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2013 ANNUAL REPORT
ONLY ST. JUDE
THE MISSION OF ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S
ONLY ST. JUDE
RESEARCH HOSPITALВ® IS TO FIND CURES
2013 ANNUAL REPORT
FOR CHILDREN WITH CANCER AND OTHER
DEADLY DISEASES THROUGH RESEARCH AND
ONLY ST. JUDE TREATMENT. ST. JUDE IS DEDICATED TO THE
A LETTER OF THANKS
BELIEF OF OUR FOUNDER THAT “NO CHILD
3
5
PATIENT CARE
6
SCIENCE TO SURVIVAL
16
ALSAC IS THE FUNDRAISING AND AWARENESS
ACADEMIC RESEARCH
22
ORGANIZATION FOR ST. JUDE. ALSAC’S
INTERNATIONAL LEADERSHIP
28
SOLE MISSION IS TO RAISE THE FUNDS AND
FUNDRAISING & AWARENESS
36
LEADERSHIP & SERVICE
44
SHOULD DIE IN THE DAWN OF LIFE.”
AWARENESS NECESSARY TO OPERATE AND
MAINTAIN ST. JUDE.
YOU CAN HELP
MEGAN
AT AGE 11
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
56
ONLY ST. JUDE
Brennan needed four bone marrow transplants. Six-week-old Apollos had
a massive brain tumor. Alexis needed an entirely new type of treatment to
fight her cancer.
Their families turned to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
At St. Jude they found a hospital unlike any other, where cutting-edge
research into childhood cancer and other deadly diseases is brought
together with extraordinary patient care and unparalleled family support.
We are turning laboratory breakthroughs into lifesaving treatments for
children—every day—and never send a bill to patient families.
THERE ARE GREAT RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS,
GREAT HOSPITALS AND GREAT CHARITIES.
WE ARE ALL THREE. WE ARE FINDING CURES
AND SAVING CHILDREN.
APOLLOS
AT AGE 1
GLIOBLASTOMA MULTIFORME
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 2
You can help. Find out how at stjude.org.
NICHOLE
AT AGE 1
ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA
Dear Friends,
When our father, Danny Thomas, opened St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital more than 50 years ago, little did he dream that his
desire to help desperately ill children would touch the lives of so many people.
In communities all across this country—indeed, all around the world—St. Jude is a champion for families who only want their
beloved children to be well, and to put to an end, once and for all, the threat that childhood cancer and other diseases pose
to their children’s lives.
That’s because, at St. Jude, doctors and scientists are making breakthroughs every day that benefit children. During just this past
year, because of our genome project, they shed new light on our understanding of deadly childhood diseases and created new ways
to treat them. Then, as always, they shared that knowledge so doctors and scientists everywhere can use that information to save
children. At the same time, they continued working hard to make sure every child can enjoy the best quality of life possible—and a
future full of hope and promise.
None of this would be possible without you. We are so very thankful for your steadfast support and incredible generosity, and for
your passion for helping us reach the day our father dreamed of—the day when no child will die in the dawn of life.
God bless the children,
Marlo, Terre and Tony Thomas
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 4
BROOKLYNN
AT AGE 2
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
PATIENT CARE
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 6
MADISYN
AT AGE 1
SEVERE COMBINED
IMMUNODEFICIENCY
(SCID)
PATIENT CARE
CHILD-CENTERED, FAMILY-FOCUSED
At St. Jude, providing the best in patient care means treating the whole child,
not just a disease. It means not only finding the best treatment plan for each
child, but also working to discover why he or she got sick. And it means looking
at the long-term effects of treatment and taking every possible precaution and
providing every possible service to ensure each patient enjoys the best quality
of life.
And families never receive a bill from St. Jude—not for treatment and not even
for transportation to the hospital or food and housing once they arrive.
