UNMC Chancellor Earns Lifetime Achievement Award from National Children’s Oncology Group

Harold M. Maurer, M.D., chancellor of the University of Nebraska Medical

Center, has been named a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award of

the Childrens Oncology Group, a National Cancer Institute-supported clinical

cooperative cancer treatment and research group.

Im tremendously honored and humbled, Dr. Maurer said. To get a Lifetime

Achievement Award from all of your peers in the United States, it actually

makes me tremble a little bit. Its the greatest kind of recognition that

a physician could receive.

Dr. Maurer will be one of four physicians presented with the award on

Friday, March 28, at the Childrens Oncology Group meeting in Atlanta.

The other cancer-treatment pioneers include Denman Hammond, M.D., professor

of pediatrics and associate vice president of health affairs at the University

of Southern California in Arcadia, Calif.; Teresa Vietti, M.D., professor

emeritus of pediatrics at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.; and

Giulio DAngio, M.D., professor emeritus of Radiation Oncology and Pediatric

Oncology at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Dr. Maurer is being recognized for his significant contributions to

pediatric cancer research, specifically his work with the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma

Study Group, which he helped to form in 1972. He chaired the group for

the next 25 years, becoming the worlds foremost expert on the disease.

The IRSG is credited with raising the cure rate of children afflicted with

the disease from 20 percent to 75 percent.

When I began my career, there was no literature about how to effectively

treat rhabdomyosarcoma, Dr. Maurer said. All of the treatments were very

radical, and we basically said, Time out. Theres got to me a more effective

way of treating children with this disease. As is turned out, there was.

Rhabdomyosarcoma is a malignant tumor found in soft tissue of children.

The most common sites are the structures of the head and neck, the urogenital

tract, and the arms or legs, but the cancer can form almost anywhere. Each

body site, when afflicted with the cancer, has its own special problems,

Dr. Maurer said. The cause of rhabdomyosarcoma is unknown. The vast majority

of children with the disease do not have any known risk factors. With several

hundred new cases per year throughout the United States, the cancer is

the fifth-most common cancer found in children under age 15.

Dr. Maurer was a young physician-scientist at the Medical College of

Virginia in Richmond when he diagnosed a young girl with rhabdomyosarcoma

in her leg and in her lung. The standard treatment at that time was to

amputate her leg and to surgically remove a portion of her lung. Instead,

Dr. Maurer irradiated the tumor in the lung, resected the tumor from the

girls leg, irradiated the post-operative tumor bed and proceeded with

a novel chemotherapy regimen.

She did real well, Dr. Maurer said.

Still, the lack of any literature on rhabdomyosarcoma and the radical

treatment that disfigured many children bothered Dr. Maurer. He wanted

to form a study group, but needed more cases than were available regionally.

Eventually, his idea of a study group made it to Dr. Hammond, a professor

at the University of California, Los Angeles, and a key clinical researcher

for the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

At a meeting in Park City, Utah, Dr. Maurer and several other physician-scientists

met with Dr. Hammond to discuss study groups in rhabdomyosarcoma and three

other childhood cancers. The rhabdomyosarcoma group was the only one to

survive more than five years.

In 1972, with funding from the NCI, the Intergroup Rhabdomyosarcoma

Study Committee (it would be formally become an NCI-recognized group in

the early 1990s) launched its first integrative study, the first of four,

six-year studies that the group would conduct over the next 25 years. The

historical results were not good: only 20 percent of children who were

afflicted with the disease in the United States survived.

Over the next two decades, however, that number increased to 75 percent,

as hospitals around the country and world began to treat patients based

on the research from the rhabdomyosarcoma study group.

It became the gold standard of treatment, Dr. Maurer said.

Dr. Maurer credits the work of the group for bettering the treatment

of rhabdomyosarcoma patients. He said that team members wrote dozens upon

dozens of papers and presented hundreds of lectures and seminars, never

worrying about who was getting the credit.

Dr. Maurer himself is author of more than 200 publications and is the

editor of a pediatrics textbook and a book on rhabdomyosarcoma. He also

has presented at more than 150 scientific meetings and has served on the

editorial boards of the American Journal of Hematology, the Journal of

Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, and the Medical and Pediatric Oncology

Journal.

In 1993, when he came to UNMC as the College of Medicine dean, Dr. Maurer

brought nearly $1 million a year in National Institutes of Health grant

money, relating to his research into rhabdomyosarcoma. He stepped down

as chairman of the study group in 1998. The study group eventually became

part of the Childrens Oncology Group when all childrens cancer study

groups in the United States were combined.

This award isnt about what Ive done, but what the people on my team

have done all over the world, Dr. Maurer said. They didnt care who got

the credit, they just wanted children with this terrible disease to be

treated better and to have better lives. I am glad that in most cases,

we were able to achieve that.

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