Cell-based Gene Therapy is finally here!

The first-ever approval of a Cell-based Gene Therapy by the Federal Drug Administration in the US has finally come – after many years of research and development into our long-held belief that DNA holds the key to a possible cure for disease.

Our own Professor John Rasko is Head of Cell and Molecular Therapies at RPA Hospital in Sydney and President-Elect of the International Society for Cellular Therapy – he is delighted that the day has arrived.

“This is a day we’ve been waiting for” he says “… the thought that we could ‘turbo-charge’ the immune system has been around for decades – so to have a working and approved treatment based on these ideas is fantastic.”

With this new ‘Car-T’ therapy, blood from a patient is removed and the T-cells genetically modified to help them identify the diseased Cancer cells and destroy them. These Car-T cells are reintroduced to the patient’s blood stream through a normal blood infusion, where they massively expand and go to work – killing the tumour cells… in just the same way that your body identifies and deals with bacteria and viruses.

“Just one single modified T-cell is capable of killing thousands, or tens of thousands, of Cancer cells” says Professor Rasko.

 

Cure The Future are actively involved raising funds for Car-T research (see below)

Hear the full ABC Radio interview about Car-T therapy with Prof John Rasko.

Exciting News as 1st Cell & Gene Therapy approved by FDA

by Fran Kelly | ABC RN Breakfast with Prof. John Rasko AO October 2017

Car-T Project

Professor Rasko & RPA Hospital are part of a global research initiative to expand the potential for Car-T therapy, in collaboration with leading researchers at other centres in USA, Canada & Sweden.

Cure The Future is the leading Cell and Gene Therapy Charity in Australia & New Zealand – Join us now & help support this fantastic project.

Let’s find a cure for cancer and other inherited diseases. 

Should unproven stem cell therapies be regulated?

Should unproven stem cell therapies be regulated?

A group of 15 senior doctors and researchers from around the world have published a paper calling for worldwide regulations against unproven stem cell therapies.

Warnings that a treatment is “unproven” or “untested” might not deter those who are seriously or terminally ill and have no other option.

That’s given rise to a market for expensive treatments that don’t have scientific backing — particularly in the field of stem cell therapy.

Should unproven stem cell therapies be regulated?

by Fran Kelly | ABC RN Breakfast with 'Dr. Blood' Prof. John Rasko AO 6th July 2017

Vice Regal Patronage for Cure The Future

Vice Regal Patronage for Cure The Future

Cure The Future are proud to announce that His Excellency General The Honourable David Hurley AC DSC (Ret.), Governor of New South Wales, has granted Vice Regal Patronage to Cure The Future, as of May 2017.

This news is exciting for the charity, officially recognising as it does the importance of Cell and Gene Therapy as a possible cure for the future of some cancers, haemophilia, arthritis and other inherited diseases.

 

 

 

Make a Tax-Free Donation to Cure The Future

Cure The Future – Tax Free!

Some of the World’s greatest medical advances have been made possible by individuals like you and me, making donations to help fund research. Every time our researchers  discover something that brings us loser to our goal of curing genetically inherited diseases and cancers, I am reminded that it would not be possible with that support.

We need ongoing help and support to continue this pioneering research into Cell and Gene therapies, which are getting ever closer to finding a cure. The greater the investments we make now, the closer we be to a cure for genetically inherited disease.

Your support will help us deliver that possibility in years, rather than decades.

So with the End of Financial Year fast approaching, please remember that all donations to Cure The Future are Tax-Free.

So you can help us, yourself and your family.

Make a donation using a credit card or with a PayPal account using the button below.

Diane Langmack

Chairperson

In Memory of Helen Rasko

In Memory of

Helen Lorain Rasko OAM

 

Mark Skinner

Helen Lorain Rasko OAM

Born 8 July 1928

Sharing happiness through the joy of music enabled Helen to have an international and Australian career in the entertainment business. She had the privilege of touring Commonwealth Countries with performances for HRH Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip; representing Australia at Malaysia’s “ Puspawana” compering in English and Malay; performing at the inauguration of Lee Kuan Yew as Prime Minister and for Prince Phillip again later, when Singapore became a Republic.

She appeared in Europe singing for the Troops and displaced persons camps. Helen also appeared regularly on BBC TV, Granada and German TV.

Her jazzy contralto voice enabled Helen to raise funds for charities including the Actors Benevolent Fund and Sydney Grammar School. On her return to Australia in the 1950’s she appeared under television contracts for 8 years on all networks including The Mike Walsh Show, Graham Kennedy’s Blankety Blanks and The Tonight Show.
She was a lifelong learner and, when widowed in her late forties, dedicated herself to pay for the education of her two sons John and David, who survive her.

Her greatest honour was receiving the Medal of the Order of Australia in 1998 for service to the entertainment industry and to charitable organisations. She enjoyed her life to the full with a close-knit circle of friends and family.

Her secrets for success were diligence, discipline, respect, and love.

This mosaic image of Helen has been created using photos of people from the Cure The Future family album.

It is in loving memory – and to help remind us that we are all connected.

Helen Rasko Mosaic

Tim Gilbert joins to help Cure The Future

Well-known TV personality Tim Gilbert has become an Ambassador for Cure The Future. Mr. Gilbert has been presenting sport to Australian audiences for over 20 years and is one of the regular team on Channel Nine’s breakfast show ‘Today’.

He is a veteran on Nine’s Wide World of Sports, where it all began for him in the mid 1990s.

Since then, Gilbert has travelled the globe covering major sporting events – including cricket in India, major golf tournaments in the USA, the London Olympics, the Vancouver Winter Olympics, as well as two Commonwealth Games, in Melbourne and Kuala Lumpur.

He is also the host of the southern hemisphere’s biggest road cycling event, the Santos Tour Down Under.

In addition, Tim works within the award-winning Nine News team as one of their seasoned sports presenters.