- Our Services
-
Patients and Families
- Get Directions
- Parking
- Childrens Locations
- Getting Around
- Guidelines for Visitors
- Contact a Patient
- Contact Children's
- Send an e-Card
- Gift Shop
Planning a Visit
- Find a Doctor
- Child Health A-Z
- Community Ed.Classes
- Injury Prevention
- International Patients
- Medical Records
- Patient Handbook
- Patient Procedures
Parents
- For Health Professionals
- Research
- Ways to Give
- News
Our Services
Research
In 1970, a child diagnosed with leukemia had a very slim chance of survival. Today, the most common type of leukemia has a cure rate of 70 to 90 percent. The reason: research. With support from the Children’s Oncology Group, a national multi-institutional team studying cancer in children, physicians and researchers from the Hematology/Oncology Division are conducting world-renowned research to determine why some children develop cancers, to create innovative cancer treatments and to discover cures for childhood cancers.
Several Hematology/Oncology physician-scientists also receive funding support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the federal agency that conducts, supports and coordinates biomedical research in the United States. Ongoing NIH-funded oncology research projects include the study of critical biochemical events that control the growth, maturation and death of cells that cause leukemia and the study of a family of genes that cause cancers such as Burkitt’s lymphoma and neuroblastoma.
Another ongoing oncology research project at Children’s involves the study of graft-versus-host disease following unrelated donor stem cell transplantation. In addition, Hematology/Oncology researchers are studying various treatment options for pediatric blood disorders such as severe aplastic anemia and sickle cell disease.
For specific study information, please review the following physician links:
Last Update
April 7, 2010
April 7, 2010

Children's is in the Top 10 Again
Children's 'Hard Head Patrol' Hits the Streets to Keep Kids Safe
Adding Breast Milk Ingredient to Formula Could Prevent Deadly Intestinal Problem in Premature Babies