

Summary symposium
The subject of this 10th edition of the Radboud New Frontiers Symposium was cancer research. read moreSummary symposium
In the last decade, there has been an enormous progress in the field of cancer. New treatment paradigms have become available for tumor types that were hardly treatable before. In all of the facets of the diagnostics the personalized approaches are being adopted. New care concepts improve the quality of life of cancer patients. Such new developments that originated from the basic sciences, clinical practice and health sciences were the subject of these two days.
In front of an audience of more than 250 scientists, Professor Paul Smits, Dean / vice-Chairman Radboudumc, opened the symposium. The speaker of the opening session Professor Gerrit Meijer (NKI) discussed the paradigm of personalized or precision medicine and the developments towards the productive translational cancer research.
In the first session on cancer prevention a number of different topic were discussed; starting from primary prevention in Tobacco control by Marc Willemsen (Maastricht UMC), followed by the latest developments in lung screening CT by Mathias Prokop (Radboudumc). The session was closed by an inspiring lecture of Per Hall (Karolinska Institute, Stockholm) on how to identify and treat women with high risk breast cancer.
The second session focused on the future of cancer imaging, the essential and versatile technology that is pervasive in cancer diagnosis, treatment and research. The four speakers presented diverse imaging approaches. Professor Peter Friedl (Radboudumc) showed impressive developments in intravital microscopy of cancer invasion, metastasis and therapy. The state of the art of nuclear medicine was presented by Professor Wim Oyen (ICR, London). Professor Uulke van der Heide (NKI) discussed the future of use of image guided therapy to tailor the treatment in heterogenic tumors. The last speaker of the session Dr Go van Dam (UMC Groningen) focused on local tumor treatments using fluorescent guided surgery.
The last session of the first day dedicated to the exiting area of cancer immunology was opened by an excellent talk of Professor Jolanda de Vries (Radboudumc) on dendritic cell based vaccination, on the long way from biology to daily practise. Professor Rengaswamy Sankaranarayaran presented the different approaches of HPV vaccination in low income countries. The session was closed by dr. Ignacio Melero (University of Navarra, Pamplona) on exploration of new targets such as CD 137 in cancer immunotherapy approaches.
During the second day of the symposium, the fourth session focused on consequences for daily practice. Professor Kathy Pritchard-Jones (UHCL, London) showed the new organization systems to deliver outcome-based cancer care. In the next presentation professor Koos van der Hoeven (Radboudumc) discussed the price of the healthcare. The third lecture on late effects and cancer survivorship was presented by Professor Christopher Johansen (University of Copenhagen). The session was closed by the interesting lecture of Professor Nicole Blijlevens about the platform where patients are in lead using e-health; CMyLife, on cancer immunology, on ‘treating the mutation, the cancer or the patient’, on prevention and patient participation and on durability of the healthcare system. Each session of the program was of interest to both molecular life scientists and health scientists as well as to clinicians with a focus on patient care instead of research.
After the lunch and poster session Professor Paul Workman (ICR, London) talked on de latest development in the genetic field and in drug discovery. The next speaker, professor Donald Berry (MD Anderson, Houston) discussed biomarkers and innovation in clinical trial design, as well as the future of clinical trials.
The keynote lecture about the genetic susceptibility to ovarian cancer, and its clinical significance was given by Professor Paul Pharoah. He is also the first awardee of the John Graunt Award for outstanding scientific achievement in epidemiology.
Best poster awards
There have been two poster sessions during the 2 days of the Symposium. An excellent jury awarded three best poster prizes. They received a certificate, the recently published book The Gene: An Intimate History by Siddhartha Mukherjee and a dinner voucher. The winner of the best poster was Ilja Diets. The second best poster was presented by Sabrina Boer; third place was for Anke van Erp.
John Graunt Award
Starting in 2016, the Radboud Institute for Health Sciences will honor an outstanding scientist every two years for his / her extraordinary achievements in one of the population sciences. read moreSummary public evening
On Monday November 21st, the Radboud Center for Oncology and the Radboud Institute for Health Sciences organized a public evening on the Future of cancer for the patient of today. read moreProgram
THURSDAY NOVEMBER 24, 2016
Prof. Paul Smits, Dean / vice-Chairman Radboud university medical center, will open the symposium followed by the lecture Towards productive translational cancer research of Prof. Gerrit Meijer.
Prof. Gerrit Meijer is professor of pathology with a special interest in gastrointestinal oncology and translational research and leads a translational research group that focuses on gastrointestinal cancer. This involves omics based tumour profiling, using DNA, RNA and proteomics based techniques, in order to stratify patient groups and arrive at individual tailored therapies. Furthermore, genomic and proteomics profiling of pre-malignant lesions is used for biomarker development to improve (colorectal) cancer screening. This program was and is supported with grants from KWF, ZonMW, MLDS en CTMM.
