UofL Health – Mary & Elizabeth Hospital – UofL News Fri, 17 Apr 2026 17:45:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL Health – Brown Cancer Center celebrates 40 years /post/uofltoday/uofl-health-brown-cancer-center-celebrates-40-years/ Mon, 23 May 2022 18:30:54 +0000 /?p=56493 The UofL Health –  is celebrating 40 years of conducting groundbreaking research and providing care to hundreds of thousands of patients. The ultimate goal of Brown Cancer Center is to end cancer.

“The disease of cancer used to be terminal,” explained Jason Chesney, director of Brown Cancer Center. “Today, most of our patients are living long lives because of the treatment we offer. It’s a dramatic change.”

The Brown Cancer Center (BCC) first opened in 1981, four years after the Regional Cancer Center Corporation (RCCC) raised nearly $12 million for its construction and operation. At the time,  took care of about 50 patients a day. Today, they care for over 500 patients per day. The number of oncologists has grown from seven in the early 1980s to nearly 80 now. As late as 1999, BCC hosted four clinical trials. In 2022, there are more than 130 open clinical trials. In addition to patient care, more than 65 University of Louisville faculty investigators conduct basic and translational research to find new and better ways to prevent, diagnose and treat cancer.

“Certainly, much has evolved in the science and technology of cancer treatment after 40 years, and I’ve enjoyed seeing the depth of talent develop in many specialties of oncology,” said Henry V. Heuser, Jr., an RCCC board member who helped lead this effort alongside several other architects of change, including Lt. Gov. Wilson Wyatt.

The Brown Cancer Center offers dozens of services, including treatment for breast cancer, endocrine cancer, gastrointestinal cancer, lung cancer, bone cancer, skin cancer and more. In 2021, the Brown Cancer Center expanded its services to UofL Health – Medical Center Northeast and UofL Health – Mary & Elizabeth Hospital, further opening up access to treatment for patients.

Forty years ago, the Louisville community came together to ensure local cancer patients did not have to travel to get the best possible cancer treatments. In a state with some of the highest rates of cancer and cancer deaths, Kentuckiana made a considerable investment to create an academic cancer center that would lead the charge in the war on cancer and educate the next generation of oncologists and cancer researchers.

“The Brown Cancer Center has a remarkable legacy but, most importantly, it is positioned to dramatically shape the future,” said Tom Miller, UofL Health CEO. “Of all the cancer teams I’ve worked with across the country, this group of clinicians and researchers is the most dedicated I’ve seen. When a cure for cancer is discovered, and I believe the cure will be discovered here, it will because of the collaborate and compassionate dedication of all those at our Brown Cancer Center.”

Since opening the doors in 1981, the BCC has been the site of significant research breakthroughs and groundbreaking treatments.

Major cancer research discoveries at the Brown Cancer Center include:

  • Development of the first anticancer drugs that inhibit cancer cell metabolism
  • Discovery and first in world trial of anticancer DNA aptamers (AS1411)
  • Creation of the world’s largest nonprofit computer grid in Kentucky High Schools, already used to discover more than 20 new anticancer drugs
  • The first clinical trial of cancer metabolism, following the date of glucose at the ATOMIC level
  • The discovery of a novel population of multipotent stem cells called Very Small Embryonic-Like (VSELs).
  • Development of the first stem cell vaccine to prevent cancer
  • Clinical trials of beta-glucans as immune-stimulants in combination with therapeutic monoclonal antibodies

The Brown Cancer Center’s milestones in the clinical arena include:

  • 1990: Creation of Kentucky’s first mobile mammography program to reach underserved communities providing access to advanced cancer screenings
  • 2002: Dedication of the Molecular Imaging Research Center, housing Kentucky’s first positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) scanner and a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) suite that serves as a catalyst for advanced cancer research
  • 2010: The Multidisciplinary Breast Cancer Program became the first in Kentucky to receive full three-year accreditation from the National Accreditation Program for Breast Centers.
  • 2017: The first melanoma patient undergoes TILs procedure
  • 2019: Creation of a Good Manufacturing Practices Facility and the Dunbar CAR T-Cell efforts where the patient’s white blood cells are re-engineered with a chimeric antigen reception (CAR) into the T-cells, multiplied by the millions then infused back into the patient where they bind to an antigen on the cancer cells and destroy them
  • 2021: Expanded services to UofL Health – Medical Center Northeast and UofL Health – Mary & Elizabeth Hospital, further opening access to treatment for patients

 

]]>
UofL Health expands family medicine services in south Louisville /post/uofltoday/uofl-health-expands-family-medicine-services-in-south-louisville/ Mon, 25 Apr 2022 17:53:07 +0000 /?p=56173 UofL Health and the University of Louisville are increasing access to family medicine in south Louisville on the Mary & Elizabeth Hospital campus.

On April 21, UofL Health announced that three primary care providers who are UofL School of Medicine faculty along with eight first-year resident physicians are opening a new office in Medical Plaza 1, Suite 306, 4402 Churchman Ave.

The new office becomes a second location of UofL Physicians – Family Medicine at Cardinal Station on Central Avenue. 

“This is a great opportunity to increase access and health services to an underserved population,” said Jonathan Becker, chair of the Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine at the UofL School of Medicine. “The immediate benefit is to south Louisville, but long term, the impact is much larger as our future physicians share best practices developed here with other communities and the state.”

“Expanding the School of Medicine’s Family Medicine Residency Program is good for UofL and UofL Health and mostly, good for the people served by Mary & Elizabeth Hospital,” said Toni Ganzel, dean of the UofL medical school and vice president for academic medical affairs at UofL. “In 2019, with the help of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, UofL and UofL Health took on a struggling health care system and promised that it would not close but would, in fact, grow.

“This expansion is another example in that continued growth and represents our ongoing commitment to providing high quality care to the people of Louisville today as we educate and train the health care workforce for tomorrow.”

“Mary & Elizabeth Hospital provides services for a population that has tremendous need for accessible primary care,” said Melisa Adkins, chief executive officer at UofL Health – Mary & Elizabeth Hospital. “The community we serve has above-average rates of obesity, high blood pressure, diabetes and heart disease. The opening of this clinic with 11 new family medicine providers will have immediate positive impact on the health care of our south Louisville community.”

Current patients can move their care to the Mary & Elizabeth Hospital location or continue to receive health care services from other providers at the Cardinal Station location, Suite 100, 215 Central Avenue.

 

 

]]>