Laura Calvi, M.D., achieved what a lot of translational researchers only dream of: For years, she made important discoveries in the lab, but then she was able to turn the project into a clinical trial, where it has begun to benefit patients.
"It's an amazing accomplishment to get this far," says Calvi, a co-leader of Wilmot Cancer Institute's Cancer Microenvironment research program.
Many researchers, of course, intend for their basic science to eventually help patients. But the process can get derailed during the years it takes to develop goals, run experiments, publish the results, and then design and fund clinical trials. Sometimes good ideas don't pan out, or funding is lost, or the scientist gets pulled in other directions.
In this case, though, a strong team approach made it happen. Calvi emphasized that moving the laboratory project into the clinical trial required a close collaboration with many Wilmot clinician-scientists, including Jane Liesveld, M.D.; Jason Mendler, M.D., Ph.D.; Michael Becker, M.D.; Frank Akwaa, M.D.; and Melissa Loh, MBBCh.
"This project represents a huge success," Calvi says. "To hand off a concept to a clinical team that can run a study — it's really, really difficult, but we've done it."