
Josh Neman is an assistant professor of neurosurgery and member of the Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center at the Keck School of Medicine of USC. (USC Photo/Gus Ruelas)
To Stop Cancer, a Neuroscientist Studies Its Uncanny Survival Skills
To understand how cancer spreads to the brain, Josh Neman looks for answers in his labwith inspiration from patients.
If you or someone you love has cancer, USCs Josh Neman is in your corner.
The scientist is determined to stop cancerous tumors on the turf he knows best: the lab bench.
An assistant professor of neurological surgery, physiology and neuroscience at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, Neman studies cancerous cells that spread to the brain. He can explain their tendencies in ways that practically anyone could understand. Thats because he knows these rogue cells well. The molecular neuro-oncologist holds a doctorate in neurobiology and did a fellowship in cancer biology, and he focuses on pediatric cancer and metastatic breast cancer.
Ask Neman what motivates him, though, and he doesnt talk about cells. He talks about people with cancer.
Josh Neman, USC Cancer Fighter in the Lab
When surgeons remove a tumor from a patients brain, they turn tissue over to Neman, a member of the USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, to study it. His lab investigates how tumor cells talk with brain cells and how they can hijack those brain cells for their own benefit.
As he walks a visitor through his lab, he talks enthusiastically about projects from the young researchers in his group. Here, look at these, he says, pulling a clear, round plastic dish from a steel incubator. The dish swishes with liquid as he puts it under a microscope. Hundreds of metastatic breast cancer cells fill the fluid. They came from a sample brought from a breast cancer patient who had a tumor in her brain. Its only been a few days since they started growing in the dish but already the cells show their knack for survival, he says. He and students and fellows in his lab are conducting studies to find out why.
Ideas and Inspiration from Patients
Neman gets ideas for research from conferences and journals, like any other scientist but he is so curious that he finds inspiration in others life experiences, too. When breast cancer patients complained of feeling foggy headed years after completing their chemotherapy, for example, he wondered: Could chemotherapy affect the brain and help cancer to subsequently spread there?
The question spawned research now conducted by his research fellows. Theyre focused on the brains barriers, which are meant to keep harmful substances in the blood from entering brain tissue. Their findings suggest that chemotherapy might cause lasting damage to those barriers, potentially allowing metastatic cancer cells to enter brain tissue. The National Institutes of Health and private foundation METAvivor have now funded that work.
Neman brings cancer survivors into his lab and listens to their suggestions. These patients are trained as advocates and review grants for the Susan G. Komen organization and the Department of Defenses breast cancer research program, which has supported Nemans work. He also serves on Susan G. Komens L.A. County board, promoting metastatic breast cancer research and awareness however he can.
Running Shoes and the Fundraising Scientist
He even brought the American Brain Tumor Association (ABTA) 5K Run/Walk to USCs University Park Campus. The scientist rallied a team of volunteers to walk and run for the national charity. The ABTA funded one of his projects and also supported a medical student who joined his lab to study brain tumors. She is now a Keck Medicine of USC neurosurgeon.
To have a researcher with that passion is so important, says ABTAs CEO, Ralph DeVitto. The work hes doing is so challenging, and hes someone we see as a true ambassador and a true leader.