THANKS TO THE GENEROSITY OF DONORS,
NO FAMILY EVER PAYS ST. JUDE FOR ANYTHING.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 8
TREATMENTS INVENTED AT ST. JUDE
HAVE HELPED PUSH THE OVERALL CHILDHOOD
CANCER SURVIVAL RATE FROM
& AROUND THE WORLD
1962
TO
TODAY
ST. JUDE
TREATS PATIENTS
FROM ALL 50 STATES
20 %
%
80 %
%
WE ARE WORKING TO DRIVE THE OVERALL SURVIVAL
RATE TO 90% IN THE NEXT DECADE. WE WON’T STOP
UNTIL NO CHILD DIES FROM CANCER.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 10
BRENNAN
AT AGE 7
ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA
In 2009, at the tender age of 7, Brennan was diagnosed with a rare and deadly subtype of acute
myeloid leukemia. Three bone marrow transplants—one at a local hospital and two at St. Jude—
failed to stop the aggressive cancer, and in 2011, his parents decided to pursue Brennan’s only
remaining hope—a risky fourth transplant with cells harvested from his mother’s marrow.
ONLY ST. JUDE WOULD HAVE ATTEMPTED A FOURTH
TRANSPLANT. THE TRANSPLANT SAVED BRENNAN’S LIFE,
AND WHAT ST. JUDE HAS LEARNED FROM BRENNAN WILL
HELP OTHER CHILDREN.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 12
“BECAUSE THEY WERE
WILLING TO TAKE A
RISK ON MY SON,
THERE ARE OTHER
CHILDREN WHO ARE
ALIVE NOW.”
—TURNER
BRENNAN’S FATHER
BUILDING LEGACIES
TELLING UNIQUE STORIES
Writing music, creating a documentary or stretching a voice
to reach the high notes—these are just some of the ways
our teen patients are encouraged to express their feelings
and fears, and share their special individuality.
The St. Jude Legacy Bead Program was designed
specifically to address the challenges faced by our patients
and provide a way for them to visualize their experiences
at St. Jude. Patients receive a bead for every procedure
and treatment they undergo, stringing them together into
a unique story that can be shared with family and friends.
MAE
AT AGE 6
WILMS TUMOR
DANCING IN THE HALLS
St. Jude is a place of joy, where children dance to the sounds
of visiting musical groups, trick or treat in the hallways every
Halloween, or pelt their doctors with Silly String in a summer
“war” on the campus. At St. Jude, we let kids be kids.
LEARNING AND GROWING
TREATING THE
WHOLE CHILD
CONTINUING CARE
Part of childhood’s normal routine is going to school, and
the St. Jude School Program Presented by Target gives
patients a way to focus on the future and keep up with
schoolwork. St. Jude teachers work with patients’ home
schools to help them stay the course with their classmates,
whether that’s learning to read or preparing for college
entrance exams.
At St. Jude, our care doesn’t end when treatment is done.
Our After Completion of Therapy clinic is the largest long-term
follow-up clinic for childhood cancer patients in the U.S.—
and we do this at no cost to patients. The clinic helps patients
stay healthy after active treatment ends, and has served as a
prototype for other follow-up programs.
CELEBRATING MILESTONES
COPING WITH TREATMENT
SUPPORTING SURVIVORS
A diagnosis of cancer can totally disrupt the lives of patients
and their families. But that shouldn’t put a halt to celebrating
life’s moments of joy and accomplishment—patients should
not have to miss their high school prom or their kindergarten
graduation. At St. Jude, they don’t have to.
Being sick can mean being scared—of needles and
medical tests and treatment. The Child Life specialists at
St. Jude help children understand—at their own age levels—
what to expect at the hospital, helping to relieve their stress
and anxiety.
St. Jude is a pioneer in studying the effects of treatment in
adults who survived childhood cancer. Through our St. Jude
LIFE study, we’re monitoring more than 2,600 people who were
treated at St. Jude. We’re finding out how their treatment is
affecting their health as adults, looking for ways to lessen
long-term side effects, and helping survivors understand their
health risks.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 14
BAILEY
AT AGE 6
WILMS TUMOR
SCIENCE TO SURVIVAL
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 16
SCIENCE TO SURVIVAL
ON THE LEADING EDGE
In February 2013, the project was recognized by TIME magazine as one of the
top 100 new scientific discoveries.
Everyone at St. Jude is committed to doing everything possible to end the loss of life
caused by childhood cancer and other deadly diseases.
WE ARE AT THE FOREFRONT IN UNDERSTANDING
THE GENETICS OF CHILDHOOD CANCER AND IN
DEVELOPING AND DELIVERING THE MOST ADVANCED
THERAPIES, ALL FOR ONE GOAL: TO SAVE LIVES.
