Resistance Prevention

This program will work on understanding the mechanisms underlying response and resistance to contemporary cancer therapies. 聽It is envisaged that laboratory findings will be translated directly from bench to bedside through clinical trials.

Work will include:

  • Specialised expertise in metabolism and radiation biology with precision medicine focus.
  • Clinically relevant, patient derived models to reduce the gulf between laboratory and patient.
  • Ability to translate targets to novel therapeutics - established links to medicinal chemistry for small molecular development - emerging interest in PROTAC/ENTAC for protein degradation/stabilisation.

The Paediatric and Neuro-oncology program will utilise the close links to the Braggs Comprehensive Cancer Centre, which is Australia鈥檚 first proton therapy centre and the first of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere. 聽It is expected to be treating approximately 700 patients per year from 2025. 聽The program鈥檚 research teams will also work closely with SAiGENCI affiliates such as .

Computational Cancer Immunogenomics Laboratory

Group Leader -

Dr Stefano Mangiola is the head of the Computational Cancer Immunogenomics laboratory at SAiGENCI.聽 At SAiGENCI, the lab's research is centred on elucidating the intricate interplay between cancer and the immune system through sophisticated multiomic profiling and advanced computational strategies.

Dr Mangiola and his team employ high-throughput and cutting-edge next-generation technologies, such as spatial and single-cell sequencing, coupled with metabolomics, to intricately map the immune response and trace the pathways of cancer progression and metastasis.

The lab鈥檚 focus on modelling the immune tissue and tissue biology through large-scale data modelling will be propelled by novel, highly scalable analysis pipelines and the use of machine learning techniques on demographic-scale datasets.

OncoTherapeutics and Biology Laboratory

OncoTherapeutics and Biology Laboratory

L-R:聽 Steffi Tiburcius, Dr Kimberley Clark, Professor Christopher Sweeney, Dr Mark Bunting, Thuy Trang To

Group Leader -

The Sweeney Research Group has a translational research focus and works to better understand the
underlying biology of prostate cancer and improve therapies for patients.

Prostate cancer is a complex disease that affects millions of men globally.聽 Development of prostate cancer
involves corruption of the normal prostate transcriptional network, following deregulated expression or
mutation of key transcription factors.聽 The group is interested in understanding how many of these
transcription factors affect prostate cancer development, from localised disease to castration-resistant
metastatic prostate cancer, and subsequently finding viable therapeutic approaches to benefit patients.

The research team is led by Professor Christopher Sweeney, who has devoted his clinical and academic career
to developing strategies to improve the care of patients with genitourinary malignancies with a major focus on
prostate cancer and testicular cancer

听笔别辞辫濒别

Program Lead, Resistance Prevention

Group Leader, Computational Cancer Immunogenomics Laboratory

Group Leader, OncoTherapeutics and Biology Laboratory

Researchers

Our internationally-recognised research is tackling localised and metastatic prostate cancer.