UNMC Researcher Receives Joseph P. Gilmore Outstanding Investigator Award Award For Research into Potential Way to Detect Pancreatic Cancer Early

Surinder Batra, Ph.D., has been awarded the 2001 College of Medicine

Joseph P. Gilmore Outstanding Investigator Award. The award highlights

the work of an outstanding researcher at UNMC.

Dr. Batra received the award for his latest research breakthrough that

may provide hope for detecting pancreatic cancer early. Because pancreatic

cancer is hard to detect, by the time the cancer is discovered, patients

usually have about six months to live.

Dr. Batra and his group have identified a blood molecule MUC4 mucin

that shows promise as being the first marker specific to pancreatic cancer.

Currently, there are no known markers (in the blood) specific to pancreatic

cancer, said Dr. Batra, UNMC associate professor in biochemistry and molecular

biology. Our trial showed that MUC4 is not only a marker for the cancer,

but it also could be a molecule that wed target in therapy.

Joseph Gilmore, Ph.D., was professor and chairman of the department

of physiology from 1970 to 1987. He was funded by the National Institutes

of Health for his entire career, supervised numerous graduate students

and post-doctoral fellows, and published more than 200 scientific papers.

The Joseph P. Gilmore Award was established by the department of physiology

and biophysics upon Dr.Gilmores retirement in 1987 to recognize outstanding

research contributions by a faculty member.

Dr. Batra has made important contributions to cancer research, said

Ira Fox, M.D., associate dean for research and development within the UNMC

College of Medicine, and he was selected for this award from a very competitive

field.

Dr. Batras research into the causes of pancreatic cancer began during

his more than eight-year tenure at Duke University Medical Center, in Durham,

NC. He came to UNMC in 1996, he said, because of its strong program in

pancreatic cancer, and the interaction that occurs between basic scientists

and clinicians.

His lab group, consisting of between 10 and 14 members at any one time,

is supported by various funding agencies, including the National Institutes

of Health, the U.S. Department of Energy, the Nebraska Research Initiative

program, the Nebraska Cancer and Smoking Disease Research Program, and

private foundations.

During the past 4½ years, Dr. Batra has written 31 published

works, including research papers, review articles and book chapters. Nearly

all of his efforts focus on pancreatic cancer, which accounts for 3 percent

of total cancer types and 5 percent of all cancer deaths. About 28,000

people are diagnosed and die every year from the disease. Nearly all of

them are diagnosed after the disease has metastasized, or spread, from

the pancreas.

People who are diagnosed with pancreatic cancer usually dont have

long to live usually from two months up to a year, at the longest, Dr.

Batra said.

Dr. Batra is hopeful that identifying MUC4 will help change that. In

the preliminary study, completed two months ago, 105 patients with various

cancers and disease were studied. Only those with pancreatic cancer exhibited

expression of MUC4.

The next study, which will involve numerous medical centers, will investigate

many more patients and those people who are at high-risk for developing

pancreatic cancer, such relatives of victims.