The pediatric cancer genome project continues to generate new scientific
breakthroughs, as St. Jude focuses on an area of genomic science that
few other organizations are pursuing: finding mutations in the regulatory
regions of genes as well as other mechanisms that turn genes on and off.
In FY12 we announced that the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital-Washington
University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project completed sequencing of the cancerous
and healthy genomes of 700 childhood cancer patients.
When the project began three years earlier, not one entire childhood cancer genome
had been sequenced.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 18
In 2014, St. Jude plans to begin sequencing the genome of every St. Jude
cancer patient in an effort to discover the best ways to tailor each child’s
treatment and achieve better outcomes.
KHAMONI
AT AGE 4
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
IN 2015, ST. JUDE
WILL BEGIN TREATING
PATIENTS IN THE
NATION’S FIRST
PROTON THERAPY
CENTER DEDICATED
SOLELY TO CHILDREN.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 20
Proton therapy is more powerful in
destroying cancer, because it
can be used to deliver a higher dose
of radiation to the tumor.
Proton therapy reduces harmful side
effects, because the radiation does
not continue beyond the tumor. This
spares normal tissue and vital organs
from exposure, which is critical in a
developing child.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 22
ACADEMIC RESEARCH
TURNING LABORATORY BREAKTHROUGHS
INTO LIFESAVING TREATMENTS
CHILDHOOD CANCER SURVIVORS HAVE
UNDIAGNOSED DISEASE AS ADULTS
MAE
AT AGE 6
WILMS TUMOR
A St. Jude study provided the most complete picture yet of
adult survivors of childhood cancer and their health risks,
underscoring the need for lifelong medical follow-up. St. Jude
found that childhood cancer survivors experience a significant
amount of undiagnosed, serious disease through their adult years.
The Journal of the American Medical Association | June 2013
St. Jude is the epicenter for the latest innovations in research and
treatment of childhood cancer and other deadly diseases, sharing
our results in 800 articles published in FY13.
OUR DOCTORS AND SCIENTISTS ARE
CHANGING THE WAY THE WORLD
UNDERSTANDS CANCER AND OTHER
DEADLY CHILDHOOD DISEASES, AND
ULTIMATELY, HOW CHILDREN EVERYWHERE
ARE TREATED FOR THESE DISEASES—
AND CURED.
For children facing the fight of their lives, the research breakthroughs
made only at St. Jude offer hope for long and healthy lives.
For more information about the medical and scientific breakthroughs
at St. Jude, please see the St. Jude Scientific Report at
stjude.org/stjudepublications.
NEW MUTATIONS TO BLAME FOR
BRAIN TUMOR SUBTYPE
The St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital-Washington
University Pediatric Cancer Genome Project announced findings
that could lead to better treatments for children diagnosed
with low-grade glioma, the most common childhood tumor
of the brain and spinal cord. The research identifies most
of the genetic mistakes that lead to these tumors.
Nature Genetics | April 2013
INHERITED GENETIC VARIATIONS
IMPACT LEUKEMIA RISK
ABNORMAL GENE LAUNCHES
RARE LEUKEMIA
EXISTING DRUGS OFFER NEW
TREATMENT OPTIONS
A study led by St. Jude scientists found that children who inherit
certain variations of four specific genes have a much higher risk of
developing acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), the most common
childhood cancer. The report offers new insight into higher ALL
rates among Hispanic children.
The St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital-Washington University
Pediatric Cancer Genome Project announced a discovery that
provides insight into the causes of acute megakaryoblastic
leukemia, which has very low long-term survival rates. The research
findings could pave the way for better testing and treatment plans
for children fighting this cancer.
