
Institute for Translational Medicine (ITM) researchers came together with about 100 Chicagoland community members to spark connections and share stories behind innovate research supported by the ITM’s Pilot Awards program to propel creative science explorations – like new potential ways to diagnose and treat head and neck cancer, keep a hospital soap effective and not turbo charge bad bacteria, and treat blood clots and fight childhood cancer with a bubble technology.


“It was cool to see the discoveries that were being made in the science and how they were actually affecting the healthcare setting,” said attendee Christina Warner.
For the nearly 900,000 people worldwide who are diagnosed with head and neck cancer each year, the treatment can feel as grueling as the disease itself. Traditional chemotherapy and invasive surgeries can strip away a person’s ability to speak, swallow, or breathe. Izumchenko is leading research to catch this condition early and develop non-surgical treatments.
A special antiseptic soap called chlorhexidine is a simple but powerful prevention tool. Studies show it can significantly reduce infections, including those caused by antibiotic-resistant bacteria, particularly for high-risk patients.

ITM Contact: Sara Serritella, Director of ITM Communications, serritella@uchicago.edu
This project is supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that supports the Institute for Translational Medicine (ITM) through Grant Number UL1TR002389.