Session 1: Cancer prevention
Although (almost) everyone agrees that more can be achieved with prevention than with clinical care, innovations in cancer prevention are lagging behind. Smoking prevalence is decreasing only slowly. In the same time, obesity is becoming an epidemic. What should be done to give cancer prevention a boost? Despite decades of research, there is still no screening program for prostate cancer and lung cancer. Can we expect such programs any time soon? And what is the next step in breast cancer screening. Is it possible to tailor screening to women with different risk profiles?
Session 2: Future of cancer imaging (research)
Imaging is an essential and versatile technology that is pervasive in cancer diagnosis, treatment and research. In this session four very diverse imaging approaches are presented. We show how microscopy imaging allows researchers to see invasion, spread and the effect of therapy on cancer cells; how novel nuclear imaging is increasingly sensitive in detecting and visualizing tumors and therapeutics in the living body; how radiotherapy is more and more guided by imaging, even during radiotherapy treatment; and how fluorescent imaging can help surgeons during an operation to remove and locally treat cancer.
Session 3: Cancer immunology: between biology and implementation
The realization that cancer cells may be immunogenic has opened up the possibility to investigate to which extent we can stimulate the immune system to prevent or cure cancer. After many years of research into the basic immunological mechanisms, we are now entering an exciting era, in which vaccination, cellular therapy and the use of immunomodulatory drugs and antibodies are being put to the test in patients. In this session, the state of the art of this field will be highlighted by three speakers working in different areas of the immunological arena.
FRIDAY NOVEMBER 25, 2016
Session 4: Consequences for daily practice
Innovations in cancer care is not all about genes, molecules, and images. Important progress can be achieved with, e.g., centralisation of care, network creation, and alternative forms of communication. In this session, you will see examples of such cancer care innovations. Innovations that are urgently needed to keep cancer care sustainable in the near future.
Session 5: Treating the mutation or the tumor or the patient?
Genetic—and later, genomic—investigation of cancers has led to the discovery of pathognomonic – sometimes druggable- mutations in many cancers, which led to personalized cancer care. However, further research has clearly shown that the effects of specific mutations are dependent on cellular context, and thus treatment decisions based solely on the presence of targetable mutations can be misleading. In this post-genomic era, rare cancers are a growing group as a result of reclassification of common cancers by molecular markers. There is therefore an increasing need to identify methods to assess interventions that are sufficiently robust to potentially affect clinical practice in this setting.
Complete program
Venue
The symposium dinner will be held in Landmark Wijnfort Lent, Bemmelse Dijk 4, 6663 KV Lent. A coach is available to take you from the Radboud Auditorium to Landmark.
In the mid 19th century, the fortress town of Nijmegen wanted to strengthen its position. As fort Knodsenburg in Lent could not fulfill any role of significance three new defensive works around the village of Lent were planned two of which were realised: fortress Boven-Lent, also called Sprokkelenburg, and fortress Beneden-Lent, or Nieuw-Knodsenburg. The first was built in 1862, the second a year after. Although most of the fortresses were dismantled after the abolition of fortress Nijmegen in 1874, both fortresses in Lent were preserved. During World War II in September 1944 the German used these to open fire on the Americans on both banks of the Waal. The Americans finally won, but lost 200 men. Fort Sprokkelenburg is a real "LANDMARK" situated at the north shore of the Waal by Nijmegen. The Fort, also known as Fort Above Lent, was part of the line of defense for the city of Nijmegen back in 1870. Nowadays it is in the limelight as a unique location for intimate or big parties in the Netherlands
Public evening - The future of cancer for the patient from now
On the 21st of november the RIHS and the center for Oncology will organize a public evening about cancer research. read morePublic evening - The future of cancer for the patient from now
What is the future of cancer?The threatment of cancer is changing rapidly. New possibilities present themselves, but also the organization of care is changing.
What do these developments mean for the current patient? Prominent doctors en researchers will lead you to the newest developments in cancer research.
When and where?
21 november, 18.30 - 22.00
Location: Auditorium, route 296
Program
Speaker: Koos van der Hoeven
18.30
Entry and reception
19.00
Where are we now and what is will the future bring us?
Koos van der Hoeven, Chairman Center for Oncology
19.30
Imaging of cancer, a glance over the horizon.
Jelle Barentsz, Professor Functional Imaging
19.45
Spy cancercells to understand metastases.
Mirjam Zegers, researcher cellbiology
20.00
The operating room of the future.
Maroeska Rovers, Professor evicence based surgery
20.15
Pause
20.45
New drugs against cancer, where are we going?
Carla van Herpen, medical oncologist
21.00
The past and the future of radiotherapy
Jan Bussink, radiotherapist
21.15
Vaccination to prevent and threat cancer
Jolanda de Vries, Professor Translational Tumor Immunology
21.30
E-health in the aftercare of cancer
Judith Prins, Professor medical psychology
21.45
Questions and discussion
22.00
Closure