A new study led by St. Jude identified genetic changes in a subtype
of acute lymphoblastic leukemia that could lead to improved
treatments for children with that disease. The study shows some
patients might benefit from existing targeted therapies.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute | March 2013
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 24
Cancer Cell | November 2012
Cancer Cell | August 2013
1962
TODAY
10 % 83 %
%
%
75 % 95 %
%
%
10 % 75 %
%
%
50 % 95 %
%
%
4 % 94 %
%
%
20 % 70 %
%
%
MEDULLOBLASTOMA**
RETINOBLASTOMA
NEUROBL ASTOMA
HODGKIN LYMPHOMA
ACUTE
LYMPHOBLASTIC
LEUKEMIA***
OSTEOSARCOMA
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 26
A tumor that arises in the brain
A malignant tumor of the retina
The most common tumor in infants younger than 1 year
of age and a common solid tumor of childhood
A cancer characterized by progressive enlargement of affected
lymph nodes and sometimes spreads to the spleen, liver, bone
marrow, bones or lungs
The most common form of childhood cancer affecting
lymphocytes, a type of white blood cell
The most common type of bone cancer in children and
adolescents, occurring most often in the bones on either side
of the knee and in the upper arm
*Based on national averages from 2001—2007
THANKS IN PART TO WORK AT ST. JUDE
***Reflects survival rate at St. Jude, the highest worldwide for ALL
DESPITE THIS PROGRESS, CANCER REMAINS THE LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH
BY DISEASE IN CHILDREN OVER THE AGE OF 1 IN THE U.S. AND THE NEED TO
FIND BETTER TREATMENTS REMAINS CRITICAL. THE DOCTORS AND SCIENTISTS
AT ST. JUDE ARE COMMITTED TO FINDING THOSE CURES.
**Reflects survival rate at St. Jude, standard risk and high risk, the highest among national cooperative groups for medulloblastoma
5-YEAR CANCER SURVIVAL RATES*
CARRIE-LYNN
AT AGE 13
ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA
BARBADOS
INTERNATIONAL LEADERSHIP
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 28
INTERNATIONAL LEADERSHIP
SAVING CHILDREN EVERYWHERE
The mission of St. Jude is to find cures and save children—and that mission has
no boundaries.
ST. JUDE FREELY SHARES ITS BREAKTHROUGHS, SO
ONE CHILD SAVED AT ST. JUDE MEANS DOCTORS
AND SCIENTISTS AROUND THE WORLD CAN USE THAT
KNOWLEDGE TO SAVE THOUSANDS MORE CHILDREN.
St. Jude doesn’t stop there. Through its International Outreach Program and an innovative
website, cure4kids.org, St. Jude reaches out to health care professionals across the
globe. St. Jude pioneered a cooperative, partnership approach that pairs St. Jude leaders
with local community leaders and health care providers in developing countries—sharing
knowledge and expertise that can help improve diagnosis and treatment.
CHRISTOPHER
AT AGE 11
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
PUERTO RICO
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 30
In June 2013, the inaugural
St. Jude International Forum
was held in Memphis, bringing
together the foundations that
support St. Jude International
Outreach Program sites to
share experiences and ideas
related to patient care, fundraising
and awareness.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 32
IN 2014, ST. JUDE WILL OPEN A STATE-OF-THE-ART
GLOBAL EDUCATION AND COLLABORATION CENTER THAT
WILL BRING TOGETHER DOCTORS AND SCIENTISTS
FROM AROUND THE WORLD TO TEACH, COLLABORATE
AND LEARN FROM EACH OTHER.
Learn more about the St. Jude International Outreach Program at stjude.org/international.
COMMUNITIES BUT OUR
DISCOVERIES ARE.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 34
SITES
MAY NOT BE IN YOUR
20
OUR LABORATORIES
PARTNER
IN
37,000
HEALTH CARE
PROFESSIONALS
FROM
14
COUNTRIES
USED BY MORE THAN
187
COUNTRIES
CURE4KIDS.ORG
WITH
MORE THAN
2,200
SEMINARS
AVAILABLE
AND loaded
7MILLION
ITEMS VIEWED OR
DOWNLOADED
FREE TO PEDIATRIC HEALTH
CARE PROFESSIONALS
AND SCIENTISTS
RILEY
AT AGE 9
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
FUNDRAISING & AWARENESS
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 36
FUNDRAISING & AWARENESS
EMBRACING THE MISSION
Unlike any other hospital, the majority of funding for St. Jude comes from individual contributors.
THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO SUPPORTS ST. JUDE, WE
HAVE THE FREEDOM TO FOCUS ON WHAT MATTERS
MOST—SAVING KIDS REGARDLESS OF THEIR FINANCIAL
SITUATION. NO FAMILY EVER RECEIVES A BILL FROM
ST. JUDE—FOR ANYTHING.
That’s because millions of people have made the mission of St. Jude their own. You can, too.
Visit stjude.org/waystohelp to find out how you can make a difference.
