Tag Archive for: charlotte children’s cancer foundation

ISF Funds Frontline MIBG Therapy with the Children’s Oncology Group

In this picture is Isabella in MIBG therapy at CHOPT in Philadelphia. Isabella not only received this as a end of life treatment instead of a frontline therapy… she had to travel away from her home and family to receive it. This will be a game changer for kids fighting.

In 2016, funded a Frontline MIBG Therapy project with the Children’s Oncology Group (COG). The purpose of this project was to determine the effectiveness of pulling MIBG therapy, which was traditionally used as an end of life treatment, to the frontline of therapy for children with high-risk Neuroblastoma. We are excited to announce, thanks to your donations – this trial is ready for children across the country. Starting in August of 2018, the COG will start the process of enrolling over 800 children with high-risk Neuroblastoma and will enroll children over the next 3 years. Tomorrow night, Dr. Peter Adamson, Chair of the Children’s Oncology Group, will be with us here is Charlotte to speak at a private event about the advancement of the program. Can’t wait to share more updates.

This is great news for Charlotte because as you know, ISF has agreed to fund the creation of a MIBG at Levine Children’s Hospital! We are inching towards our goal of $1 MILLION DOLLARS and anticipate breaking ground in 2018. What this means is that in just one year, our local children will benefit from a trial that YOU supported in a room that YOU built. This trial hopes to reduce the number of children who relapse and reduce the burden of late effects of therapy. Amazing.

This is due to your support. So thank you. Children of Charlotte thank you.

We were so proud to have been able to donate a total of $175,000 to the COG through three of their children’s cancer trials and programs.  Learn more about the programs YOU helped us fund through the COG.

Your Donations at Work Fighting Childhood Cancers, $175,000 Granted

The Children’s Oncology Group is the first line of defense for a child diagnosed with cancer–including neuroblastoma.  In 2016, we were so proud to have been able to donate a total of $175,000 to three of their children’s cancer trials and programs for 2017.  Next month, we are excited to have Dr. Peter Adamson, Chair of the Children’s Oncology Group, with us in Charlotte to speak at a private event.  We look forward to hearing more about the advancements of the trials and programs you helped us fund.  Below you can read what each children’s cancer trial or program entails.

FRONTLINE MIBG THERAPY  |  $100,000

We are proud to have donated 100K for a Phase 3 trial to specifically evaluate the effectiveness of frontline MIBG therapy for children with newly diagnosed high-risk neuroblastoma that will open in the summer of 2017. Up to 800 patients will enroll on this trial. A trial of this scale will not only answer key clinical questions regarding targeted therapies, but will also provide an unprecedented opportunity to evaluate novel biomarkers that may guide treatment for future patients. We hypothesize that rational selection of therapy based on results of validated biomarker studies will improve the care of children with newly diagnosed high-risk neuroblastoma, thereby reducing the number of children who relapse and reducing the burden of late effects of therapy. ISF will be supporting this study as well as the cost of supplying blood and tumor samples that will help us understand which children are most likely to benefit from MIBG therapy.

CIRCULATING TUMOR DNA  |  $50,000

Could you imagine if we could prevent some of the frightening processes that children have to go through just to detect cancer?  The treatments are tough enough so we are eager to see another option for these kids who are facing so much already.  By supporting Project Every Child in 2017, ISF is helping an exciting technology that has been developed within test tubes that will allow cancer to be detected through a blood test.  Circulating tumor DNA may provide a method for monitoring disease status during treatment and may be a means with which to detect changes in neuroblastoma mutation status without the need for invasive biopsies.  Currently, children are put through painful procedures as well as exposure to repeated radiation to determine if cancer is present in their system, which may no longer be necessary with this new technology.

PROJECT EVERY CHILD  |  $25,000

Project EveryChild is a single research study run by The Children’s Oncology Group that aims to capture the biology and outcome of every child diagnosed with cancer in the United States.  Participation is offered to every child diagnosed with cancer, no matter how common or rare the cancer may be.  The ultimate goal is to collect biospecimens, including tumor tissue, host, and when feasible, parental DNA samples, which are stored at the COG’s state-of-the-art biorepository at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.  These samples may then be utilized by any scientist in their studies to find new and improved cure for pediatric cancer.

