University of Nebraska Medical Center researchers awarded $890,000 for Mantle Cell Lymphoma

New York, NY — The Lymphoma Research Foundation (LRF) announced today

funding to help hunt for clues to cure and better treat a rare form of

blood cancer, mantle cell lymphoma. The nine institutions named this month

are part of an overall $12.8 million funding initiative the foundation

announced in December. A total of 18 research grants will be provided.

The University of Nebraska Medical Center will receive a three-year grant

totaling $890,000. Lymphoma is the most common blood cancer and the third

most common cancer of childhood.

Our goal is to develop new and improved, less toxic therapies to enhance

survival rates and ultimately find a cure, said Joseph Bertino, M.D.,

chairman of the LRF Scientific Advisory Board. Mantle cell lymphoma is

a very aggressive cancer and less than 10 percent of patients with the

disease are alive after 10 years.  We hope to change that.

The project at UNMC will be conducted under the leadership of Timothy

Greiner, M.D., associate professor in the Department of Pathology and Microbiology,

in collaboration with co- investigator Judith Christman, Ph.D., professor

and chairperson of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.

Dr. Greiners project will use DNA technology to study how some genes are

turned off in mantle cell lymphoma.  Knowledge of these genes may

lead to effective therapies for the disease.

Through research funded by the National Institutes of Health and led

by Dr. John Chan of UNMC, we have previously characterized the abnormal

gene expression pattern in mantle cell lymphoma, Dr. Greiner said. Now

we hope to determine one of the processes that cause this pattern, which

lets the lymphoma cells grow unchecked.

Dr. Greiner has been researching lymphoma at UNMC since 1993. This

grant will allow us to take our research to the next level in understanding

mantle cell lymphoma, he said.

More than 500,000 Americans are affected by some form of lymphoma —

either non- Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) or Hodgkins lymphoma (HL). Each year,

another 61,000 new cases are diagnosed and nearly 25,000 people die from

the disease. Lymphoma is the most common cancer of the lymphatic system

and the fifth most common form of cancer in the U.S. The overall five-year

survival rate is only 55 percent.

Mantle cell lymphoma is a relatively uncommon B-cell lymphoma, which

accounts for 5 to 7 percent of all adult non-Hodgkins lymphoma cases in

the U.S.  It is a malignancy of cells located in the mantle zone of

the lymph node, a thin area surrounding individual follicles.  Mantle

cell lymphoma, which predominantly affects older males, was first well-defined

20 years ago by Dennis Weisenburger, M.D., professor in the Department

of Pathology and Microbiology at UNMC, Dr. Greiner said.

Hodgkins lymphoma, also known as Hodgkins disease, is a less common

form of lymphoma. The overall five-year survival rate is 84 percent. Hodgkins

lymphoma occurs mainly in young adults, with a peak occurrence between

ages 16 and 34.  Older patients, especially those over age 55, may

also develop HL.

Funding for the $12.8 million initiative was made possible through

an anonymous donation to the foundation by a New York-based family. For

a full listing of all the institutions which received funding, please visit

the news section of the LRF website at www.lymphoma.org

To date, LRF has funded more than $9 million in lymphoma research. People

affected by lymphoma can receive free personalized information tailored

to their diagnosis, help with finding a clinical trial, and easy-to-understand

information on lymphoma, current treatments, and promising research by

calling 800-500-9976, e-mailing helpline@lymphoma.org, or visiting the

www.lymphoma.org Web site.

We appreciate the efforts of the Lymphoma Research Foundation in raising

funds to further lymphoma research, Dr. Greiner said. Were hopeful that

our research project will allow us to be successful in better treating

this disease.