American Airlines Applauded for Its Fundraising to Support Susan G. Komen for the Cure(R), Promise Grant to The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
Posted on: Tuesday, 14 April 2009, 14:01 CDT
Collaboration to Fight Inflammatory Breast Cancer Already Making Gains in First Year of Funding
American's annual Celebrity Golf and Tennis event, plus its Miles for the Cure(TM) program - soon to launch its second year - are funding a unique Komen for the Cure Promise Grant at The
In just one year, American Airlines raised more than
"The real heroes in this effort are our customers and sponsors as well as our employees, whose generosity and support have made it possible to not only meet, but exceed our fundraising goal for Komen to date," said
American, whose partnership with
"This collaboration and this Promise Grant serve as a model for breast cancer research going forward," said
"M. D. Anderson is making extraordinary progress because of the generosity of these contributions, which fuel our drive and dedication towards a cure for women afflicted with this disease. This Promise Grant is paving the way for us to move very quickly to glean new information from laboratory models that will lead to better detection and long-term treatments for IBC," said Fredika Robertson, Ph.D., professor of experimental therapeutics at M. D. Anderson.
M. D. Anderson's IBC Clinic has four treatment trials using standard breast cancer therapies. To date, there is no treatment available that was developed to target inflammatory breast cancer.
"The clinical trial developed from Dr. Robertson's laboratory work will be the first line of treatment specifically targeting IBC and offering great promise for our patients," says
IBC affects only one to five percent of women with breast cancer. It is extremely aggressive, rapidly spreading from a small "bug bite" to involve the surface of the entire breast in a matter of weeks. The five-year survival rate is only 40 percent, less than half the rate for other breast cancers. Because it typically does not present like other breast cancers, women often are not diagnosed with IBC until it has spread to other organs. More baffling, the disease affects a disproportionate number of younger, premenopausal women who are typically not considered at risk for breast cancer. To learn more about IBC or the Miles for the Cure program, visit www.komen.org, www.mdanderson.org or www.aa.com/komen.
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