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NEWS BRIEFS

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February 21, 2012

FROM THE LABORATORY TO THE PATIENT:
FIRST CANADIAN SYMPOSIUM ON HEPATITIS C TO BE HELD IN MONTREAL

Montreal will host the first ever Canadian Symposium on the Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) on February 23 at the Hotel Hilton Bonaventure. Chaired by Dr. Naglaa Shoukry of the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre, this symposium will bring together around 200 researchers and clinicians from across Canada and around the world. The goal is to increase interactions and exchanges between researchers, healthcare professionals and community organizations to develop more effective strategies to meet the challenges of preventing and treating Hepatitis C. CRCHUM researchers have spearheaded the development of many important discoveries in this area:    ≥≥≥

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February 13, 2012

THE CRCHUM RECEIVES $2.8 M FOR RESEARCH INTO CANCER PREVENTION RESEARCH

A team  led by Dr Jack Siemiatycki of the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM) with Dr Michael Pollak of McGill University has received the go ahead for a five-year project to develop and apply CANJEM, a job-exposure matrix, to discover occupational causes of lung, brain, ovarian and colorectal cancer.

With $2.8 M in funding from the Cancer Research Society and the Fonds de Recherche Québec – Santé,  the team hopes to make important strides in cancer prevention by focusing on modifiable causes of cancer, particularly those encountered in the workplace (e.g., asbestos, radon gas, formaldehyde). 
  ≥≥≥

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February 7,  2012


A TEAM OF CRCHUM RESEARCHERS PAVES THE WAY FOR IMPROVING TREATMENT FOR TYPE 2 DIABETES

In a study published last week in the prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, a team led by Dr. Vincent Poitout of the CHUM Research Centre has made an important step forward in understanding how insulin secretion is regulated in the body. This discovery has important implications for drugs currently in development to treat Type 2 diabetes, a disease which is diagnosed every 10 seconds somewhere throughout the world. ≥≥≥

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February 7,  2012


RECIPIENTS OF CRCHUM CHALLENGE GRADUATE AWARDS
 
 

The CRCHUM is pleased to announce the  receipients of the CRCHUM Challenge awards.
These awards were made possible through funds raised during the CRCHUM Challenge.
≥≥≥
 

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December 18, 2011


THE 14th CRCHUM STUDENT CONGRESS, HELD ON DECEMBER 13, WAS A RESOUNDING SUCCESS

The 14th CRCHUM Student Congress, held on December 13, was a resounding success. More than 160 CRCHUM students presented their research projects. The event was attended by over 300 people. Twenty students and postdoctoral researchers were awarded scholarship supplements and 16 students received awards from the University of Montreal’s biomedical and molecular biology programs. Several students also received prize for oral presentations or posters through Grand Challenges  ≥≥≥

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December 1st, 2011

A BREAKTHROUGH IN PINPOINTING PROTECTIVE MECHANISMS IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS:
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE SONIC HEDGEHOG PROTEIN REVEALED BY A TEAM OF CRCHUM RESEARCHERS

In an article published today in the prestigious journal Science, a team of researchers led by Dr Alexander Prat and postgraduate fellow Jorge 
Alvarez at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM) sheds light on how the blood-brain-barrier (BBB) works to prevent the incursion of the immune system into  the brain. “Our findings provide a better understanding of the mechanisms used by the brain in mounting a natural defence against immune system aggression, as is the case in  Multiple Sclerosis” explains Dr Prat.   ≥≥≥

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November 7, 2011


A TROJAN HORSE IN THE FIGHT AGAINST HIV/AIDS:
CRCHUM RESEARCHER RECEIVES FUNDING FROM THE BILL & MELINDA GATES FONDATION

The CRCHUM announced today
  that one of its researchers will receive funding of US $100,000
through Grand Challenges Explorations, an initiative created by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
that enables researchers worldwide to test unorthodox ideas that address persistent health
and development challenges. Andrés Finzi will pursue an innovative global health research project, titled
“Reverse Fusion: a new approach to eradicate HIV/AIDS” to deliver toxic genes to HIV-infected cells and
eliminate them.≥≥≥

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November 2,  2011

NOMINATION OF DR. WILLIAM D. FRASER, AS ASSOCIATE SCIENTIFIC DIRECTOR,
CLINICAL RESEARCH

It is with great pleasure that the CRCHUM announces the nomination of Dr. William D. Fraser, MD, MSc,
FRCSC, as Associate Scientific Director, Clinical Research. Dr. Fraser nomination will take effect in
November 2011.
Dr. Fraser role will be to promote the CRCHUM as the first choice for clinical research and
to advantageously position the CRCHUM within major Canadian and Quebec clinical research strategies,
especially with regard to the CIHR’s Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research and Quebec’s Research and
Innovation Strategy.  ≥≥≥


