Key allies
When Fred Hutch’s Dr. Corey Casper, now 44, first came to Uganda in 2004, he, like Cheever, was drawn to the UCI. It was no longer the site of game-changing research and treatment, as it had been more than 30 years earlier when Cheever was there. But the history — and the promise —remained. The challenge was to bring it back.
The Fred Hutch partnership with the UCI began as a pilot program that year, developed by Dr. Larry Corey, now Fred Hutch president and director emeritus, with the support and funding of Dr. Lee Hartwell.
Hartwell, then president and director, "supported the vision of attacking cancer in Africa," said Corey.
Two years later, Casper joined the faculty and then took over the program. By then they'd also been joined by Dr. Jackson Orem, an esteemed Ugandan cancer researcher who trained at Makerere University in Kampala and Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, who replaced Mbidde as UCI director.
“The Fred Hutch Cancer Research Center is one of our very key allies for our plan of reinventing UCI, regaining the status that we used to have,” Orem told visitors to the UCI last summer.
Cancer causes more deaths in low- and middle-income countries than malaria, tuberculosis and HIV combined. Yet few governments, organizations or scientists were aware of this, much less working on research, prevention or treatment. The alliance aimed to change that.
It offered fellowships to young Ugandan doctors to study at Fred Hutch and the University of Washington so that they might return to the UCI to treat patients and do research. Where there was once only one oncologist at the UCI, now there are more than a dozen physicians, eight of them Hutch-trained oncologists. Another 300 Ugandan scientists and 40 Ugandan doctors have undergone shorter trainings in Kampala.
The research program continues and now includes Kaposi sarcoma, Burkitt and other non-Hodgkin lymphomas, cervical cancer, breast cancer and Hodgkin lymphomas. About 30 projects have been completed, and more than 7,000 Ugandans have taken part in studies.
Private grants allowed the alliance to add clinical care to research and training, starting with a pilot project on Burkitt lymphoma, with innovations that are being adopted by other UCI teams. Today the decade-long alliance is held up by the NCI as a model for research, training and patient care in low-income countries.
“It’s been a long, long journey here — all the suffering we went through, all the death we saw,” Okuku said. “All those things we talked about in those days and thought would never come to pass — now here we are.”
To Mika, the historian, it is the partnership between the two centers that makes the UCI-Fred Hutch alliance so successful — and so unusual, especially on the part of U.S. institutions.
“It took humility to recognize that there were tremendous Ugandan clinicians on the ground, this untapped human resource that just needed to be groomed,” she said. “They didn’t have the opportunity to train at a center of excellence, so [Fred Hutch researchers] said, ‘Let’s train them at a center of excellence.”
And when so many developed countries lure trained health care workers away from Africa to help with their own shortages, she pointed out, the UCI-Hutch alliance is giving caregivers and researchers skills to take home.
“It’s the capacity-building that’s unprecedented,” she said. “Instead of resource extraction, it’s collaboration.”
From the beginning of the alliance, a new building was seen as an essential part of the plan. Instead of a hodgepodge of 40-year-old bungalows, the alliance would have a suitable home for high-quality research, effective care and proper training.
‘I’ve always wanted to go back”
In recent years, Linda Cheever, who is married to the Hutch’s Mac Cheever, has become involved in the Rotary Club’s Malaria Partners program, which also works to eradicate Burkitt lymphoma. Her current involvement – she leads trips to Uganda for donors and others – and Cheever’s earlier time there sealed the case for going to Kampala for the opening of the new UCI-Fred Hutch Cancer Centre.
“I’ve always wanted to go back,” Cheever said. “What Corey [Casper] is doing there is fantastic.”
In the intervening years, Cheever has been present for many more firsts: Back in Seattle as a young researcher, he got to train under Dr. E. Donnall Thomas, whose pioneering work on bone marrow transplants cured patients of leukemia when nothing else did. Now he is involved in immunotherapy, which, by leveraging the immune system, could potentially treat other cancers once seen as incurable and do so in ways that are less toxic than radiation or chemotherapy. Once again, he is working on the cutting edge of medicine.
It all started in Uganda.
Funding for the Burkitt Lymphoma Project comes from the National Cancer Institute, the Burkitt’s Lymphoma Fund for Africa, the Martin-Fabert Foundation and individual donors.