fundraiser Archives - Sanford Burnham Prebys
Institute News

At Pedal the Cause, Team SBP rode 787 miles for cancer research in San Diego

AuthorJessica Moore
Date

November 16, 2016

Over a blisteringly hot November weekend, scientists, staff, and supporters of Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute came together to support the fight against cancer. They participated in the fourth annual Pedal the Cause bike ride and fundraising event that raised over $1.6 million. The money will be used to fund joint collaborative cancer research projects among scientists from SBP, the Salk, Rady Children’s Hospital and Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego.

Our team’s nine riders biked a collective 787 miles over hilly terrain, raising almost $17,000. Some, like graduate student Marisa Sanchez, were inspired to ride by their personal experience with cancer. “I ride to honor my sister, Alessandra, who we lost to cancer four years ago,” said Sanchez in a video interview. “Research is crucial to advance cancer care—the treatments that are being developed now might have saved her life.”

Team SBP also ran a refueling station, where our volunteers helped the event’s 1,500 riders take a much needed break Sunday morning. In addition to water, snacks, and shade, the SBP station provided a fun disco-themed photo booth, complete with 70s-era tunes, in honor of the Institute’s 40th anniversary.

Local news station CW6 was on site to interview riders and scientists, including SBP’s Cosimo Commisso, PhD, assistant professor in the NCI-designated Cancer Center, who emphasized the importance of adequate funding to accelerate progress towards cures.

Commisso was part of a team that was awarded a grant from Pedal the Cause in 2014. That collaboration with Geoffrey Wahl, PhD, at the Salk and Andrew Lowy, MD, at Moores Cancer Center focused on pancreatic cancer, the most deadly common cancer in the U.S., and yielded breakthrough findings that could lead to a new treatment approach. The money raised this year will support similarly innovative, high-impact research that can be rapidly translated into new hope for cancer patients.

Institute News

“No surrender” to CDG

AuthorHelen I. Hwang
Date

September 9, 2016

From a farmhouse in rural Iowa, Crystal Vittetoe is fighting for her two babies afflicted with congenital disorders of glycosylation, known as CDG. She and her family have raised over $37,000 from a single fundraiser, and the donations keep coming in. “If we don’t fight for research, we are surrendering to CDG,” says Vittetoe.

“What Crystal has done for our research at the Institute is incredible. She’s raised enough money to pay for half a postdoc’s salary to do research for one year, and now we need to find the other half,” says Hudson Freeze, PhD, director of the Human Genetics Program at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute (SBP). “We have so many projects we start and want to complete. We need more hands on the projects. And if a family needs help, we don’t turn anybody away,” he says.

CDG is a collection of genetic diseases that causes mental and physical developmental issues, which leads to severe damage to multiple organs like the liver, heart and intestines.

The Vittetoes have two young children with CDG—two-year-old daughter Everlee (in the photo above) and one-year-old son Breckyn. Vittetoe drove from Iowa to SBP in La Jolla, Calif., for the annual Rare Disease Day Symposium at SBP. There, she met other families, scientists, doctors as well as Freeze to learn about the latest research and treatments that can help their kids cope with her illness. Worldwide, there are less than 1,500 known cases of CDG where children are born with the genetic disorders.

Vittetoe realized from the family’s visit to SBP that much more research was needed to figure out why CDG happens and how to lessen the her children’s suffering. She was inspired to raise money for the Rocket Fund, in honor of John Taylor (Rocket) Williams IV who would’ve turned 10 years old this year. Sadly, he passed away at the age of two.

In the past year, Everlee has been hospitalized six times. During one episode, she was having an hourly seizure for 24 hours with the last one enduring for 3.5 hours. “It’s so stressful, no matter if she’s having a stroke-like episode or just needs fluids,” says Vittetoe.

With the help of family and friends, Vittetoe held a dinner and silent auction at Lebowski’s Rock ‘N Bowl in her hometown of Washington, Iowa with a population of just over 7,000. The three-hour inaugural event raised a phenomenal amount of money that even surprised Vittetoe. “We were blown away,” she said.

The bar donated 15% of the tab and a friend, who’s also a singer, volunteered the entertainment. Over 300 people contributed to a free-will dinner donation for delicious pork loin from the family’s hog farm and scrumptious sides whipped up by the children’s grandmother.

Substantial seed donations, along with gifts from local businesses, raised an enormous amount of funds at the silent auction. The Vittetoes have been farming in Iowa for generations, and Crystal’s husband Jonathan approached the local seed dealers who all said “yes” to helping out the kids. And of course, neighborhood farmers came to support the Vittetoes who always need seed for their crops.

People contributed checks from $10 to $5,000, and every dollar counted. Other families with CDG children drove over six hours from as far away as Minnesota and Illinois to show their support.

The giving doesn’t just stop with the fundraiser hosted by the Vittetoe family. Recently Crystal’s grandfather passed away in Colorado and the family asked for memorial donations to the Rocket Fund.

Vittetoe says, “It’s your babies and if you don’t do something, you’re just waving the white flag. We’re not waving the white flag. We just want to do something for them.”

Note:

The next SBP Rare Disease Day Symposium will be held on February 24, 2017. The day-long event will focus on Alagille syndrome, a genetic disorder that causes liver damage due to abnormalities in the bile ducts, which carry waste from the liver to the gallbladder and small intestine. For more information, click here.

Photo credit: Drish Photography.