Hope Is Definitely Brewing

Photo courtesy of Daniel Cordero

We are absolutely thrilled to announce the results of our 2nd Annual COFFEE FOR A CURE. Just a few short weeks ago, more than 700 men and women gathered at Carmel Country Club in Charlotte, NC to not only learn more about Isabella’s story …but they also gathered to fill a room with hope.

Hope for a cure. 

This two-day event served as a call to action in the fight against pediatric cancer and to educate community members on the importance of bringing pediatric cancer treatments home to Charlotte.

Greg Olsen & Grant Santos, Photo courtesy of Laura Stikeleather

We are blown away, humbled, honored, and beyond grateful that the event raised $185,000 and donations keep coming in.  Not only were we excited to have Carolina Panthers’ Greg Olsen, WBTV Host Molly Grantham, Charlotte Lifestyle Personality Emily Maynard and Levine Children’s Hospital Head Oncologist Dr. Javier Oesterheld as key note speakers, but we were also honored to be joined by several other community supporters who touched everyone with their words: Grant SantosJackson & Tammy Lowry, and Melanie Miller.

During the event, we introduced our new major gift society, called The Three Wish Circle, With an annual gift of $5000 or more, donors can take their support of the ISF mission to the next level by funding more research for Neuroblastoma and help to bring innovative treatment options to our local community.  We were blown away that within 3 weeks of launching it, 15 individuals had already committed to it. If you have questions or want to know more about how to take your support to the next level, contact our ISF Development Director, Tia Wackerhagen.

Levine Children’s Hospital Head Oncologist Dr. Javier Oesterheld, Photo courtesy of Laura Stikeleather

Additionally, we recognize someone in the community each year, who lives a life with the same dreams and aspirations as Isabella and who is trying to make a difference in the world.  This year at our Coffee events, we were excited to recognize not only one, but three great people with our 5th Annual Isabella Santos Award.  Congratulations to Jackson Lowry, Lisa Weaver and Stephanie Grigg. Each of these three individuals have given back to their Charlotte community in different ways and we are super grateful to have them support ISF and other local non-profits.

Lastly, we could not have put this wonderful event together if it wasn’t for the support of our community businesses who help us through their sponsorship. It is through their passion for charitable giving and making a local impact that we are able to continue Isabella’s fight.

To everyone who supports us…we cannot begin to put words to how grateful that we are for the impact you are helping us make. We are so proud of what we have accomplished together and it is because of YOU. We do not do this alone and could not continue our fight without your help. We humbly thank each of you and look forward to a world with no more cancer where we will beat cancer, grow hair and live the dreams of all children fighting the fight.

With gratitude,
The ISF Team
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THANK YOU TO THESE INCREDIBLE BUSINESSES FOR SUPPORTING
THE 2017 COFFEE FOR A CURE:
Brighthouse Financial
Maxim Tickets/PSL Source
Bull Engineered Products
Community Blood Center of the Carolinas
Diamonds Direct
Carolinas Healthcare System
Levine Children’s Hospital
Charlotte Radiology
Novant Health Carmel OBGYN
Morgan Property Group
Pegram Superior Insurance
Tom Bush Law Group
Dermatology Laser and Vein Specialists of The Carolinas
Center for Integrative Sleep Medicine LLC
Captrust
Scoop Charlotte
Next Stage Consulting
GloBody
Southpark Pediatric Dentistry
Pure Barre
Southpark – A Simon Mall
Sign Up Genius
Little Nest Portraits
Moxie Mercantile
Magnolia Cottage Design
Blooming Events
Royal Cup
Pink Petunia
Stikeleather Photography
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VIEW EVENT PHOTOS BY LAURA STIKELEATHER HERE

 

Living a Life in 10 Week Increments

Written by Melanie Miller, mommy of Emily Erin Fights like a Girl

Emily Miller

Emily is our first born, a very sweet and quiet 8 1/2 year old.  We also have a 6 year old girl named Sadie and Reid our 19 month old ball of energy.  Emily has Autism and is mostly nonverbal, which presents with multiple challenges of it’s own.  On June 17th 2012 Emily started having high fevers and fatigue that lasted about a week.  After a visit to her pediatrician and a few tests she was diagnosed with Mononucleosis. On a Thursday afternoon just about 2-3 weeks later, Emily’s fevers returned and she had what appeared to be a bruise on her right eyelid, so we setup an appointment for the following day.  Later that same day we called our pediatrician because she woke up from a nap and had difficulty bearing any weight on her left leg and was whining a lot.  His advice was to go straight to the ER.

