Powered by support from the Canadian Cancer Society (CCS), Dr Lee-Hwa Tai and her team are developing an immunotherapy vaccine with the goal of treating triple-negative breast cancer, one of the most difficult to treat types of breast cancer.
Called to be a cancer researcher @(Model.HeadingTag)>
“Studying the immune system during my PhD awoke my interest in cancer research,” says Dr Tai. “Working alongside clinicians and cancer patients while developing novel immunotherapies during my postdoctoral fellowship, cemented my calling as a cancer researcher.”
It is estimated that about 1 in 8 Canadian women will develop breast cancer during their lifetime. This has pushed Dr Tai to work every single day and be resilient in her pursuit to develop the vaccine to treat triple-negative breast cancer.
Developing a vaccine that gives hope @(Model.HeadingTag)>
This combination approach has previously led to a strong anti-tumour immune response in previous work by her team and other researchers. Now, Dr Tai is studying the different parts of the body’s immune response to this strategy, to identify and test factors that can boost the treatment’s effectiveness. If Dr Tai and her team are successful with their research, this can provide a much-needed treatment option for people with what has been considered one of the most difficult breast cancers to treat.
With support from CCS, this research can help people live longer and fuller lives.Your donations help Dr Tai save lives @(Model.HeadingTag)>
Funding allows me to be a scientist. It allows me to ask research questions, design and execute studies to address these questions, hire students and research staff, mentor them, conduct collaborative research, publish our research, patent our inventions, raise more funds, and most importantly, initiate clinical trials to help as many cancer patients as possible.Donate today to help fund researchers like Dr Tai. Nothing big gets solved by one person or one organization. To take on cancer, it takes every one of us. It takes a society.