Pink Pumpkin Patch Foundation announces grant recipient
Pink Pumpkin Patch Foundation announces grant recipient
The Pink Pumpkin Patch Foundation, a Colorado nonprofit corporation, announced the recipient of the 2013 breast cancer research grant: Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, has been awarded a $30,000 grant to fund breast cancer research.
The Pink Pumpkin Patch Foundation is comprised of pumpkin growers throughout the country, who in 2013 committed to donating funds to an organization dedicated to breast cancer research for every pink pumpkin sold. FFA students also raised substantial funds for the foundation through pink pumpkin sales.
“We want to express our gratitude to all of our Pink Pumpkin growers, without whom this grant would not have been possible,” Carol Holsopple-Froese, president of the Pink Pumpkin Patch Foundation and a breast cancer survivor, said in a press release. “We are thrilled to be able to make a contribution to cancer research and hope this puts us one step closer to finding a cure.”
Funding from the Pink Pumpkin Foundation will specifically allow Rush to conduct research identifying the mechanism of action and propose a clinical trial evaluating adjuvant aspirin therapy in PIK3CA-mutant breast cancers, which exist in up to 45 percent of breast cancers.
The Departments of Medicine & Pharmacology, Division of Hematology & Oncology at Rush University Medical Center leads the laboratory focused on translational breast cancer genetics. Its research uses powerful genetic techniques to identify molecular mechanisms of drug resistance and identify new targets for existing therapies.
“This award carries special significance for me because I know it came from a portion of the proceeds collected by America’s hard-working pumpkin growers,” Dr. Abde M. Abukhdeir, assistant professor in the Departments of Medicine & Pharmacology at Rush University, said in the release. “My research group and I are very grateful and we hope that our research results will have a far-reaching impact on the treatment of women diagnosed with breast cancer.”