$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (2024)

The gift is one of the largest ever to Queen's University Health Sciences

Author of the article:

Meghan Balogh

Published Jun 10, 2024Last updated Jun 11, 20247 minute read

Join the conversation
$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (1)

A significant gift to Queen’s University will be the starting point for brand-new cancer research and treatment therapies in Kingston and will add significant resources to Canada’s cancer treatment ecosystem.

Advertisem*nt 2

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (2)

THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS

Subscribe now to read the latest news in your community.

  • Unlimited online access to all articles on thewhig.com.
  • Access to subscriber-only content, including History: As We Saw It, a weekly newsletter that rips history from our archives, which span almost 190 years.
  • Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists.
  • Support local journalism and the next generation of journalists.

SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES

Subscribe now to read the latest news in your community.

  • Unlimited online access to all articles on thewhig.com.
  • Access to subscriber-only content, including History: As We Saw It, a weekly newsletter that rips history from our archives, which span almost 190 years.
  • Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists.
  • Support local journalism and the next generation of journalists.

REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES

Create an account or sign in to keep reading.

  • Access more articles from thewhig.com.
  • Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments.
  • Get email updates from your favourite journalists.

Sign In or Create an Account

or

View more offers

Article content

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (3)

We apologize, but this video has failed to load.

Try refreshing your browser, or
tap here to see other videos from our team.

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada Back to video

Murray and Cara Sinclair have gifted Queen’s Health Sciences $25 million, which will be used to establish a cancer imaging facility and develop a biomanufacturing facility that will allow for cell-based therapies to be used locally in both research and treatment.

I think we’re all positioned to have increased hope.

Principal and Vice-Chancellor Patrick Deane

The gift, being described as one of the largest donations ever made to Queen’s Health Sciences, was announced during a ceremony on Monday in the atrium of Queen’s University’s School of Medicine.

Patrick Deane, Queen’s University principal and vice-chancellor, told those in attendance that the Sinclairs’ generosity brings researchers a step closer to a cure for cancer.

“I think we’re all positioned to have increased hope,” Deane said. “Queen’s having a role in finding a cure for cancer is not really a question at all, because today’s announcement makes clear that our researchers are in the vanguard of cancer research, not just in Canada but in the world, and through this announcement, they will have unprecedented support to continue their groundbreaking work.”

Deane said the gift will have “an incredible impact on not only cancer research but also on how we deliver cancer care.”

“Their investment will help Queen’s researchers discover new potential treatments, test new drugs and better understand the value of treatment for patients,” he said.

Advertisem*nt 3

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Article content

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (4)

Sinclair Cancer Research Institute

The donation also precipitates the renaming of the Queen’s Cancer Research Institute to the Cara and Murray Sinclair Cancer Research Institute, also to be known as the Sinclair Cancer Research Institute, which School of Medicine dean Dr. Jane Philpott was “delighted” to announce on Monday.

This is a really big deal locally, and that will be felt nationally.

Dr. Annette Hay

“This is the only research centre in Canada that brings together experts from three key cancer disciplines: cancer biology and genetics, clinical trials through the Canadian Cancer Trials Group and cancer epidemiology,” she said.

“From basic science research, to testing new drugs, to evaluating the impact of treatments, the Sinclair Cancer Research Institute will take cancer research from bench to bedside and back. It is very rare to have this spread of research in one institution, and we will now build on that unique foundation by enhancing research, improving training and launching new programs that will position the Sinclair Cancer Research Institute to be a leader in cancer research on the world stage.”

Gift will have significant impact

Queen’s University’s Dr. Annette Hay is the senior investigator for the Canadian Cancer Trials Group and a hematologist and clinician-scientist with Kingston Health Sciences Centre. She was a panellist during a short discussion on stage on Monday to explore the potential impacts of the Sinclair family’s donation.

Advertisem*nt 4

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

She described the gift as creating the infrastructure to have a significant impact not only for patients in Kingston but across Canada.

“This is a really big deal locally, and that will be felt nationally,” Hay told the Whig-Standard in an interview.

Hay works with patients who have blood cancers and utilizes treatments like chemotherapy and stem cell transplants, as well as conducting research in clinical trials testing new cancer treatments.

She said the donation will “deliver now and for many, many years to come.”

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (5)

“The various areas where it will help include clinical cancer research of all types, understanding how cancer works, how cancer occurs, how the treatments work or don’t work — the whole span, including supporting students and the various aspects that go into cancer research.”

One of the new facilities slated will allow the local manufacturing of CAR (chimeric antigen receptor) T cells for use in CAR T cell therapy, which sees immune cells taken from a patient’s body and then engineered to fight specific cancer cells.

“It is a new treatment for cancer that works, and we have been using it for patients here for probably about four years now,” Hay said. “At first, patients who needed it actually had to go to the United States to get treatment because it wasn’t available in Canada. Then we’ve been gradually building capacity in Canada.”

Advertisem*nt 5

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Currently, patients who need this type of immunotherapy can access it in Toronto or Ottawa.

Still, the cell manufacturing largely takes place in the United States.

