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Improving Treatment of Invasive Brain Tumors

$4,000
100%
Raised toward our $4,000 Goal
94 Donors
Project has ended
Project ended on December 29, at 11:59 PM EST
Project Owners

Brain Cancer Research

ABOUT US

We are Team MetaBio, a brain cancer research team sponsored by the Gemstone Honors Program at the University of Maryland, College Park. We are composed of 8 interdisciplinary undergraduate students with knowledge spanning bioengineering, physiology and neurobiology, neuroscience, as well as cell biology and genetics. Our research mentor, Dr. Huang Chiao Huang, is an Assistant Professor in the Fischell Department of Bioengineering and director of the Optical Therapeutics and Nanotechnology Laboratory


GLIOBLASTOMA BRAIN CANCER

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and aggressive malignant brain cancer, making up 49.1% of primary malignant brain tumors. The average survival rate for patients diagnosed with GBM is about 12-18 months with the five-year survival rate being 6.8%

The majority of GBM patients receive their diagnosis when the cancer is a grade IV, meaning GBM has strong resistance to conventional cancer treatments, such as radiation and chemotherapy, and rapidly reemerges after surgery. Resistance of GBM to conventional treatment methods remains under-explored and could be attributed to a combination of neurophysiological mechanisms.


BRAIN CANCER TREATMENT

The purpose of our research is to develop an effective and innovative treatment approach to eliminate GBM tumors and prevent their recurrence. There has been little progress in finding effective treatments of GBM due to the complexity, highly invasive potential of GBM tumors, and the lack of funding GBM research has received compared to other cancers. 

While there have been some treatments developed to decrease the rate of cancer progression and its symptoms, there are no existing treatments that serve as a comprehensive cure for GBM. The science community has concluded that more research needs to be done in order to develop an effective long-term treatment for GBM brain cancer.


OUR RESEARCH:

Why help us? Throughout our literature review and research process, we are studying the potential of an innovative combinatorial approach to cancer treatment, involving photodynamic therapy (PDT) and a new class of small-molecule inhibitors. This novel approach remains underexplored in GBM, and we are hopeful that our research will provide insight on the promising future of combination treatment approaches to brain cancer. Our research is not just about GBM. It is about sparking a greater conversation about the need for a comprehensive approach to cancer treatment as well as the prospective benefits of recently explored, innovative therapeutic methods. 


PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY

Photodynamic Therapy (PDT): While conventional cancer treatments (chemotherapy, radiation, etc.) can affect healthy cells, which have harmful side effects, photodynamic therapy (PDT) offers a novel way to target cancerous tumors while protecting healthy, non-cancerous cells and triggering the body’s immune response. Innovative cancer treatments like PDT can offer better combination therapy treatments by reducing the necessary dosage of anti-cancer drugs and decreasing GBM infiltration into the brain, while simultaneously resulting in an additive, synergistic effect on tumor burden.


STAY INFORMED

We hope that you will follow our socials to stay informed about the progress of our research (Instagram: @teammetabio; teammetabio.wixsite.com/metabio).




Gifts in support of the University of Maryland are accepted and managed by the University of Maryland College Park Foundation, Inc., an affiliated 501(c)(3) organization authorized by the Board of Regents. Contributions to the University of Maryland are tax deductible as allowed by law. Please see your tax advisor for details.


Levels
Choose a giving level

$10

Nanoparticle Level

Donors will help us purchase basic laboratory supplies, such as gloves, lab coats, micropipettes, and more!

$25

Glioblastoma Level

Donors will help us purchase the GBM cell lines that will be used in our in vitro experiments.

$50

Molecular Inhibitor Level

Donors will help us attain other materials and equipment required for in vitro experiments, including an MTT Assay (GBM cell proliferation), Transwell Assay (invasion), and Scratch Wound Assay (migration).

$100

Photodynamic Level

Donors will help us develop nanotherapeutic liposomes to co-package the small molecule inhibitor with a photosensitive PDT agent.

$200

Brain Level

Donors will help us investigate the efficacy/cytotoxicity of the small molecule inhibitor and PDT through in vivo experiments.

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