The Covid-19 Pandemic and Cancer Research


The world has no doubt changed due to the impact of COVID-19. We take a look at how the global pandemic is impacting cancer research. Interestingly, it’s not all bad news.

In less than ten months, there have been over 35 million cases of COVID-19 in over 100 countries worldwide. Many of the world’s top researchers are working hard to find a vaccine for this illness but sadly, many other diseases continue to have global impact, including cancer.

Cancer continues to affect millions every year, with approximately 10 million people dying from the disease annually. Cure Cancer’s researchers, Dr Jessica Duarte and Dr Arutha Kulasinghe, share with us how the pandemic has affected their work and why a COVID-19 vaccine could be beneficial to cancer research.

An Unexpected Standstill

Few could have predicted the situation we have found ourselves over the last several months, with whole workforces based at home and life as we know it disrupted for the foreseeable future.

Cancer researchers are doing everything they can to ensure that their work doesn’t stop. With labs closing across Australia, international travel brought to a halt and patient interaction limited, this is becoming increasingly difficult.

“Until recently, we were still working in the Institute, but all meetings, seminars, and conferences have been cancelled. Many of us have already missed out on important overseas collaboration opportunities,” says Dr Jessica Duarte , an immunotherapy researcher at the Olivia Newton-John Cancer Research Institute in Victoria. Like many researchers, Jessica, whose work focuses on establishing more effective immunotherapy treatments, is concerned about how the current situation will impact on funding for cancer research.

“The situation is unprecedented, and understandably several funding agencies are redirecting funds towards much needed COVID-19 research,” she says. “In addition, due to restrictions on social gatherings, major cancer research fundraising events have been cancelled. But cancer continues to affect our community as it did before, and cancer research remains vitally important. It is crucial that once we have overcome COVID-19 as a community, we can refocus our attention to cancer. To do so, we need to ensure funding is available.”

The Potential For Positivity

Thankfully, though, there may be some good news on the horizon. Immunotherapy researcher Dr Arutha Kulasinghe , whose Cure Cancer grant is funded by the Can Too Foundation, is hopeful that the research into a COVID-19 vaccination could have a positive impact on his work.

“My research is in developing predictive biomarkers of response to immunotherapies so that patients can be identified for these highly effective treatments,” he explains. “I am looking at this through the spatial analysis of the tumour microenvironment.”

“Recent data shows that injection with the annual flu shot turned immunologically cold tumours into hot tumours, making the tumours more responsive to immunotherapies. Whilst this work has only been done using the flu vaccine, there could be scope for using the COVID-19 vaccine once developed which may have direct impacts for cancer patients – a really exciting space when thinking about finding ways to improve response to immunotherapies by using immune-stimulating mechanisms.”

It is ground-breaking developments like this that further underline the need to fund these incredibly talented young researchers, whose commitment to innovation is bringing us ever closer to finding a cure.

The Importance Of Innovative Research

18.1 million people around the world find out they have cancer every year. The only way we can improve this statistic is by investing in trailblazing research.

Over their 53-year history, Cure Cancer has funded over 528 research grants, all of which have been based on innovative, ground-breaking hypotheses like Aruthas'. As a result, some of the researchers they took a chance on early in their careers are now leaders in cancer research globally like Professor Roger Reddell and Professor Carolyn Mountford .

Heartbreakingly, Cure Cancer’s ability to continue this funding has been severely compromised. The disruption caused by COVID-19 has brought fundraising close to a standstill and they are now fighting to ensure that they can continue to support the crucial work of future cancer researchers.

Cure Cancer is the only charity in Australia that exclusively funds researchers at the very start of their careers, thus creating a pipeline for future research success. If they can’t provide this funding, the medical community stands to risk the long-term future of cancer research.

That’s why your generosity is more important than ever.

Advances in immunotherapy have the potential to change the outlook for countless cancer patients around the globe.


We can’t let research like this stop – make a donation today to help Cure Cancer continue their life-saving work.


Source:
World Health Organisation

 

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