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YU News

YU News

Standing Up to Cancer

Fight Against Cancer Brings Together Survivor and Einstein Researcher On August 26, cancer researcher Matthew Levy, Ph.D., and his lab colleagues got some unusual visitors. Young actress Abigail Breslin and 13-year-old cancer survivor Pearce Quesenberry came to visit their research lab at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University as part of Stand Up To Cancer, a national effort to raise cancer awareness and fund research. Dr. Levy is the recipient of a $700,000 Stand Up To Cancer grantthat gives young, innovative scientists funding for high-risk, high reward research. He and his team are working on developing treatments that will attack cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone, which could reduce or even eliminate the side effects of chemotherapy, which can range from mild to debilitating. At the lab, the two teenage girls donned lab coats, peered through microscopes and got a look behind the scenes. The Stand Up To Cancer telecast aired on Sept. 10 and raise funds that will accelerate innovative cancer research. The live, one-hour fundraising event was simulcast on ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, Bio, Current TV, Discovery Health, E!, G4, HBO, HBO Latino, MLB Network, mun2, Showtime, Smithsonian Channel, The Style Network, TV One and VH1 and hosted by network news anchors Katie Couric, Diane Sawyer and Brian Williams. The Stand Up To Cancer broadcast is dedicated to the 12 million U.S. cancer survivors, illustrating how groundbreaking research can change the tide in the fight against the disease. The 2008 telecast helped raise over $100 million. To date, five multi-disciplinary “Dream Teams” of researchers from more than 50 institutions, as well as 13 young innovative scientists who are undertaking high-risk yet potentially high-reward projects have received SU2C funding. For more information, visit www.su2c.org.