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November 2, 2011


LAUREATS OF THE DÉFI CRCHUM PROFESSIONAL TRAINING AWARDS


The CRCHUM is pleased to announce the laureats of the Défi CRCHUM professional
training awards.
The funds for these awards were made possible through the sums
collected during the Défi CRCHUM.
The Défi CRCHUM professional training awards are intended to help members of its 
personnel defray the
costs of training activities, participation in conferences or 
congresses and other professional training
activities.   ≥≥≥
 

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October 14, 2011

A NEW  INITIATIVE SEEKS TO CHANGE THE WAY OVARIAN CANCER IS DIAGNOSED AND
MANAGED WORLDWIDE

Women throughout the world will benefit from a new, pan‐Canadian Terry Fox Research
Institute (TFRI)
initiative that aims to change the way in which ovarian cancer is
diagnosed and managed. TFRI and the
Canadian Partnership Against Cancer are providing
a total of $5‐million in funding for a five‐year,
multi‐site Ovarian Cancer
Pan‐Canadian Program called COEUR. The program will identify new
biomarkers to
predict and treat this relatively rare but deadly form of cancer, which will result in the use
and application of current and new drugs more effectively for patients ≥≥≥

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JULY 6, 2011

URBAN CHILDREN ARE HEALTHIER COMMUTERS THAN RURAL TEENS

The children most likely to walk or cycle to school live in urban areas with a single parent, and in an
economically disadvantaged home, according to survey results that were published in Pediatrics today
by Dr. Roman Pabayo of the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre and the university’s
Department of Social and preventive
medicine. Pabayo’s study is unique in that it follows the same group
of children as they age throughout the school years, and it shows that children increasingly use “active
transport” to travel to school until they reach ten or eleven years of age, at which point the trend then
reverses ≥≥≥

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May 16,  2011

BREAST CANCER: A NEW TREATMENT AVENUE IDENTIFIED AT THE CRCHUM AND THE PETER
MACCALLUM CANCER CENTRE


Researchers at the CRCHUM and the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Australia have identified a new
avenue for treating breast cancer.
In 20 to 30% of breast cancer patients, the over-expression of a particular
protein (human epidermal growth factor-2) is the main cause of the proliferation of cancer cells. Over the past
few years Herceptin® (trastuzumab) has become the standard treatment for this kind of cancer. While it is known
that it blocks the activity of this protein, its exact mechanism of action has remained a mystery. ≥≥≥
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April 21, 2011

EFFECTIVE PREVENTION STRATEGIES AMONG INJECTION DRUG USERS IN MONTREAL


The results of an epidemiological study at the CRCHUM show that injection drug users (IDUs) recruited after
2001 and who obtained all their
syringes from Montreal’s safe needle distribution network were five times less
likely
to be infected by HIV than users who obtained their needles elsewhere.

Led by the CRCHUM’s Dr. Julie Bruneau, who is also a professor at the Université de Montréal, the study
confirms the importance of cocaine injection, intensity of
injection activities, needle sharing and unstable
housing in the HIV epidemic among
IDUs. The study also indicates that sexual transmission in this
population plays a
role, regardless of injection practices. ≥≥≥
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April 8, 2011

A WORLD FIRST:

THE DISCOVERY OF A COMMON GENETIC CAUSE OF AUTISM AND EPILEPSY


Researchers from the CHUM Research Centre (CRCHUM) have identified a new gene that predisposes
people to both autism and epilepsy.

Led by the neurologist Dr. Patrick Cossette, the research team found a severe mutation of the synapsin
gene (SYN1) in all members of a large French-Canadian family suffering from epilepsy, including individuals
also suffering from autism. This study also includes an analysis of two cohorts of individuals from Quebec,
which made it possible to identify other mutations in the SYN1 gene among 1% and 3.5% of those suffering
respectively from autism and epilepsy,while several carriers of the SYN1 mutation displayed symptoms
of both disorders ≥≥≥

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January 8, 2011

AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS (ALS): NEW GENETIC INSIGHTS


In order to better understand the causes of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's
Disease, a group of scientists at the CRCHUM studied 29 genes involved in the development of motor neurons
in 190 ALS patients from Quebec and France. The results of this large-scale study were recently published in the
online version of Archives of Neurology.

“This is the first time a large-scale genetic study is carried out in the field of ALS. By focusing on this group of
29 genes specifically expressed in motor neurons, we found a high frequency of rare non-synonymous mutations
in our cohort of ALS patients.” says senior author and researcher at CRCHUM, ≥≥≥

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