After a long night of tests, the doctors were unable to determine what was really going on so they admitted her.  She was followed by several doctors and several more tests were done. On Monday morning she had a bone marrow biopsy of the left hip, and it was discovered that there were malignant cells in the bone marrow. At first it appeared to be Leukemia, which we were told had a survival rate of 98% and the treatment was done on an outpatient basis, she could even still attend school.  Just 3 hours later the doctor returned to tell us that something wasn’t quite right about how the bone marrow looked and it led him to believe it could be something a lot more serious.  We had just wiped away the tears at the thought of Leukemia, and now he was saying it could be a lot worse.  Again after a few more tests that included a full body scan we were given the diagnosis of Stage IV Neuroblastoma, a treatment plan that spanned well over a year and a half and a survival rate of only 40%.  Our stomachs dropped and we just stared at each other in stunned silence.  How could our daughter be filled with a life threatening cancer and show no signs or symptoms until a couple of weeks ago? We were told that Emily had a large tumor on the adrenal gland that sits atop her kidney and metastases to the bone marrow from her skull all the way down to her legs. She also had a tumor emerging from the orbital bone of the right eye. The image of the MIBG scan is still burned into my brain, it was lit up like a Christmas tree, I remember running out of the room.

Melanie and Emily Miller

The initial diagnosis and subsequent treatment plan was pretty rough; 6 rounds of chemotherapy that required one full week inpatient stay each time, major abdominal surgery to resect the tumor, a stem cell transplant that put us in isolation for almost 4 weeks, a full month of daily radiation, 5 week long rounds of painful antibody therapy and numerous other hospital visits to deal with the multiple side effects from the toxic treatments.  And that was just the first year and change, the relapse was a whole different and painful journey.  I won’t go into a lot of detail, but I will say that when she relapsed, just 16 months after being declared cancer free, it was terribly aggressive and our options were extremely limited.  I spent days researching treatment options, talking to everyone I knew in the pediatric cancer world, and the results were very thin.  Almost immediately we contacted CHOP in Philadelphia, Sloan Kettering in NYC, and CHOA in Atlanta.  With limited options we started radiation right away here at Levine Cancer Institute, to stop the tumor from putting pressure on her right eye, combined with chemo while we waited for answers.  Unfortunately there were almost no clinical trials that she qualified for and no standard of care, so we came back to Charlotte to start chemotherapy.  The side effects from the treatment were incredibly toxic and Emily went quickly from being healthy and robust to thin, grey, and too weak to leave her room for days at a time.  The transformation was shocking and terrifying.  Realizing the treatment was too intense and not seeing the tumors shrink as much as we were hoping, we shifted gears and went to Sloan Kettering in NY.  There we tried a couple of different options and after about 16 months of treatment got her back to remission status.  Fearing another relapse we enrolled in 1 of only 2 options available to help prevent relapse, a clinical trial which has required over a dozen trips to NY within the last year, which is no small feat when you have 2 kids under 5 at home.  But I can now breathe a small sigh of relief to say we have been in remission for almost 10 months, with the last treatment scheduled for May.

Miller Family

We were introduced to the Isabella Santos Foundation in December 2012 when Erin and friends were delivering toys to the hospital right before Christmas. I remember not wanting to leave Emily, as she was in isolation post stem cell transplant, but our nurse told me a little bit about ISF and how Erin had just lost her daughter in June of that year, just 3 weeks before Emily was initially diagnosed. I remember telling Tim, my husband, how she must have remarkable strength to be able to come into the hospital and be here to support all these families just 6 short months after losing her daughter. The following September when Emily had just entered remission we attended the race for the first time and every year since we have tried to be as involved as possible. Anytime I have a question about treatment, advice or just need a shoulder, Erin and the wonderful women of the foundation are always there for me and my family.  Knowing that every dollar we raise could lead to a clinical trial that Emily or our local friends could benefit from, fuels our drive to raise as much as possible.

Do I think that they expect to cure cancer this week? This month?  I don’t think so, but if a trial they fund saves just one child, or gives another child an additional couple of years, then it’s all worth it.  My daughter may only have a measly 5% chance of long term survival, but those statistics change every day, and the next clinical trial that ISF helps fund could be the one that saves my child or one of my friend’s children that I have met along our journey.