MICHELLE
AT AGE 10
PINEOBLASTOMA
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 38
ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S RESEARCH HOSPITAL
IT COSTS
$
IS THE
1.9 MILLION
HEALTHCARE CHARITY
IN THE U.S.
31REGIONAL
FUNDRAISING OFFICES
4 OUT OF 5
AMERICANS
RECOGNIZE THE
ST. JUDE BRAND
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 40
SUPPORT OF
LARGEST
GENEROUS
2
ND
THANKS TO THE
TO OPERATE EACH DAY
ABOUT
}
75
%
OF OPERATING FUNDS ARE RAISED
BY PRIVATE DONATIONS
9 MILLION
ACTIVE DONORS
28
&
FORTUNE 1,000 COMPANIES
}
AVERAGE
INDIVIDUAL
DONATION
$
33.13
31,000 FUNDRAISING ACTIVITIES EACH YEAR
NO FAMILY EVER RECEIVES A BILL FROM ST. JUDE—FOR
TREATMENT, TRAVEL, HOUSING OR FOOD, BECAUSE ALL A
FAMILY SHOULD WORRY ABOUT IS HELPING THEIR CHILD LIVE.
THANK YOU FOR ALL
THAT YOU DO FOR THE
CHILDREN OF ST. JUDE
“WE ARE INCREDIBLY PROUD
TO MAKE THIS HISTORIC
PLEDGE TO ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S
RESEARCH HOSPITAL.”
KAYLA
AT AGE 8
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
“IT’S A LABOR OF LOVE FOR MY
ENTIRE FAMILY.”
—LAURA BARNETT
MOBILE, AL
Barnett chairs the Memphis to Mobile Run, which just completed its fourth
year. Barnett’s entire family participates in the fundraiser.
—ERIC TRUMP
PRESIDENT AND FOUNDER OF
THE ERIC TRUMP FOUNDATION
“I AM SO THANKFUL TO BE ABLE TO BE A
PART OF THE MIRACLES THAT HAPPEN AT
ST. JUDE.”
T he Eric Trump Foundation pledged $20 million to fund
state-of-the-art surgery suites and an intensive care unit in a
new tower on campus.
—THERESA MORRIS
RICHMOND, VA
M
orris volunteers at various St. Jude fundraisers, including the St. Jude Dream HomeВ®
Giveaway. She also donates monthly through the St. Jude Partners In Hope program.
“IT WAS MORE THAN A RACE FOR US. IT
WAS NOT ABOUT US, BUT ABOUT WHAT
WE AS A TEAM CAN DO FOR OTHERS.”
“WE HAVE HAD A LOT OF
ACCOMPLISHMENTS OVER THE
LAST FIVE YEARS AS A BUSINESS,
BUT NONE OF THEM COME CLOSE
TO COMPARING WHAT WE ARE
DOING HERE.”
—JOE REYNOLDS
—MARI NOVO
CAPTAIN OF TEAM DIABLOS
Members of the team ran the St. Jude Latin Music Miami Beach Half Marathon as
St. Jude Heroes.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 42
CO-FOUNDER AND CO-CEO OF RED FROG EVENTS
ed Frog Events announced a $25 million commitment toward
R
opening of the proton therapy center that will be part of a new
tower at St. Jude.
“WE CAN SAY WE’RE A SMALL TOWN
WITH A MILLION-DOLLAR HEART. I AM SO
PROUD OF OUR COMMUNITY AND OUR
COMMITMENT TO ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S
RESEARCH HOSPITAL.”
—MELISSA BROWN
CO-CHAIR OF MINDEN, LA AUCTION
The annual Minden Auction has raised $1 million for St. Jude for two years in a row.
“I FEEL REALLY GOOD THAT I’M HELPING
OTHER KIDS FEEL BETTER.”
—ANNABELLE BALDUCCI
WARNER ROBINS, GA
For three years, Annabelle has run a lemonade stand at her elementary
school’s fall festival to raise funds for St. Jude.
SLADE
AT AGE 6
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
LEADERSHIP & SERVICE
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 44
LEGACY OF SERVICE
Paul J. Simon
Hasan M. El Khatib
Ronald Terry
Investments
FY13 EXECUTIVE ADMINISTRATOR
TO THE BOARD
Terre Thomas
George Elias Jr.
