A grant at ‘the perfect time’
Unfortunately, Bielas still didn’t have enough data to convince the NIH to fund the project. At least, he didn’t until he got an unexpected email in May 2015 from the Washington Research Foundation, informing him he’d been selected to receive the $100,000 grant.
“We had a few pieces of preliminary data when the grant initially went in [to the NIH],” he said. “We pieced together some money here and there and got a little more preliminary data and we got a score, but not a fundable one. Then the Washington Research Foundation — in honor of Sally — granted us this money and we put it toward the project.”
A year later, Bielas resubmitted a grant proposal to the NIH to test whether cancer therapies directed at mitochondrial DNA could shift the energy production back toward mitochondria and promote suicide in cancer cells.
Last month, Bielas received word that his proposal had finally been funded — to the tune of $2.2 million.
Part of their project aims to “determine through a small biopsy who will respond to therapy — which is very, very important — and identify those who won’t,” Bielas said. “We’re focusing on breast cancer now but it should work across all cancer types.”
Bielas said his newly funded study also has a targeted drug screen component to it.
“We have a few clinically approved drugs that we’re going to test to see if they can re-sensitize the tumors to chemotherapy,” he said. “They’re not currently used in cancer therapy, but according to our underlying hypothesis, we expect that a few of them can be repurposed. Since these drugs are already FDA approved for human use, that makes their potential use and approval for cancer therapy way faster.”
WRF’s Etscheid was delighted that their grant was able to fast forward Bielas’ work and applauded Narodick for her “leap of faith.”
“It ended up being such a happy story,” Etscheid said. “He hadn’t had a sizable grant for some time and needed to get just a little more data. And that’s exactly what he did. We visited him a month or two after he received the $100,000 grant and even in that very short amount of time, he’d already had a major breakthrough on something that had been put on hold because it was unfunded.”
Groudine said the WRF gift was a crucial springboard for Bielas.
“This gift in honor of Sally was a catalyst,” he said. “It permitted him to actually do the work and gain more preliminary data and start nailing this down. This is what you want from philanthropy. … Often the very innovative work isn’t funded by conventional review because it’s considered too risky. This kind of catalytic philanthropic funding is essential for high-risk/high-reward research.”
Bielas agreed that it’s a success story that’s important for researchers — and the general public — to hear.
“It’s all about leveraging,” he said. “Funding goes in cycles and when it’s coming down, you’re letting people go and your projects are slowing down. And then you get this money. It’s a bridge period and we don’t often get that. This just came at the perfect time.”
But of course, Bielas’ motivation is larger than just keeping his laboratory funded.
“We expect that our work will prevent unnecessary overtreatment … and revolutionize treatment regimens by replacing interventions that have life-threatening toxicities with ones that are safe and effective,” he said, and ultimately improve cancer patients’ outcomes, quality of life and survival.”
Diane Mapes is a staff writer at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. She has written extensively about health issues for NBC News, TODAY, CNN, MSN, Seattle Magazine and other publications. A breast cancer survivor, she blogs at doublewhammied.com and tweets @double_whammied. Email her at dmapes@fredhutch.org.