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Manitoba

CancerCare Manitoba joins research project that offers hope for kids with rare cancers

CancerCare Manitoba and its foundation are making Canadian history by joining more than 30 pediatric cancer research and funding organizations from across the country for Terry Fox Profyle project.

PROFYLE project brings together experts from across Canada to network, discover new treatments

Dr. Geoff Cuvelier is a pediatric oncologist with CancerCare Manitoba. He says the new PROFYLE project is about 'thinking outside of the box to find new treatments for this 20 per cent [of young cancer patients] who are not doing well.' (Marianne Klowak/CBC)

Great strides have been made in treating children's cancer, and 80 per cent of all cases are now successfully treated.

A new cross-Canadaproject is focused on finding treatments for the other 20 per cent.

"It's no longer appropriate to be saying 'just add more chemo, do more surgery, do more of this.' It is simply not working," said Dr. Geoff Cuvelier, a pediatric oncologist with CancerCare Manitoba.

"We have to begin to think outside of the box. This is exactly what PROFYLE is. It is thinking outside of the box to find new treatments for this 20 per cent who are not doing well."

PROFYLE stands for "precision oncology for young people." The multi-institution research and treatment project, which CancerCare Manitoba is part of,focuses on providing personalized care for children, adolescents and young adults up to age 29 with rare and difficult-to-treat cancers, giving patients who haven't had a positive outcome with conventional cancer treatment other options.

PROFYLE focuses on sequencing tumour samples on a molecular level and analyzing the vast amount of information at any of three labs in Vancouver, Toronto and Montrealfor patients, regardless of where in Canada they live.

Until now, that kind of testing was not always availablefor young cancer patients in rural or remote areas, let alone the collaboration of scientists and researchers from across the country to guide treatment.

'She was such a rock star'

About 60 children under the age of 18 in Manitoba are diagnosed with cancer every year. The number ofcases jumps to 200 for those up to 29 years old. Cuvelier says based on that figure, about 40 patientsfall into the "rare and hard-to-treat" category every year.

Graham McBain'ssister, Kendra, was one of them. She was diagnosed in 2007with a rare form of cancer after she found a lump on her arm when she was 15.

"She had a similar cancer to Terry Fox. His was in his bones. Kendra's was in her muscles," McBainsaid.

"But she was such a rock star. Shespearheadeda campaign to raisethousands of dollars to help other teens who were really struggling and not responding to treatment, just like herself.She died when she was 18."

Part of the wing in CancerCareManitoba'spediatric oncology unit is now named "Kendra's Way."

Pooling expertise

PROFYLEgathersexpertise from across the country, giving oncologists new options they may not have considered previously.

Experts in clinicaloncology, genetics and basic science are networking as part of the project, which seestissue re-biopsied to understand the molecular footprint that is driving a particular cancer.

Once that is understood, specialists come up with targeted treatments that can use new drugs, and that might not have been considered as options otherwise.

"We are talking about those who have a difficult diagnosis when they first present, those who have metastatic disease, those who are refractory to their initial chemotherapy, or those who relapse. These are the patients we are targeting withPROFYLE," saidCuvelier.

Manitoba is part of the expertise team for the research and treatment project. Cuvelier says experts in Manitoba are notonly contributing, they're consulting with experts in other cities to help young patients here. He says the province is behind the initiative and the health-care system is responding.

"Operating rooms are willing to re-biopsy patients, surgeons are willing to re-biopsy patients, pathology departments are willing to store tissue in a way that we can molecularly characterize," he said.

"We have the full support of the health-care system and this is going to be the most important initiativein pediatric cancer in the next five years."

'Agroundbreaking initiative'

McBain is hopeful.

"You have to be optimistic in any case, any situation, especially when it is a person so young. I think they are heading in the right direction," he said.

"I think the possibilities are endless and we have some of the best brains in the world attacking this disease right now. Collectively, Canada has always done well together and hopefully this project will be the same."

The CancerCareManitoba Foundation isfunding up to $1 million dollars over five years for theproject.

In total, $16.4 millionraised by the Terry Fox Research Institute and the research and funding partnersis being committed across the country to molecularly profile the tumours of patients, no matter where they live in Canada.

"PROFYLEis such an important step forward in Manitoba and across this country," said Annitta Stenning, president and CEO of the CancerCareManitoba Foundation.

"We want to be the generationthat moves the needle to 100 per cent success rate for children and young adults with rare and hard-to-treat cancers. This is a groundbreaking initiative."

With files from The Canadian Press