“What it means is we take a patient with cancer — and it’s only certain types of leukemias and lymphomas — and we actually remove their own immune blood cells in a safe outpatient procedure,” Hay explained. “(The cells) get flown down to the United States (to a) manufacturing facility in California or in New Jersey. There, the patient’s own immune blood cells are engineered to make them recognize their own cancer, and they’re flown back to Canada where they’re given to the patient.”

The approximately four-week delay that process requires can affect patient outcomes, Hay said.

“If you have a really aggressive cancer, that’s a problem,” she said. “Some people just can’t survive for weeks. It’s also super expensive, around half a million dollars for a dose for one person.”

Hay believes the new facility in Kingston will be able to complete this cell manufacturing faster, and cheaper.

“And then we can also continue to test new types of cell therapies that may work better, and may be safer, in clinical trials,” she said.

Hay said the donation is helping to establish a brand-new cancer treatment and research ecosystem in Canada.

Advertisem*nt 6

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

“It’s going to benefit the most important people: the patients with cancer who need this,” she said. “People in our region will have increased access to clinical trials. But the impact is way more, because the results are intended to inform further research and patient care all across Canada, and around the world.”

Article content

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (6)

Donation will establish local imaging facility

The Sinclairs’ gift will also help to establish a new imaging facility under the direction of Dr. Paul Kubes, who is relocating to Kingston from Calgary and stepping into a new role as the Canada Excellence Research Chair in Immunophysiology and Immunotherapy.

During the panel discussion on Monday, Kubes described cancer treatment development in fishing terms.

“I’m a really bad fisherman,” he told those assembled. “I throw my lure in and I hope it works, but I can’t see what’s going on under the water. And I think that in cancer we have a similar problem. We make these T cells and we hope they get to that site and we hope that they work and we hope they kill the tumour. And sometimes they don’t, and we don’t understand why.”

With cutting-edge microscopic technology, Kubes is hopeful that he and researchers will be able to “actually go right inside the body and look at what the different cells are doing inside any particular organ.”

Advertisem*nt 7

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

“We’re trying to understand how we might be able to treat cancers by engaging the immune system, by getting the immune system to say, ‘Look, this is a bad thing and we need to kill it.’”

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (7)

In an interview with the Whig-Standard, Kubes described many cancer treatments as a “kind of lottery,” where treatment is given and then “they hope for the best.”

With new imaging techniques Kubes hopes to utilize, researchers could potentially answer the question of why or why not cancer treatments are working.

“The imaging tells us if we’ve done the right thing and now the immune cells don’t like the cancer and are starting to destroy it,” he said. “Or no, it didn’t work, and why didn’t it work? Can we use a different approach? Can we tweak the approach to make it work. Right now, we’re sort of working blind.”

The imaging will work in conjunction with current and future therapies.

“We’ve developed a way of looking under the water and being able to see what the fish are eating and now use the right lures,” he told the audience on Monday, coming back to the fishing analogy. “And so by the same token, as we develop our imaging in immunotherapy, we’ll be able to track these immune cells … that way we’ll be able to understand which immunotherapy works and which immunotherapy doesn’t work.”

Advertisem*nt 8

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Article content

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (8)

Donors committed to collective fight against cancer

Donors Murray and Cara Sinclair, who live in Vancouver, attended the event on Monday and spoke about their decision to donate their gift to Queen’s University.

Cancer touches us all

Murray Sinclair

“Cancer touches us all,” Murray Sinclair told the Whig-Standard during an interview late last week. “They say 45 per cent of us will get a cancer diagnosis in our lifetime, and 675 people are diagnosed with it each day. My wife’s parents had cancer at different times and my father had cancer.”

Sinclair, a Queen’s alumnus, told those assembled on Monday morning through tears about his brother’s recent death due to a glioblastoma brain cancer diagnosis.

“Cancer crosses all lines, all cultures, race and religion, but its universality is what we can bring home,” Cara Sinclair, originally from Kingston, said on Monday. “It affects everyone, everywhere, so it can also bring us together to beat it.

“Because cancer affects all of us, we have a common goal. We all have a take in it and we understand how critical it is to act. We are all touched by cancer, and because of that, we can find the collective strength and motivation to do something about it.”

“We know that’s why everyone has joined us here today, to do something about it,” Murray Sinclair said. “For us that means honouring the memory of my brother and all the others we have lost to this terrible disease. It also means bringing people and the best minds together. It means supporting the groundbreaking research that is happening right here at Queen’s.”

mbalogh@postmedia.com

Article content

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (9)

Article content

Comments

You must be logged in to join the discussion or read more comments.

Create an AccountSign in

Join the Conversation

Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion. Please keep comments relevant and respectful. Comments may take up to an hour to appear on the site. You will receive an email if there is a reply to your comment, an update to a thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information.

This Week in Flyers

$25-million donation to Queen's will impact cancer research, treatment across Canada (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Last Updated:

Views: 6213

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Cheryll Lueilwitz

Birthday: 1997-12-23

Address: 4653 O'Kon Hill, Lake Juanstad, AR 65469

Phone: +494124489301

Job: Marketing Representative

Hobby: Reading, Ice skating, Foraging, BASE jumping, Hiking, Skateboarding, Kayaking

Introduction: My name is Cheryll Lueilwitz, I am a sparkling, clean, super, lucky, joyous, outstanding, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.