Emily Miller

Now I don’t want you to think I don’t deeply understand the reality of my situation, trust me I do.  I have been skeptical and negative since the day she was diagnosed.  I was the one in my family who didn’t have much hope we could beat the odds, especially after her relapse.  I am the one who has been so jaded that when a stranger asks me about her diagnosis and what her chances are, I often simply shake my head and utter the word terminal.  I look away because I hate to see the look of shock and sadness on their faces, but at the same time I am tired of lying.  Tired of slapping a smile on my face, telling them how hopeful we are, telling them that Emily is a fighter and she will beat the odds, tired of having to show any enthusiasm at all when all I want to do it curl up into a ball and take a nap.

Emily has scans every 10 weeks, so I live my life in 10 week increments.  Never wanting to plan anything that can’t be cancelled for a full refund, never wanting even to look that far ahead.  This goes against my very nature.  I am a planner.  I like things organized, I like to pretty much plan out the year ahead.  Get those vacation plans sorted out, summer camps, trips to visit family, and everything in between.  I have to live daily with the constant knowledge that I can wake up the next day and have to drop everything to take Emily to the hospital for a week-long stay.  I say this from experience, as it has happened dozens of times.  The most dramatic was when she relapsed.  It blindsided us, and now I refuse to ever let that happen again.  So I live my life with a constant dark grey cloud hanging over my head, never knowing when that lightning bolt will strike.  Everyone always preaches to live in the moment, live life to the fullest, and I do try.  I do.  I sometimes am able to find moments playing on the floor with my son, pushing the kids on the swing outside, or just cuddling up with them to watch a movie.  But these moments are few because my mind is always turning.  When is the cancer going to come back? Next month? 3 months? 6 months?  Should I try and squeeze in a beach trip next month, just in case?  How about a trip to Disney?  My father constantly teases me that I always talk about vacations, and I admit it, I do.  I have spent countless hours planning trips that never come to fruition, as if I am living in the fantasy of these great trips but never get to take them.  

But now I am starting to feel hopeful again, now I am starting to make plans.  Over the last 5 years since Emily was diagnosed I have seen a lot of progress in the world of Neuroblastoma, and a lot of that success is due to the relentless work of organizations like the Isabella Santos Foundation, and I know every year children like my daughter will have more options because of them. This is why ISF is partnering again with Levine to bring a groundbreaking treatment to Charlotte.  This new MIBG treatment room will be a real game changer for children with Neuroblastoma.  I really hope that after listening to our story that you are motivated to really take action to help raise funds for neuroblastoma research. I really hope you share what you’ve learned here, tell your friends, your neighbors, your co-workers, and your family. I hope that by telling my story it gives you a new face to fight for in your community, a local child that is fighting this awful disease for which there is no cure, for which there is so little funding, for which there is so little hope.

But by donating to the Isabella Santos Foundation you are giving families like mine the hope that they desperately need to keep going, to keep fighting,  to keep hoping.  And just in case you still think your donation won’t make an impact, back in 2007 there was a group of families in NY that went to the lead researcher at Memorial Sloan Kettering and asked what they could do to help their children.  He told them the same thing, that there was a severe lack of funding for research and that while there were better treatments out there, they would not be explored due to the lack of funds.  These families got together, gathered other NB families and raised 2 million dollars to fully fund a clinical trial that began in August of 2011.  This treatment is currently being used to treat kids daily at MSKCC and has been very successful for relapsed Neuroblastoma. This one drug has made a HUGE impact in a very short amount of time. I have met dozens of families from so many different parts of the world that travel to Sloan Kettering for that very treatment.  That treatment wouldn’t exist if it hadn’t been for a small foundation formed by a group of parents who came together and got it done. That is what the Isabella Santos Foundation is doing for children here in our community and for children across the country. So when you feel like your donation is not going to make a difference, let me tell you, it will. The next clinical trial can be that ground breaking treatment that boosts the current 40% survival rate and dismal 5% relapse survival rate, to 80% to 90% to 99%. Please think about this when you make your donation today. Thank you.

Follow Emily’s journey on facebook:  Emily Erin Fights like a Girl

10 Years in 10 Minutes

10 years in 10 minutes. A glimpse of Isabella’s sweet soul, the legacy her parents fight to build to save children like her, and what the Isabella Santos Foundation is doing today in her honor to help kids with cancer.