Investing in the next generation of medical and research pioneers >

Study of Cancer Metastasis Gets $35 Million Boost

May 10, 2023

Gift from race car driver Theodore Giovanis to Johns Hopkins supports research in the most common cause of cancer death

With a $35 million gift from researcher, philanthropist, and race car driver Theodore Giovanis, scientists at Johns Hopkins Medicine will study the biological roots of the most fatal aspect of cancer: how it metastasizes, or spreads, through the body.

The contribution, a 15-year commitment, will establish the Giovanis Institute for Translational Cell Biology, dedicated to studying metastasis. The institute’s researchers aim to make discoveries that reveal common features of metastasis across cancer types, with the potential to develop new therapies.

Wearing a dark suit, Andrew Ewald of Johns Hopkins Medicine stands and smiles as he looks at donor Ted Giovanis who stands with his arms crossed and wears a dark suit.
Andrew Ewald, PhD, (left) the new Giovanis Institute Director at Johns Hopkins, with Ted Giovanis. The institute is dedicated to studying how cancer spreads through the body. Above: A triple-negative breast cancer organoid invades collagen tissue. IMAGES: Johns Hopkins Medicine

“Cancer is most dangerous when the disease has spread to many parts of the body, and conventional treatments are not effective enough for patients with metastatic disease,” says the new Giovanis Institute Director Andrew Ewald, PhD, the Virginia DeAcetis Professor in Basic Cancer Research and director of the Department of Cell Biology at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. “Research in our department has shown that many different cancers use similar molecular tools to spread, and we seek to design treatments to disrupt this process.”

Overall, cancer is the second leading cause of death in the U.S., and some estimates indicate that about two-thirds of cancer deaths are linked to metastasis.

“Understanding fundamental biology drives the majority of medical advances, and this gift is incredibly important for that goal,” says Theodore DeWeese, MD, interim dean of the medical faculty and CEO of Johns Hopkins Medicine.

Ewald and other researchers have previously received research funding from Giovanis’ foundation, the Jayne Koskinas Ted Giovanis Foundation for Health and Policy, named to honor his late wife, who died from metastatic breast cancer in 2010. Giovanis is an advisory board member of the Johns Hopkins Institute for Basic Biomedical Sciences.

“I think of myself as someone who wants to make a difference, and I can leverage the work of my foundation to a much broader and more impactful scale by providing this gift to Johns Hopkins,” says Giovanis.

 

Born in Baltimore and a Maryland resident, Giovanis’ career spans a long history in hospital system finance and insurance regulation. He led the legal battle for hospitals for a multibillion-dollar settlement in 2012 to correct an error in reimbursement rates for hospitals. He was among the first staff to run the Health Services Cost Review Commission in Maryland, the only state to annually review and set Medicare and Medicaid payment rates for hospitals.

Currently, Giovanis is a professional sports car driver and owner of Team TGM in the International Motor Sports Association.

“Mr. Giovanis’ gift will enable collaboration among scientists from many disciplines, including those who specialize in basic biology, clinical treatment of patients, physics, engineering, machine learning, and computational medicine,” says Ewald, co-leader of the Cancer Invasion and Metastasis Program at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center.

Topics: Foundations, Friends of Johns Hopkins Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Fuel Discovery, Promote and Protect Health