Yael Mossé, MD

Home » Research » Pre-Clinical Projects » Yael Mossé, MD
Dr. Yael Mossé

Yael Mossé, MD

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

CureSearch Acceleration Initiative Award: 2025-2028

Focus: Neuroblastoma

Project title: Translation of an ALK-directed Antibody Drug Conjugate for Neuroblastoma

Children diagnosed with advanced solid tumors face serious challenges – fewer than half survive, and those who do often endure lasting and sometimes life-threatening side effects. Neuroblastoma, the most common extracranial solid tumor in children, affects approximately 700 children in the US each year. Nearly half of these cases as classified as high-risk, a prognosis with an overall survival rate of less than 50%.

Dr. Yael Mossé, a CureSearch Acceleration Initiative awardee at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, is working to improve these odds by developing a novel immunotherapy for high-risk neuroblastoma patients. While immunotherapies have achieved remarkable success in treating blood cancers, their progress in solid tumors has been limited. This is largely due to the challenge of identifying targets found on cancer cells but not on healthy tissue.

Dr. Mossé’s research focuses on one such promising target: Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK), a protein expressed on the surface of neuroblastoma cells but absent from normal cells. ALK is found in other pediatric cancers as well, including subsets of rhabdomyosarcoma and Ewing sarcoma, in addition to several adult cancers – making it a compelling target for immunotherapy.

To target ALK, Dr. Mossé and her team are developing an ALK-directed antibody-drug conjugate (ADC). ADCs are a rapidly emerging class of drugs that combine an antibody that recognizes a specific protein on cancer cells, such as ALK, with a powerful cancer-fighting drug. This approach enables precise delivery of the drug to the cancer cells, sparing healthy tissue. Their first-generation ALK-directed ADC has shown strong and sustained tumor shrinkage in preclinical models. With CureSearch funding, Dr. Mossé will refine this therapy and assess its safety and efficacy in the lab. These efforts are designed to identify a lead candidate for clinical development and pave the way for a future clinical trial in children with high-risk neuroblastoma – brining a potentially curative treatment to currently incurable patients.

This project is supported in part by the Norcross Foundation.

Pin It on Pinterest

Scroll to Top