Enter your search term above.

Small Cell Lung Cancer

This informational page is an addendum to our booklet, Understanding Small Cell Lung Cancer. We’re glad you are here! If you would like additional support or personalized resources, our Lung Cancer Support Line is always available. Call (844) 835-4325 or email support@LCRF.org.


Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) is a challenging disease to treat, due to its aggressive and rapid growth, early metastasis, and tendency to develop resistance to chemotherapy. Many patients already have advanced (extensive-stage) disease when they are diagnosed. This is why developing more and better options for treatment is so important.

The Lung Cancer Research Foundation is committed to investing in SCLC research will lead to real progress, extending lives and improving outcomes for patients living with this disease.


Recent SCLC research funded by LCRF

Updated December 2025

Lu Wang, PhD

Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
2025 LCRF Leading Edge Research Grant
Joan H. Schiller, MD Award for Scientific Merit

Dr. Wang’s previous research focused on identifying a factor known as the BAP1/ASXL3 complex, which regulates one of the most predominant molecular subtypes of small cell lung cancer by controlling its gene expression patterns. As a result, they screened and optimized small-molecule drugs that could target this complex by inhibiting its function and promoting its breakdown. This approach significantly reduced tumor progression in cells and animal studies targeting small-cell lung cancer. The current study focuses on a new factor named MBD6, which is able to stabilize the oncogenic BAP1/ASXL3 complex. Grant details


Carl Gay, MD, PhD

University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
2023 LCRF–Daiichi Sankyo–AstraZeneca Research Grant on Antibody Drug Conjugates

Dr. Gay is evaluating targeted therapies for small cell lung carcinoma (SCLC) and large cell neuroendocrine lung cancer—both of which remain difficult to treat. His research focuses on two biomarkers, HER2 and TROP2, which are expressed in these aggressive cancers. Dr. Gay’s team is evaluating antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), a promising treatment approach that uses antibodies to deliver chemotherapy directly to cancer cells. Grant details


Benjamin Morris, PhD

University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
2023 LCRF Leading Edge Research Grant Program

Dr. Morris is leading critical research to better understand how small cell lung cancer (SCLC) responds to treatment by analyzing patient tumor samples before, during, and after therapy—particularly when the cancer progresses. His team is also comparing the genetic makeup of tumors in patients who respond well to treatment versus those whose cancer proves resistant. Grant details


Ann Pendergast, PhD

Duke University School of Medicine
2023 LCRF Research Grant on Understanding Resistance in Lung Cancer

Dr. Pendergast is conducting groundbreaking work to uncover new ways to treat therapy-resistant small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Her research focuses on understanding how cancer cells communicate at the molecular level, specifically through RNA messages. Her team has identified ABL, a proto-oncogene that supports cancer growth, as a key target. Grant details


Bingnan Zhang, MD

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
2022 Lung Cancer Research Foundation Pilot Grant

Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy modifies a patient’s own immune cells to target and kill cancer cells. Dr. Zhang and her team have developed a novel CAR T against a SCLC surface protein target DLL3. Her team is investigating the efficacy of the DLL3 CAR T and its potential resistance mechanisms in patient-derived mouse models. The goal of this research is to ultimately inform the design of clinical trials using DLL3 CAR T and its combination approaches to benefit patients with SCLC.


Excerpts from our website