HERSHEY, Pa. — Since the first time she treated a child with neuroblastoma, Giselle Saulnier Sholler wanted to do the impossible for her patients. Neuroblastoma is the most common extracranial solid tumor in children with roughly 700 new diagnoses every year. The survival rate is 30% and for patients who relapse following conventional standard of care treatments, the survival rate is less than 10%.
“The outcomes are really poor,” said Sholler, director of pediatric oncology research at Penn State College of Medicine and division chief of pediatric hematology and oncology at Penn State Health Children’s Hospital. “It breaks my heart. These are young parents with young kids. I couldn’t keep doing the same thing over and over again, only to see the same results.”
Sholler set out to find novel therapies and create the results she wanted to see. In December 2023, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved eflornithine (DFMO), the first drug to reduce the risk of relapse and increase survival in high-risk pediatric neuroblastoma patients, the culmination of 20 years of Sholler’s research, clinical trials and patient care.
With her work, Sholler has helped make Penn State College of Medicine and Penn State Health a destination for pediatric cancer patients from all over the world. Recently, Penn State News caught up with Sholler to learn more about her quest to transform cancer care.
Q: You’re a clinician-scientist. How does your clinical practice inform your research priorities and vice versa?
Sholler: It’s circular: What we learn from patients, we bring to the lab and what we learn in the lab, we bring back to patients. It’s critical for finding new therapies for kids with cancer and for understanding cancer better.
In 2019, I started looking at the genomic sequencing of tumors because I wanted to understand why, for example, 30% of patients responded to a drug but the rest don’t even though they have the same cancer. What mutations are in this particular child’s tumor? What are the pathways that are making this specific tumor grow?
In my lab, we grow the cell lines from patients’ tumors and test different currently available drugs to see what works. Will it respond, or do we need to develop new drugs? For instance, we found a new mutation in one child. Had we not grown that cell line, we would never have known what this mutation does or how to treat it.
It’s led to two lanes of research — one testing drugs in clinical trials that could target these pathways and one pursuing a precision medicine approach that uses genomic information from a patient’s tumor to create treatment plans tailored to the patient.