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The Brian Morden Foundation was created to honor Brian, a courageous 19 year old, who battled Ewing's Sarcoma for more than two years. He lost the battle on February 15, 2003, but his family, friends, and many others who only knew Brian by reputation have vowed to continue the fight against this horrible disease.

The foundation has three goals:

  • Fund Ewing's Sarcoma and childhood cancer research.
  • Support patients, family, and staff of pediatric oncology units*
  • Provide funding for "Brian Morden Memorial" higher education scholarships

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Brian in 1984.
Happy 28th Birthday, Briney!

Upcoming events:

Brian Baskets for Valentine's Day
First Lutheran Evangelical Church
Altoona, PA
February 4,
2012
9-11 AM
Please join us in making Brian Bags/Baskets for local children with cancer
as well as the four Children's Hospitals at which they are being treated:
Pittsburgh Children's Hospital, Janet Weis at Geisinger,
Penn State Hershey Children's Hospital, and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.


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Brian Morden Memorial 2012 Scholarship
Postmark Applications by March 24, 2012

Thanks Grammy and PopPop for your yearly birthday gift to Brian
and the BMF, ensuring that we will be able to award
a Brian Morden Memorial Scholarship.

Thank you to others who have generously given
so that we will be able to award
an additional scholarship to a cancer survivor this year.

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Thank you to the Duncansville Evangelical Lutheran Church
Pastor Jaime Olson and members



Your
2011 HIStory of Christmas
touched many lives in the area
in addition to helping the BMF fight back against
childhood cancer.

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Looking ahead ...

Bikes and Trikes and Things That Go - May 5, 2012

8th Annual Team Gold Ribbon Ride and Run - May 26, 2012

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Happy 28th Birthday, Brian
January 10, 1984


SuperBrian

Please sign our guestbook to help us celebrate his life.

 

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YOU can make a difference
in the lives of the innocent children and families
who have to suffer with this horrendous disease.


Some suggestions from the Brian Morden Foundation:
  • Send cards to children with cancer. Contact the BMF for addresses.
  • Donate to the Brian Morden Foundation through our website.
    You will be helping to fight back against childhood cancer.
  • Adopt "Issy" to send to a childhood cancer patient, give to a loved one, or keep for yourself.

  • Help Issy spread the word about the need for childhood cancer research!
  • Support the BMF through the purchase of an ornament or other merchandise
  • Attend any upcoming BMF event!

Please see our National Childhood Cancer Awareness page to find out more.

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The BMF donated $1008 to CureSearch during National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month (September 2011) in honor of our local children with cancer. ($36 for each one of our 28 "kids" battling cancer including Brian) We hope to find other promising research studies to fund in the near future.

September 2008 Update from Dr. Lessnick, a recipient of one of our research grants:

In terms of science, we’re making pretty solid progress all around.  In terms of a “lay person version,” as you know, we work on the genetic mutation that causes Ewing’s sarcoma.  This mutation creates a protein, called EWS/FLI, that serves as a master-regulator of gene expression in these tumors.  We recently made a surprising finding:  EWS/FLI regulates at least some genes by using “junk DNA” in the human genome.  Approximately 50% of the human genome may be “junk DNA,” that is, DNA with no known function.  EWS/FLI seems to have figured out how to use some of these regions, and in doing so, induces Ewing’s sarcoma.  This work was just published in a pretty high-profile journal.

Additionally, through our studies of the genes that are regulated by EWS/FLI, we have some VERY PRELIMINARY data about a drug that may be useful for Ewing’s sarcoma.  This drug is called vorinostat, and it’s from Merck.  It blocks a class of proteins, called histone deacetylases.  These proteins participate in gene regulation.  We’ve worked out a series of connections by which EWS/FLI turns on a second protein called NKX2.2.  NKX2.2 uses histone deacetylase inhibitors to regulate even more genes.  By blocking this pathway, we can block the growth of Ewing’s sarcoma tumor cells in the laboratory.  We’re now starting to see if we can do this in a mouse model of the disease.  If that looks good, then we’d try to bring this agent to a clinical trial.

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Personal Tragedies Bring Hope to Sarcoma Patients
Developing a Vaccine for Treating Sarcoma is a Primary Goal

September 2006 - Dr. Geiger and his research team are actively looking for eligible participants for the vaccine pilot study which the Brian Morden Foundation has helped fund. For more information, please see study details which includes a brief summary of eligibility requirements and contact information.

August 2006 - Dr. Geiger reported the following in an email, "We have all approvals and are ready to start evaluating patients for the trial.  We also should be able to provide a link to a website with info about the trial." As soon as we receive that information, we'll post it here.

September 2008 - Dr. Geiger reported the following in an email, "10 patients have completed the trial so far. We have some results back on 8 of them. 5 out of 8 have shown a response to their tumor in the immune testing. It is still a little early to tell too much and a few patients have progressed. We are currently giving some patients booster vaccines to hopefully improve the response to tumor. We will know more over the next several months."

Background Information: 

January 28, 2005 - The Brian Morden Foundation and the Liddy Shriver Sarcoma Initiative joined forces to fund research on a vaccine to treat recurrent/relapsed Ewing's Sarcoma, a rare cancer. The vaccine is being developed by a team of oncology specialists at the University of Michigan Medical Center led by Dr. James D. Geiger. This study continues an initial Phase I Clinical Trial funded by the National Institutes of Health that Dr. Geiger and his team initiated. Funds from the Brian Morden Foundation and the Liddy Shriver Sarcoma Initiative, in addition to grants from the University of Michigan will allow doctors to offer a new alternative to patients whose traditional chemotherapy and radiotherapy have failed. See Vaccine Pilot Study
proposed by Dr. James D. Geiger. See press release.

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*Brian was lovingly cared for at Children's Hospital in Pittsburgh, the initial focus of the second BMF goal. We still plan to contribute in important ways to the oncology unit there, however, we have expanded our outreach with Brian Baskets and "Issy" bears, sending them to other pediatric cancer patients especially to those in the Altoona Area, Janet Weis Children's Hospital in Geisinger, Penn State Children's Hospital in Hershey, and Children's Hospital of Philadelphia where some of our area children are being treated. We have also tried to brighten up the day for some children from the Ewing's Sarcoma list serv. If you know a child with cancer who could use a "pick-me-up," please contact us at fdj@brianmordenfoundation.org. We hope to be able to help as many pediatric oncology patients as possible.

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Join our mailing list for newsletters and other updates.

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Contact The Brian Morden Foundation at fdj@brianmordenfoundation.org

last updated 1/10/12