Sean Parker Donates $250 Million to Launch Cancer Immunotherapy Institute
byReuters
Silicon Valley billionaire Sean Parker will
donate $250 million to launch a new institute aimed at developing more
effective cancer treatments by fostering collaboration among leading
researchers in the field.
"Any breakthrough made at one center is
immediately available to another center without any kind of IP
(intellectual property) entanglements or bureaucracy," Parker, the
co-founder of music-sharing website Napster and the first president of
Facebook, told Reuters in an interview.
Sean Parker Kevin Mazur / WireImage file
The new Parker Institute for Cancer
Immunotherapy will focus on the emerging field of cancer immunotherapy,
which harnesses the body's immune system to fight cancer cells.
It will include over 40 laboratories and more
than 300 researchers from six key cancer centers: New York's Memorial
Sloan Kettering, Stanford Medicine, the University of California, Los
Angeles, the University of California, San Francisco, Houston's
University of Texas MD Anderson and the University of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia.
Recently approved drugs have helped some
patients sustain remission. But those first-generation therapies do not
work for everyone, and scientists are trying to understand how to make
them more effective.
"Very little progress has been made over the
last several decades," Parker said, referring to cancer drug research.
"Average life expectancy has only increased three to six months with
some of these drugs that cost billions to develop."
Parker said the current system of cancer drug
development discouraged the kinds of risk-taking that could lead to a
major breakthrough.
The new institute "is paradigm shifting," said
Dr. Jedd Wolchok, chief of the melanoma and immunotherapeutics unit at
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.
He said it would alleviate the need for
scientists to secure grants, which he said took up at least 30 percent
of his time, foster collaboration among accomplished scientists and
provide access to the newest information processing and data technology.
"I have no doubt this will allow us to make progress, and to make it much more quickly," Wolchok said.