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The fight against disease starts with research

Your donation could lead to the cure that helps save someone – maybe someone you love.

Ovarian cancer is a complex disease with multiple forms, and its symptoms are often subtle and difficult to recognise.

While advances in treatment have improved outcomes with more than half of women now surviving beyond five years after diagnosis, the mortality rate remains unacceptably high.

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Jan’s Cancer Journey: From Diagnosis to Advocacy

As a five-time cancer survivor, Jan Antony is incredibly fortunate to be alive. However, her story is the exception, not the norm, for most ovarian cancer patients.

At the age of 49, Jan was diagnosed with breast cancer. She was terrified of what the diagnosis meant – and even more afraid of what it could mean for her daughter, Zoe, who at the time was only seven. Fortunately, the surgery was successful, and the breast cancer did not return.

14 years later, in 2008, she mentioned to her doctor that she was experiencing some bloating, which was a fairly common complaint for a 64-year-old woman. After being referred to an oncologist and completing some tests, she received difficult news: she had been diagnosed with stage three ovarian cancer.

With the support of Jan’s doctor, she underwent four months of gruelling chemotherapy, which took a significant toll on her body. Through her participation in a clinical trial, she eventually received the hopeful news: she was in remission.

Over the next five years, she faced three more ovarian cancer diagnoses. It was one of the most challenging periods of her life, but she overcame it with the unwavering support of her medical team and the research made possible by WEHI scientists.

Currently, the treatment paradigm for ovarian cancer isn’t ideal with precision, personalised treatment approaches remaining unavailable for most people. For those facing cancer, time is a luxury they can’t afford.  The sooner the right treatment is found, the better the chances of survival, or at least improved outcomes.

With your support, together, we can make a difference and give hope to women diagnosed with ovarian cancer. Your donation will help WEHI do the medical research, that may lead to the cure that saves someone – maybe someone you love.

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WEHI researchers have discovered a new way to detect drug resistance in ovarian cancer patients

Jan worked closely with Professor Clare Scott and her team. Prof Scott is the joint head of Clinical Translation at WEHI and a medical oncologist at three hospitals in Melbourne.

Recently, she and her team led a study finding new way to predict a subset of ovarian cancer patients who will become resistant to PARP inhibitors – a therapy used for many ovarian and breast cancer patients.

For the first time, researchers were able to detect altered gene ‘splicing’ (a process that can make cancer cells resistant to PARPi therapy) in the blood.

The findings can be immediately applied to tests already available in research settings, such as DNA sequencing of a patient’s tumour or detecting cancer DNA in the blood.

Together, we can make a difference and give hope to women diagnosed with ovarian cancer.

Your donation will help WEHI do the medical research, that may lead to the cure that helps saves someone – maybe someone you love.

Please donate today

Other ways to donate

To make a credit card donation by phone, please call +61 3 9345 2403 (9am to 5pm AEST).

To donate by cheque, please download this donation form.

If you would like to make a donation via bank transfer or BPAY, please call our Fundraising team on (03) 9345 2403 or email us at fundraising@wehi.edu.au

If you would like to make a donation via cryptocurrency, please visit our crypto giving page.

To request donation envelopes to use at an event, please contact us on 03 9345 2403 or fundraising@wehi.edu.au.

US supporters can donate via the Chapel & York US Foundation, nominating The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research as a recipient.

Donations to WEHI of $2 or more are fully tax deductible.

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The personal information you provide via this form will be used by WEHI to process your donation, to issue you with a tax receipt and to send you future communications and updates. You can opt out of receiving marketing correspondence from us at any time. We will not disclose personal information about you to anybody else, unless you have given consent, or we are authorised or required to do so by law.

Please see our Privacy Policy for more information about how we handle personal information including who to contact if you have a privacy enquiry.

Your donation could lead to the cure that helps save someone – maybe someone you love
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Illuminate Spring 2025
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