LITTLE ROCK -- University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences researcher Dr. Amanda Stolarz recently received a five-year, $1.8 million grant from the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health, according to a news release from UAMS.
Stolarz, an assistant professor of pharmaceutical sciences in the UAMS College of Pharmacy, is the principal investigator on a study investigating possible prevention of a major complication from chemotherapy in cancer patients.
"Doxorubicin is a chemotherapeutic drug commonly used in breast cancer that carries a risk for lymphedema, a debilitating and often painful accumulation of fluid in the body. Stolarz's project explores how doxorubicin directly inhibits contractions of lymph vessels, which remove fluid from tissues to prevent lymphedema," the release said.
"There are no FDA-approved medications to alleviate doxorubicin-related lymphedema, but Stolarz's team has identified a potential new therapy. Ryanodine receptors, which are proteins essential to muscle contraction, could be blocked as a new treatment strategy to prevent doxorubicin-related lymphedema," it said.
The project, titled "Ryanodine Receptors as Therapeutic Targets to Prevent Doxorubicin-Induced Lymphatic Dysfunction," was initially funded as an R01 grant by the NCI in May, before being extended in August through an NCI MERIT Award.
"I am beyond excited to receive this award," Stolarz said in the release. "It is a culmination of many years of research and will serve as the foundation to building my own independent research program. I am grateful for the support of UAMS, the College of Pharmacy and all of my mentors and collaborators who contributed to this application. We have a great team of scientists working on this project who were instrumental in putting this proposal together, and I look forward to continue working with them."
"It is exciting to see one of our junior faculty receive such a prestigious grant and become a major contributing member of the UAMS Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute," Dr. Michael Birrer, director and UAMS vice chancellor, said in the release.
"The project is an expansion of Stolarz's postdoctoral work at UAMS. She thanked Nancy Rusch, distinguished professor and chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology in the College of Medicine; Robert Reis, Ph.D., professor of geriatrics in the College of Medicine; and Marjan Boerma, Ph.D., professor of pharmaceutical sciences and director of the Division of Radiation Health in the College of Pharmacy, for their assistance helping develop the project," it said.
"Dr. Stolarz has worked carefully to build scientific evidence for her vision to reduce doxorubicin-related lymphedema, a topic that is highly understudied," Boerma said in the release. "Her work has been an integral part of the UAMS COBRE Center for Studies of Host Response to Cancer Therapy. Her new award will allow her to grow this research program with the amazing team of investigators in her lab."