Issue StoriesInterview: Daniel C. Sullivan, M.D.by Marie S. Marchese The associate director for the National Cancer Institute's Biomedical Imaging Program speaks about its mission and the role of the medical imaging industry.
Currently associate director for the Biomedical Imaging Program (BIP) in the Division of Cancer Treatment and Diagnosis of the National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Sullivan, a radiologist by training, has a 23-year history in academic radiology with appointments at Yale University School of Medicine (New Haven, Conn.), Duke University Medicine Center (Durham, N.C.) and the Presbyterian Medical Center, University of Pennsylvania Health Systems, (Philadelphia). Sullivan, who brings his own clinical and research specialties in nuclear medicine and breast imaging to the associate directors post, oversees the Programs four branches diagnostic imaging, molecular imaging, image-guided therapy and imaging technology development. He also administers the Programs annual budget for grant applications, which has grown from approximately $59 million in FY1997 to $100 million-plus in FY2000. As Sullivan says, There is a lot of opportunity now in the biomedical imaging community due to advances in imaging technology together with recent molecular discoveries, such as the mapping of the human genome, that help scientists identify target areas of research. Medical Imaging spoke with Sullivan about NCIs Biomedical Imaging Program, its mission and the role of the imaging industry in advancing research and helping set Program priorities. How long have you been associate director of the National Cancer
Institutes (NCI) Biomedical Imaging Program (BIP) and what does your role entail? The Molecular Imaging branch focuses on one of the areas that we think is particularly new and important, which is to get imaging down to the molecular level, as science discovers what the abnormalities are that really cause disease at the genetic level and the molecular level. We would like techniques and technologies that can give us information about those abnormalities in the intact living human, so that physicians do not have to biopsy tissue, for example, and do laboratory tests on it. This is a whole new area for medical imaging. Its a major challenge, and it will not happen next year; it is something that will take 5, 10 or 20 years to develop. The Image-guided Therapy branch focuses on using imaging to guide small devices, catheters and more to do minimally invasive surgery or to deliver therapy specifically to a very localized area of the body in a minimally invasive way. That could be any type of therapy, whether it is a drug, heat, radiation, laser, surgery or biopsy, for example. The fourth branch is the Imaging Technology Development branch, which focuses on fostering research on very new technologies that are not yet clinically useful but might have some promise 5, 10 or 20 years into the future. How many employees are in the program? In fiscal year 2000, which ends on Sept. 30, our program will support a little more than $100 million of research, but we do not start out the year with a $100 million. The way the National Institutes of Health works, people send in applications on their own initiative or in response to some program we create. Those applications are reviewed by other experts the peer review system and the ones that get the highest scores will get funded. The total amount of grants that are funded during the year will depend partly upon the number of applications that are submitted and the relative merit of those applications. For the next fiscal year, starting in October, we will not start out with some predetermined budget; there will be a certain number of grants that will already be obligated, because they are multiple-year awards that have been funded, but the total amount that will be available at the end of the year is unknown. It depends on the above factors. The amount of funding for imaging has increased significantly over the last three years
from approximately $59 million in FY1997 to more than $100 million in FY2000. We have another program for small-animal imaging centers because of the importance of genetically engineered mice in research nowadays; theres a need to get biological information from those mice while still keeping them alive. There are five of those centers now and they are funded at the rate of approximately $1 million a year each. We have issued another request for applications that is currently available, so people will be sending in applications and next year we will fund another five, so there will be a total of 10. Those are just two examples. There are many other requests and program announcements that we have issued in the last two or three years that generate more applications and, in some cases, have specific set-aside money. So both of those things increase the total amount of dollars spent for imaging research. From where does your budget come? Are grants distributed throughout the United
States? Grants administered can be anywhere in the United States, and actually some are in Canada and in foreign countries, so they could be all over the world, but the majority are within the United States. Congress decided that in some cases the public health benefit to the population of the United States is well-served if there is expertise in other countries to do particular research; for example, if they do a particular study that is either not being done in the United States or is not available in the United States. So a small number of grants are made to researchers in other parts of the world not a huge percentage, and there has to be some justification for doing it. In our case, we are funding a study in Canada looking at the mammography of women with dense breast tissue to see how much of a risk factor that is, and we are funding a couple of studies in the United Kingdom and Germany that are related to looking at MRI of breast cancer or MRI screening of women at high-risk. In all those cases, we also are funding studies in the United States related to the same topics, but in order to get more patients and more data, some of it is being done in other countries as well. What role do imaging companies play in your research? Are they involved in your
decisions to investigate a particular project by being involved in the those initial
discussions or by providing you with equipment or technical support? Some of our program announcements specifically request that academic researchers form partnerships with industry, and sometimes we sponsor trials of new equipment. We are now beginning to sponsor a trial of digital mammography that will test the equipment from four different manufacturers. They were all involved with us in discussions about what the protocol should be, they will be providing the equipment and they discussed with us the subsequent use of the archive of images that will be produced from that clinical trial. So we do have an increasing amount of discussions with industry.
How does industrys participation affect your choice of projects? On the other hand, there might be some things that we know, or we think are important to the public health that might not have significant market value. Can you cite an example of something that industry deemed to have little market
value, but the Biomedical Imaging Program pursued nonetheless? We anticipate as we develop molecular-imaging agents, some very specific molecules that could target a cancer cell, for example, the market for some of those agents may be very small. If an agent is very specific for a particular type of tumor, and it is going to be used only once or twice in a patient for diagnostic purposes as opposed to a drug that gets used over and over again, the market may be small. Therefore, companies may not see it as a profitable venture, and we anticipate that NCI will have to develop those agents for the public health good. Digital mammography is a bit of an example of that. The companies have developed the machines and they think there is a market for those machines, but the benefit of digital mammography over conventional mammography in detecting more cancers and providing fewer false-positives is probably relatively small. There probably is some advantage, but it is not huge. To carry out a large trial to prove what that benefit is would be prohibitively expensive for any one company. Thats one of the reasons why NCI is working with the companies to carry out a very large trial that would benefit all companies, so that we can identify what the benefit is and how big it is. The public health interest is that women will then know what the benefit is and can decide whether they want to ask for a digital mammogram as opposed to a conventional mammogram. Do you find that certain projects, such as mammography, are more popular one
year than the next. If so, what might some of those be? The work is mainly related to diagnostic imaging, but in the process of developing an
imaging probe, some kind of molecule that can go to a specific target in the body, which
is another molecule. It is possible to also attach some kind of treatment substance to
that molecule, the target. For example, you could attach a radionuclide molecule that
would destroy the cell by radioactivity or you could attach some kind of a drug to that
molecule to get the drug specifically into the cell or into the DNA nucleus that you want
to kill. First you would give the imaging probe to identify the abnormality and make sure
the probe is going where you want it, and then you would switch to another version of that
probe that would have the therapeutic modality attached to it and give that to the
patient. One is because all of these molecular discoveries, the mapping of the genome and understanding genetic abnormalities have identified the targets that we need to go after. Second has been the developments in imaging technology itself, that is, devices like the MR scanners and CT scanners that have very high spatial resolution that means you can see very small structures. And third is the development of new technology in chemistry, what is usually called combinatorial chemistry, the ability to create hundreds or thousands of different chemical compounds very quickly and to screen those different compounds quickly to determine which ones are likely to be useful or active. The combination of those three things, two of which are technology-dependent, are what has opened lots of vistas for medical imaging. Do those three also help set the trends in biomedical imaging? |
|
|
Featured Jobs
Find a Job |
ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCES
|
Featured Employer
|
|||||||||||||||||