450,000 2024-2026

Background

Blood cancer is one of the highest causes of cancer death in Australia, claiming more lives than breast cancer and melanoma combined.  

Acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) is the lethal form of blood cancer, with only 27% of patients surviving for 5 years after being diagnosed. The major cause of poor outcomes is the persistence of leukaemia-initiating cells. 

These cells have the capacity to escape chemotherapy and make more of themselves indefinitely (known as self-renewal). There are currently no effective treatments to target these cells. 

About the Project

Dr Jenny Wang and her team have discovered a key self-renewal pathway essential for the survival of leukaemia-initiating cells.  

This project aims to evaluate the survival mechanism that these cells use to protect themselves from chemotherapy.  

Dy Jenny Wang and her team will develop a therapy targeting the survival mechanism to eliminate leukaemia-initiating cells, thereby preventing therapy resistance and improving patient outcomes. 

Impact

By evaluating the survival mechanism that these cells use to protect themselves from chemotherapy, this project will help the team develop a therapy targeting the survival mechanism to eliminate leukaemia-initiating cells, thereby preventing therapy resistance and tumour recurrence.  

This therapy will use the teams newly developed drug, that will ensure effective translation of this therapy into the clinic to directly benefit patients who are not considered curable with current chemotherapy.  

This novel therapy may also be applicable to other cancers driven by tumour-initiating cells, such as cancers of the lung, breast, prostate, colon and brain, which may share the critical survival mechanism with human leukaemia-initiating cells in blood cancer.

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