IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND receives a donation of 3,000 euros from the ASAMMA association for genetic research related to metastatic breast cancer.

The team, led by Emilio Alba, will use the funds raised for the study of the most common breast cancer and its recurrences.

The Malaga Biomedical Research Institute and Nanomedicine Platform (IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND) has received a donation of 3,000 euros from the Malaga Association of Women Breast Cancer Surgeons (ASAMMA), which will be used for a research project related to the genomic study of metastatic breast cancer.

Specifically, the study focuses on women with this disease who are treated with cyclin inhibitors, a new hormonal therapy against breast cancer - specifically the HR+/HER2 subtype, also called luminal - metastatic or locally advanced, which reduces the progression of the disease by inhibiting the cell cycle, that is, cell activation, which is also the most common form of this type of cancer.

The cheque presentation ceremony was attended by Jesús Fernández Galán, managing director of the Virgen de la Victoria University Hospital; Emilio Alba, researcher in charge of the CIMO 1 group, ‘Clinical and translational research in cancer’ of the IBIMA BIONAND Platform, director of the Oncology Intercentre Clinical Management Unit of the Virgen de la Victoria University Hospital and director of the Centre for Medical and Health Research (CIMES) of the University of Malaga; Francisco José Tinahones Madueño, scientific director of IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND, researcher in charge of group A-02, ‘Obesity, diabetes and its comorbidities: prevention and treatment' and head of the Endocrinology and Nutrition service at the Virgen de la Victoria University Hospital in Malaga; and Francisca Aguilar, president of the ASAMMA Association, accompanied by a group of members of the association.

The donation raised has been made possible through various charitable activities. The funds will go towards a genetic study related to breast cancer that develops metastasis and its treatment with hormone therapy. The IBIMA research group ‘CIMO 1. Clinical and Translational Research in Cancer’, led by Emilio Alba, together with the principal investigator of the project, Tamara Díaz, will be in charge of the development of this study.

For his part, Emilio Alba said that ‘this umpteenth effort by the ASAMMA association to support biomedical research allows us to continue advancing in treatments aimed at patients so that they have a positive impact on the fight against the disease, thanks to a key biomarker in the approach to metastatic breast cancer’.

According to the latest data collected by the European Cancer Information System (ECIS), a total of 34,735 new cases of breast cancer were diagnosed in Spain in 2022, making it the most frequent tumour in women in our country, ahead of colorectal, uterine, lung and ovarian cancer. Thirty percent of cancers diagnosed in women originate in the breast. Despite the fact that, at a national level, breast cancer is the leading cause of death in oncology, this type of cancer has experienced a significant increase in patient survival in recent years thanks, in large part, to advances in research and new treatments available.

ASAMMA Association

The ASAMMA Association, which has been working in Malaga for 35 years, was born as an organisation dedicated to helping all those who have suffered - or are suffering - from this disease, as well as offering support to the families and direct environment of the patients.

Representing the ASAMMA association, its president, Francisca Aguilar, pointed out that ‘this type of donation has meant an enormous effort on the part of the members of this collective’. ‘It is essential that we join forces to support research because we must think of those who may come in the future, not only those who are going through the disease right now,’ she added. In this sense, Aguilar stressed that ‘one of the main objectives of the association is to donate funds through different charitable activities so that professionals can have sufficient resources to develop new advances in this field that needs to find better diagnoses and treatments’. She also wanted to emphasise that the association ‘has been working intensively for more than thirty years to solve the many problems that women affected by breast cancer have at a psychological, family, social and any other level’, emphasised its president.

Tags