# Cancer Therapeutics: Technology, Discovery, and Targeted Delivery Program

> **NIH NIH P30** · UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO HEALTH SCIS CTR · 2020 · $6,764

## Abstract

CANCER THERAPEUTICS: TECHNOLOGY, DISCOVERY & TARGETED DELIVERY (CT) 
RESEARCH PROGRAM 
ABSTRACT 
The Cancer Therapeutics: Technology, Discovery and Targeted Delivery (CT) Research Program, led by Larry 
A. Sklar, PhD and Renata Pasqualini, PhD, consists of a multidisciplinary team of 43 (27 full and 16 associate 
members) of basic, translational and clinical investigators assembled from 5 Departments in the UNM School of 
Medicine, 2 in the UNM College of Engineering, the UNM College of Pharmacy, New Mexico State University, 
and our UNM Cancer Center (UNMCC) consortium partners: Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute (LRRI) 
and Sandia (SNL) and Los Alamos National (LANL) Laboratories. CT is a new UNMCC Research Program, 
developed through rigorous program planning and evaluation in response to the prior 2010 NCI CCSG critique 
and guidance from the External Advisory Committee (EAC). Building from its origins in the Cancer Biotechnology 
component of the former Cancer Biology & Biotechnology Program, CT has retained and acquired scientific 
expertise in small molecule discovery and drug repurposing, combinatorial targeting of peptide and antibody 
phage display libraries, nanoparticle and virus-like particle (VLP)-based drug delivery, as well as imaging and 
isotopes. During the prior funding period (from 1/1/10 to 9/1/2014), CT program members published 336 original 
peer-reviewed articles and reviews (37% intra-programmatic and 24% inter-programmatic) and participated in 6 
investigator-initiated trials. As of 9/1/14, CT funding is $16,076,676 in annual direct costs, of which $14,196,182 
is peer-reviewed direct funding and $3,105,330 is from the NCI. Dr. Sklar is an expert in leukocyte biology and 
drug discovery and/or repurposing while Dr. Pasqualini is an expert in vascular targeting whose pivotal work in 
vivo with phage display has led to extensive pre-clinical and clinical applications; both leaders are experienced 
in translation and commercialization. CT has contributed to the bulk of UNMCC intellectual property as well as 
10 biotechnology or pharmaceutical start-up companies. The Program benefits from the technological expertise 
in partnerships among the UNMCC, LRRI, SNL and LANL. Through the strategic recruitment of new talented 
faculty and infrastructure reorganization, the CT translational pipeline is expanding through: i) small molecule 
discovery and drug repurposing, flow cytometry technology and cheminformatics; ii) combinatorial targeting 
through selection of peptide and antibody phage display libraries; iii) targeted ligand-directed delivery coupled to 
material nanofabrication, predictive mathematical methodology, and molecular imaging; and iv) early translation 
into clinical application. Noted multidisciplinary, multi-investigator programmatic grants held by CT members 
include large NIH, NCI and DOD funds supporting translational investigations and clinical interventions. Recent 
physician-scientist and clinical inv...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10230666
- **Project number:** 3P30CA118100-15S9
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO HEALTH SCIS CTR
- **Principal Investigator:** CHERYL LYNN WILLMAN
- **Activity code:** P30 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $6,764
- **Award type:** 3
- **Project period:** 2005-09-26 → 2021-08-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10230666

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10230666, Cancer Therapeutics: Technology, Discovery, and Targeted Delivery Program (3P30CA118100-15S9). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10230666. Licensed CC0.

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