Skip to content
Project Directory
  • Français
Donate Now
  • Français
  • About
    • What We Do
    • EDI Action Plan
    • Leadership
    • Team
    • Annual Report
    • Publications
    • Careers
  • Brain Conditions
    • One Brain
    • ALS
    • Autism (ASD)
    • Brain Cancer
    • Brain Injury
    • Dementia
    • Epilepsy
    • Mental Illness
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Parkinson’s
    • Stroke
    • More
  • Research
    • Programs
    • Funding Opportunities
    • Program Partners
    • Announcements
  • Impact
    • Research Impact Stories
    • Equity, Diversity and Inclusion
    • Our Donors
    • Brain Health in Indigenous Communities
    • Women’s Brain Health
    • Mind Over Matter
  • How You Can Help
    • Ways to Give
    • Start a Fundraiser
    • Workplace Giving
    • The Great Minds

Funded Grants

Back to results

Discovering how brain cancer evolution affects responses to treatment

Project Overview

A type of brain cancers called “diffuse gliomas” currently lacks effective treatments. One obstacle to developing new therapies is the disease variability between patients. Several categories of diffuse gliomas have been identified. However, we know that even within each of these categories, the tumors can vary substantially. This includes differences in the specific genetic lesions that are present in the tumors. Those are particularly obvious as the diseases progress. Indeed, during progression, diffuse gliomas frequently accumulate new genetic lesions. We know very little about the impact of these accumulating lesions. They could make the disease more aggressive, and either more or less responsive to specific treatments. Our goal is to understand how genetic lesions that occur during disease progression shape the growth of the gliomas, and their response to a drug that recently entered the clinic. We will achieve this by developing and studying a new animal model of diffuse glioma evolution. We expect that our studies will help the design of better treatments that are tailored to individual patients.

Principal Investigator

Jerome Fortin , The Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning/McGill University

Project Ongoing

Discovering how brain cancer evolution affects responses to treatment

  • Grant Type

    Capacity building grants

  • Area of research

    Cancer

  • Disease Area

    Brain Cancer

  • Competition

    Future Leaders in Canadian Brain Research

  • Province

    Québec

  • Start Date

    2025

  • Total Grant Amount

    $100,000

  • Health Canada Contribution

    $50,000

Contact Us

1200 McGill College Avenue
Suite 1600, Montreal, Quebec
H3B 4G7

+1 (514) 989-2989 info@braincanada.ca

Please note all online donations will receive an electronic tax receipt, issued by Brain Canada Foundation.

Our Donors

Playing with Marbles Podcast

Join us and take a journey to the real last great frontier – the brain.

Listen

Subscribe to Brain News

Receive our monthly electronic newsletter with updates on funded projects, upcoming events and breakthroughs in brain research.

Sign Up

Territorial acknowledgement

The offices of Brain Canada Foundation are located on the traditional, ancestral territory of the Kanien'kehá:ka Peoples, a place which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst nations. We honour and pay respect to elders past, present and emerging, and dedicate ourselves to moving forward in the spirit of partnership, collaboration, and reconciliation. In our work, we focus our efforts on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Calls to Action, particularly those that pertain to improving health for Indigenous Peoples and that focus on advancing our own learning on Indigenous issues.

© 2026 Brain Canada Foundation

Registration number: 89105 2094 RR0001

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy

Design by Field Trip & Co