OvCaRe

BC’s unique provincial cancer care system – with coordinated diagnosis, treatment and outcome tracking – has made it possible for our province to be a leader in the evolution of improved treatments for a number of different cancers. However, there have been no significant breakthroughs in ovarian cancer treatment for more than a decade. OvCaRe was created by a group of clinicians and scientists with the explicit goal of improving ovarian cancer outcomes by freely sharing data and promoting collaborations within the group and with outside researchers interested in ovarian cancer. OvCaRe has three major goals: to develop diagnostic tests for the most promising tumour markers and offer these tests province wide; to identify novel therapies in laboratories and translate these to the clinic; and to explore markers, diagnostics and potential therapies for ovarian cancers that are unresponsive to current therapies.

Leader:

Members:

  • Nelly Auersperg
    University of British Columbia
  • Keith K.C. Choi
    University of British Columbia
  • David Huntsman
    BC Cancer Agency
  • Julie Irving
    University of British Columbia
  • Nhu Le
    BC Cancer Agency
  • Peter Leung
    University of British Columbia
  • Jessica McAlpine
    University of British Columbia
  • Kelly McNagny
    University of British Columbia
  • Dianne Miller
    University of British Columbia
  • Brad Nelson
    BC Cancer Agency
  • Calvin Roskelley
    University of British Columbia
  • Kenneth Swenerton
    University of British Columbia
  • Anna Tinker
    BC Cancer Agency
  • Yuzhuo Wang
    BC Cancer Agency

BC’s unique provincial cancer care system – with coordinated diagnosis, treatment and outcome tracking – has made it possible for our province to be a leader in the evolution of improved treatments for a number of different cancers. However, there have been no significant breakthroughs in ovarian cancer treatment for more than a decade. OvCaRe was created by a group of clinicians and scientists with the explicit goal of improving ovarian cancer outcomes by freely sharing data and promoting collaborations within the group and with outside researchers interested in ovarian cancer. OvCaRe has three major goals: to develop diagnostic tests for the most promising tumour markers and offer these tests province wide; to identify novel therapies in laboratories and translate these to the clinic; and to explore markers, diagnostics and potential therapies for ovarian cancers that are unresponsive to current therapies.

OvCaRe was created by a group of clinicians and scientists across multiple health care authorities and research institutions with the common goal of improving ovarian cancer patient outcomes by sharing data and promoting collaborations within the group and with outside researchers. OvCaRe spans the breadth of basic to clinical sciences by bringing scientific discoveries to patient populations; allowing true bench-to-bedside research and improved patient outcomes.

OvCaRe is focusing on three primary goals:

Ovarian cancer is the fifth leading cause of death in women and the leading cause of death from gynecological malignancy. Although most ovarian cancers respond to chemotherapy, they almost inevitably recur. Consequently, the life expectancy for women with ovarian cancer is, on average, less than three years after diagnosis.