Pat Kerr Tigrett
Helen B. Wood
Manufacturing
The members of the ALSAC/St. Jude Boards of Directors and Governors are volunteers from throughout the U.S. who serve without compensation.
Writer
Many represent the second and third generations of their families who have supported St. Jude through service on the board. An honorary body of
Tony Thomas
Producer
emeritus members recognizes distinguished service on the Board by those unable to continue to actively participate.
Paul H. Wein
FY13 ALSAC BOARD OF
DIRECTORS OFFICERS
FY13 MEMBERS
Camille F. Sarrouf Jr.
Public Relations
Attorney | Chairman/President
Richard M. Unes
Construction | First Vice Chair
Paul J. Ayoub
Attorney | Second Vice Chair
Fred R. Harris
Manufacturing | Secretary
Joyce Aboussie
Susan Mack Aguillard, MD
Pediatrician
Gabriel Haddad, MD
Consultant
Frederick M. Azar, MD
Robert A. Breit, MD
Sheryl A. Bourisk
Martha Perine Beard
Banking | Second Vice Chair
Fred P. Gattas Jr.
Business Consultant | Secretary
Physician—Oncology/Hematology
Joseph S. Ayoub Jr.
James B. Barkate
Business | First Vice Chair
Christopher B. George, MD
Judy A. Habib
Cardiologist
FY13 ST. JUDE BOARD OF
GOVERNORS OFFICERS
Terry Burman
Nuclear Pharmacist
and Corporate Pharmacy
Quality Manager
Mahir R. Awdeh, MD
Chief of Staff, Orthopedic Surgeon
Radiologist | Chairman/President
Fred P. Gattas III, PharmD
Real Estate/Title Research
Public Relations/Marketing
Stephen J. Camer, MD
Surgeon
Anthony Charaf
Aviation
Ann M. Danner
Real Estate Developer
Michael Francis
Marketing—Retail
Marketing
Michael McCoy
Sheriff
Robert T. Molinet
Securities and Corporate Law
Dwayne Murray
Attorney
James O. Naifeh Jr.
Helen Nugent
Paul K. Hajar
Ramzi Nuwayhid
Charles C. Hajjar
Real Estate
Fouad Hajjar, MD
Pediatric Hematology/Oncology
Bruce B. Hopkins
Banking
Richard Leyoub
Attorney
Salli LeVan
Business Consultant
Paul J. Marcus
Investments
Thomas C. Wertz
Finance
Ramzi T. Younis, MD
Physician—Otolaryngology
Tama Zaydon
Investments
Banking—Investments
Financial Advisor
Thomas J. Penn III
NBA Administration
Camille F. Sarrouf
Attorney
Joseph C. Shaker
Advertising
Joseph G. Shaker
Advertising
George A. Simon II
Manufacturing
Michael C. Simon
Investments
FY13 EMERITUS MEMBERS
(NONVOTING MEMBERS
OF THE BOARD)
Sam F. Hamra
Attorney
Broker
Joseph G. Hyder
Broadcasting
Joseph D. Karam
Wendy’s Franchise Owner
Richard J. Karam
Attorney
Banking
Judy Lester
Business
Donald G. Mack, MD
Jack A. Belz
George M. Maloof
V. Reo Campian
Speaker Emeritus
James O. Naifeh
Media Production
Real Estate
Manufacturing
Joseph G. Cory, PhD
Professor of Biochemistry
Leslie Dale
Communications
Lewis R. Donelson III
Attorney
Edward M. Eissey, PhD
Designer
Pediatrician
Attorney
Government
David B. Nimer
Export-Import
Talat M. Othman
Investments
Manal Saab
Business
Frederick W. Smith
Aviation Transportation
ALSAC/St. Jude Boards
Robert P. Younes, MD
Physician
Theodore Hazer
Thomas G. Abraham
Educator
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 46
Attorney
James A. Kinney
Business
Pediatrics Cancer Genes and
Genome Program
Publishing
Attorney
Pharmaceuticals
FY13 EX OFFICIO
VOTING MEMBERS
Richard Shadyac Jr.
CEO ALSAC/St. Jude
William E. Evans, PharmD
Director/CEO St. Jude Children’s
Research Hospital
FY13 EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA
Susan Winters
ESA President
(Nonelected member)
SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY BOARD
The Scientific Advisory Board is an autonomous panel of renowned physicians and scientists who help foster the medical and scientific development
of St. Jude, providing guidance and insight on research directions, clinical activities and institutional policy.
