(PHILADELPHIA)
– University of Pennsylvania alumni Ralph J. Roberts and his
son Brian L. Roberts have pledged $15 million to help create the first-of-its-kind
proton therapy center for the treatment of cancer. The Roberts
Proton Therapy Center will be unique in its ability to fully
integrate conventional radiation treatment with proton radiation,
which more accurately targets tumors and leaves surrounding healthy
tissue unaffected. The Center will also be the first to be located
on the campus of a world-class academic medical center, facilitating
scientific research to measure and improve this innovative therapy.
The gift will help finance the construction and equipment for the
center, scheduled to open to patients in 2009.
“The philanthropy of Ralph and Brian Roberts will be a legacy
of life and hope for cancer patients in the Philadelphia area and
beyond,” said Amy Gutmann, PhD, President
of the University of Pennsylvania. “It will be the jewel in
the crown of PENN Medicine’s cancer treatment facilities,
bestowing healing treatment for a deadly disease that is diagnosed
in over one million new patients each year.”
Proton therapy is the most precise form of advanced radiation therapy
available to treat certain cancers and other diseases. It works
by targeting a focused beam of high-dose radiation to a specific
tumor site – thereby dramatically decreasing damage to surrounding
normal tissue. Proton therapy results in less side effects and clinical
complications for patients; and it enhances the physician’s
ability to treat tumors close to critical organs and the spinal
cord.
“Philadelphia
and The University of Pennsylvania have always been special to our
family,” said Ralph J. Roberts. “Suzanne
and I are delighted to have the opportunity to give back to these
two communities that have meant so much to us, with a gift that
gives life through groundbreaking cancer research and treatment.
Proton therapy as a treatment for cancer will undoubtedly touch
thousands of lives, both adults and children, and we are fortunate
to be a part of that process.”
“Aileen
and I are honored to be involved in helping to bring proton therapy
cancer treatment to PENN Medicine and to Philadelphia,” said
Brian L. Roberts. “Our family has experienced
firsthand how cancer affects one’s life and the lives of those
around them. With the addition of this state-of-the-art technology
to Penn’s already stellar cancer treatment and research centers,
tens of thousands of patients along the East Coast will have an
access to this life-saving treatment each year.”
“The impact of Ralph and Brian Roberts’ gift will benefit
cancer patients for generations to come,” said Arthur
H. Rubenstein, MBBCh, Executive Vice President of the University
of Pennsylvania for the Health System and Dean of the School of
Medicine. “This is a landmark gift from both the perspective
of meaningful, strategic philanthropy, as well as from the standpoint
of innovative cancer therapy and research. As the largest such facility
in the world, this Center will provide lifesaving treatment to an
estimated 3,000 patients a year.”
With conventional radiation treatment, 20 percent of cancers return
because the dose is too low. Proton beam therapy permits a higher
and safer dose of tumor-killing radiation to be delivered to a cancer
site. Because it is less harmful to normal tissue, proton beam therapy
is used to treat pediatric cancers as well as those in adults.
“This is an incredibly exciting time for PENN Medicine,”
said Ralph W. Muller, Chief Executive Officer of
the University of Pennsylvania Health System. “We have always
been known as a place of collaborative thinking and cross-disciplinary
teamwork. The Roberts Proton Therapy Center will further our long-standing
partnership with The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia,
enhancing our combined efforts to explore the most effective uses
of this innovative treatment.”
In addition, with the Robert’s Proton Therapy Center, PENN
will begin a new relationship with Walter Reed Medical Center, through
which proton therapy technology will be available to United States
military personnel.
Ralph J. Roberts graduated from the Wharton School
in 1941 and served a four-year tour of duty in the US Navy. In 1963,
with the purchase of a 1,200-subscriber cable television system
in Tupelo, Mississippi, he began to build what would become the
largest cable television company in the country – Comcast
Corporation – employing 87,000 people and serving 24 million
customers. Roberts, is founder and former Chairman of the Board
of Comcast Corporation, and on the boards of the Council of Emeritus
Directors of the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Brandywine Museum
and Conservancy, the Advisory Board of the Philadelphia Urban Affairs
Coalition. He has been a member of the PENN Medicine Board of Trustees
since 2002.
Ralph Roberts has received awards from the National Cable and Telecommunications
Association, the Walter Kaitz Foundation, the Anti-Defamation League
of B’nai B’rith, the National Conference of Christians
and Jews, the Urban League of Philadelphia, the Greater Philadelphia
Chamber of Commerce, and the National Academy of Television Arts
& Sciences. He has been awarded honorary degrees from Holy Family
College and the University of Pennsylvania, and also received Penn’s
Joseph P. Wharton Award.
Brian L. Roberts graduated from Wharton School,
majoring in finance, in 1981. He started his career at Comcast selling
cable door-to-door, and rose to the presidency in 1990; he is now
the company’s Chairman and CEO. Under his leadership, Comcast
has grown into a Fortune 100 company with $22.3 billion in revenue.
The Company also has a majority ownership in Comcast-Spectacor,
whose major holdings include the Philadelphia Flyers NHL hockey
team, the Philadelphia 76ers NBA basketball team, and two large
multipurpose arenas in Philadelphia. Mr. Roberts is serving his
second consecutive term as Chairman of the board of Directors for
the National Cable & Telecommunications Association (NCTA),
until 2007.
Brian Roberts has been honored by Institutional Investor magazine
as one of America’s top CEO, by the National Association for
Multi-ethnicity in Communications, by the Partnership for a Drug-Free
American, and by The Police Athletic League of Philadelphia. He
received the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Humanitarian Award
in 2004 and, together with his father, the UJA Federation of New
York’s Steven J. Ross Humanitarian Award in 2003.
Both father and son are members of the Cable Television hall of
Fame, and are well known for their leadership in industry, civic,
and humanitarian endeavors.
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PENN Medicine is a $2.9 billion enterprise
dedicated to the related missions of medical education, biomedical
research, and high-quality patient care. PENN Medicine consists
of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (founded in
1765 as the nation's first medical school) and the University of
Pennsylvania Health System.
Penn's School of Medicine is ranked #2 in the nation for receipt
of NIH research funds; and ranked #3 in the nation in U.S. News
& World Report's most recent ranking of top research-oriented
medical schools. Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700 students,
the School of Medicine is recognized worldwide for its superior
education and training of the next generation of physician-scientists
and leaders of academic medicine.
The University of Pennsylvania Health System includes three hospitals,
all of which have received numerous national patient-care honors [Hospital
of the University of Pennsylvania; Pennsylvania Hospital, the nation's
first hospital; and Penn Presbyterian Medical Center]; a faculty practice
plan; a primary-care provider network; two multispecialty satellite
facilities; and home care and hospice. |