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The members of our Scientific Advisory Panel freely give their time and expertise to drive forward research in our fight against childhood cancer. This includes assessing research grant applications as part of our peer review process and discussing developments in the field to take forward new initiatives.
Research into childhood cancer is a broad field and we aim to reflect the diversity of topics amongst the membership of our Scientific Advisory Panel.
Thus, we select our Scientific Advisory Panel from a pool of experts to tailor for each funding call, depending upon the subject background required. Tenure on the Panel is for up to three years.
Below, you can read about the Scientific Advisory Panel appointed to our most recent Research Grant Call, which was for Research into Childhood Cancer Treatment and Survival in 2019.
Children with Cancer UK Research Fellow, The Institute of Cancer Research, London
Dr Yann Jamin is an expert in molecular and functional imaging applied to cancer. Dr Yann Jamin is a junior group leader at the ICR since 2014 and his research focus on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).
His research used advanced mouse models of neuroblastoma and computer-aided digital pathology to calibrate non-invasive MRI-based functional and molecular imaging scans to reveal and maps regional variations in active disease and to monitor and predict how neuroblastoma respond to therapy. Collaborating with the Royal Marsden Hospital and Great Ormond Street Hospital, he aims to translate these scans into practical solutions to enhance the clinical management of children with neuroblastoma.
His goals are to improve radiological diagnosis and response assessment while both shedding new lights on the biology of the disease and accelerating the development of more effective and safer therapies for children with cancer
In May 2014 he was awarded a Children with Cancer UK Research Fellowship to help him to take forward these ambitions. Dr Yann Jamin joined our Scientific Advisory Panel in April 2016.
Senior Clinical Lecturer, Institute of Cancer Sciences, University of Glasgow
Dr Christina Halsey is a paediatric Haematologist who combines clinical and academic work. Her research centres on the biology and treatment of leukaemias that have spread to involve the central nervous system (CNS). Current projects include investigating the adaptation of leukaemic cells to CNS and bone marrow microenvironments and identifying metabolic vulnerabilities that can be exploited therapeutically. A second major interest of Dr Christina Halsey’s group is in mechanisms and therapeutic strategies that might reduce neurotoxicity associated with CNS-directed treatment in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. This is linked to development of better biomarkers for CNS leukaemia and identifying children at risk of neurotoxicity who are suitable for targeted interventions.
Dr Christina Halsey’s research is combined with clinical work at the Royal Hospital for Children, Glasgow, where she cares for children with a wide range of blood disorders and cancer. She also play a major role in several international consortia working to improve outcomes for children with cancer and is leading several clinical studies exploring ways to improve CNS-directed therapy and reduce neurotoxicity of therapy.
Consultant in Paediatric & Adolescent Oncology Drug Development, The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust; Honorary Faculty/Senior Lecturer, The Institute of Cancer Research, London
Dr Lynley Marshall is a consultant paediatric oncologist and Paediatric Clinical Research Lead at The Royal Marsden Hospital, London. She heads the Paediatric and Adolescent Oncology Drug Development Team, focusing on early phase clinical trials of experimental therapeutics for high-risk, poor-prognosis malignancies (solid and CNS tumours). She undertook her PhD at The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) in the field of novel targeted therapeutics for paediatric high-grade glioma. She is a Clinical Senior Lecturer in the Division of Clinical Studies at The ICR.
She currently chairs the UK’s NCRI Children’s Group Novel Agents Subgroup and is Clinical Trials Theme Co-Lead for the UK’s Paediatric Experimental Cancer Medicines Centre (ECMC) Network. She is a member of the Clinical Trials Committee of the Innovative Therapies for Children with Cancer (ITCC) European early phase clinical trials consortium, and of the Executive Committee of the SIOPE-ITCC ACCELERATE multi-stakeholder platform.
University Reader and Honorary Consultant Paediatric Oncologist
Dr Matthew Murray works at both the Department of Pathology, Cambridge University and Department of Paediatric Haematology and Oncology, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom. He has a research interest in the clinical and molecular aspects of children’s tumours, in particular germ cell tumours (GCTs), and was the first to demonstrate the potential utility of specific circulating microRNAs for diagnosis, disease-monitoring and detection of relapse in this disease. He has attracted >£4M of grant funding to date as a Principal and Co-Investigator.
He has demonstrated leadership in GCT biology at national and international levels through his involvement in:
Professor of childhood and adolescent cancer research, University of Leeds, Leeds
Professor Sue Burchill graduated with a BSc in Pharmacology (1982) and PhD in Medicine (1986) from the Sunderland School of Pharmacy and the University of Newcastle upon Tyne respectively, before pursuing a translational research career. After post-doctoral research in the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, England and The University of Arizona Cancer Centre, USA she moved to Leeds, England in 1992 to establish the Children’s Cancer Research Group at St James’s University Hospital in Leeds, where she remains the scientific director. Sue has made major contributions to medical research in the field of cancer in children and young people, her leadership in multi-disciplinary collaborative groups includes shaping international strategies for the evaluation of new targeted treatments to improve outcomes.
Her own research is focussed on strategies to detect and eradicate metastatic drug resistant disease that is responsible for progression and relapse in neuroblastoma and bone cancers that affect young people.
Developing new treatments to improve cognitive difficulties in childhood brain tumour survivors
Medulloblastoma is the most-common, malignant, childhood brain tumour. Rates of survival for childhood cancers are increasing decade by decade,
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