University of Oklahoma Cancer Research Grant Approved

Graphic Credit: Ryan Hohman
Edmond, Ok May, 16 ( The Oklahoma Post) –

The University of Oklahoma is leading the way in cancer research. Scientists in the Sooner state have received funding from the National Institutes of Health, again, to establish the Oklahoma Center of Medical Imaging for Translational Cancer Research. Please support the cancer research by visiting the official page of the University of Oklahoma’s Stephenson Cancer Center.

You can donate to St. Jude and help them battle for a cure today by clicking the photo below.

 

See the entirety of the release below.


Federal Grant Establishes New Center for Cancer Research at OU

NORMAN, Okla., March 22, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — The University of Oklahoma has received funding from the National Institutes of Health to establish the Oklahoma Center of Medical Imaging for Translational Cancer Research. Bin Zheng, Ph.D., a professor and Oklahoma TSET Cancer Research Scholar in the Gallogly College of Engineering’s School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, is leading the new center.

The University of Oklahoma has received funding from the National Institutes of Health to establish the Oklahoma Center of Medical Imaging for Translational Cancer Research. The center is led by Bin Zheng (center) with researchers (left to right) Stefan Wilhelm, Han Yuan, Hong Liu and Yuchen Qiu. Learn more at ou.edu/research
The University of Oklahoma has received funding from the National Institutes of Health to establish the Oklahoma Center of Medical Imaging for Translational Cancer Research. The center is led by Bin Zheng (center) with researchers (left to right) Stefan Wilhelm, Han Yuan, Hong Liu and Yuchen Qiu. Learn more at ou.edu/research

Medical imaging is an essential tool to help doctors and scientists assess the size and scope of a tumor that will be effectively removed by surgery, as well as the rate at which tumors shrink in response to medical interventions such as chemotherapy or radiation therapy. University of Oklahoma researchers are investigating multiple avenues to help improve medical imaging use in cancer detection, diagnosis and treatment.

“While there are other kinds of testing methods, like blood testing, imaging is the most commonly used by clinicians,” Zheng said. “The problem is that reading medical images by radiologists is quite difficult because tumors, cancer and most diseases are very heterogenous – there is a lot a variation. We often see different image diagnostic results from different clinicians or different hospitals because of the large inter-reader variability, which can result in applying different treatment options and potentially reduce treatment efficacy.”

To counter this challenge, the center’s researchers are developing quantitative imaging markers to provide an objective measure or index that can reduce subjectivity and improve consistency for medical image diagnosis using two primary types of research approaches.

The first approach is to develop new investigative cutting-edge imaging modalities to expand ability of doctors to see or detect more detailed tumor internal structures such as using the advanced optical imaging modalities and technology.

The second is to explore and extract more effective image features from the existing clinical imaging modalities – like CT, MRI and X-ray images – and then using artificial intelligence or machine learning models to develop new quantitative imaging markers to help reduce subjectivity and variability of cancer diagnosis and predicting cancer prognosis.

The award from the Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) program of the NIH is expected to provide more than $11.3 million over a five-year Phase 1 period, with the opportunity to compete for renewal for up to three phases. The first phase supports the center’s establishment to galvanize multidisciplinary biomedical research through equipment and facilities support to junior faculty.

The center is beginning with four projects currently underway. Three projects are led by faculty in the Gallogly College of Engineering and one by a clinician scientist at the Stephenson Cancer Center. All four projects will include close collaboration between engineering researchers from the OU Norman campus and clinician scientists from the OU Health Sciences Center campus to promote interdisciplinary and translational cancer research. Learn more about these projects at ou.edu/research

About the University of Oklahoma

Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university located in Norman, Oklahoma. OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. For more information visit www.ou.edu.

End Press Release

View the original transcript on the Official University of Oklahoma Website.

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