Robert Jenq, M.D.
Robert Jenq, M.D.
The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Titles & Positions

  • Assistant Professor, Departments of Genomic Medicine and Stem Cell Transplantation and Cellular Therapy

Institutional & Related Links

Profile

Biography

Grant Information

Grant ID: RR160089
Grant Mechanism: 
Recruitment of Rising Stars
Recruited From: 
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Date Awarded: 
September 14, 2016
Grant Amount: 
$4,000,000

Patients with blood cancers like leukemia can often be cured with a stem cell transplant from a donor. But up to 50% of patients who are cured of cancer with this type of transplant suffer when the donor immune system attacks the patient’s own organs. Most cases of this graft-vs.-host disease are successfully treated with steroid medications, but other patients suffer from pain, rashes, and bloody diarrhea, and sometimes die from infections.

Now a physician scientist at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center is studying how graft-vs.-host disease can be prevented by paying attention to a less-widely-known modulator of the immune system: the gut microbiome.

Dr. Robert Jenq, M.D., was recruited to MD Anderson from Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York, with the help of a Recruitment of Rising Stars Award from CPRIT.

In his role as a bone marrow transplant oncologist, Dr. Jenq became concerned about patients who suffered from graft-vs.-host disease after successfully beating cancer. He found that the patients who fared worst had been treated with a broad-spectrum antibiotic during the transplant process.

Read More