CHAIR
Todd R. Golub, MD
Chief Scientific Officer and Director
Broad Institute Cancer Program
Professor of Pediatrics
Harvard Medical School
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Charles A. Dana Investigator
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
David S. Eisenberg, PhD
William R. Sellers, MD
Director, UCLA-DOE Institute for Genomics and Proteomics
Professor, Department of Biological Chemistry & Department
of Chemistry and Biochemistry
University of California – Los Angeles
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Global Head of Oncology
Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research Inc.
Marilyn J. Hockenberry, PhD
Walker Professor, Division Head University of Wisconsin,
Departments of Pediatrics and Human Oncology,
and UW Paul P. Carbone Comprehensive Cancer Center
Bessie Baker Professor of Nursing
Duke University School of Nursing
Louise C. Strong, MD
William G. Kaelin Jr., MD
VICE CHAIR
Theodore S. Lawrence, MD, PhD
Michael P. Link, MD
MEMBERS
Eric G. Pamer, MD
Chair of Systems Biology
Columbia University
Valerie P. Castle, MD
Ravitz Professor of Pediatrics and
Communicable Diseases Chair,
Department of Pediatrics
Physician-in-Chief, C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital
University of Michigan Health System
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 48
Professor of Medicine
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and
Harvard Medical School
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Isadore Lampe Professor and Chair
Department of Radiation Oncology
University of Michigan Medical School
Andrea Califano, PhD
Paul M. Sondel, MD, PhD
The Lydia J. Lee Professor of Pediatrics
Division of Hematology/Oncology
Stanford University School of Medicine
Chief, Infectious Diseases Service,
Department of Medicine
Enid A. Haupt Chair in Clinical Investigation
Member and Laboratory Head, Immunology Program
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Charles L. Sawyers, MD
Chair, Human Oncology and
Pathogenesis Program
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator
Sue and Radcliffe Killam Chair
Professor of Cancer Genetics
Department of Cancer Genetics
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
FUNDRAISING AND MARKETING GUIDANCE
Andy Kelly
Arnold “Arnie” I. Schwartzman
The volunteers who serve on the Professional Advisory Council and the ALSAC Leadership Council are leaders and experts in their fields who meet
Margo R. Keyes
John Tanner
regularly to provide guidance to ALSAC on strategic fundraising issues and ways to raise awareness for the St. Jude mission.
LEDIC Management Group
Key Development LLC
Eunice Mazloom
Philanthropist and Volunteer
PROFESSIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL
Jose Barra
Target Corporation
Marty Belz
Peabody Hotel Group
Doug Brooks
Brinker International
Jeb Bush Jr.
Jeb Bush & Associates LLC
Kay Dempsey
The Dempsey Companies
Joe DeVivo
AngioCynamics Inc.
Buell G. Duncan III
IBM Software Group
Daisy Fuentes
Shelter Entertainment
Don Germano
Follett Higher Education Group
Greg Gumbel
CBS Sports
George Joulwan
U.S. Army General
(Retired)
J. David Karam
Sbarro LLC
Erik Logan
OWN, The Oprah Winfrey Network
Michael J. Lynch
Bank of America Merrill Lynch
Maguy Maccario
Consulate General of Monaco
ALSAC LEADERSHIP COUNCIL
Richard A. Abdoo
Wisconsin Energy Corporation
(Retired)
Marilyn Aboussie
Retired Chief Justice of the
3rd Court of Appeals, Texas
Amin J. Barakat
Bryce McTavish
Chaz Corzine
The MWS Group
Trish Coury
Coldwell Banker
Joseph K. DeLapp II
Visioneering Technologies Inc.
Airbus North America Holdings Inc.
Physician/Clinical Professor of
Pediatrics, Georgetown University
John M. Engquist
Warren Moon
Romero Britto
Charles A. Feghali
T. Allan McArtor
Sports 1 Marketing
Artist, Britto Central
Marianne Silver
Nicholas Buttafuoco
Coyote Logistics LLC
Buttafuoco, Arce & Price
Joe Theismann
Martha Byrne
JRT Associates Inc.
Actress
Eric Trump
Nick Caporella
Trump Organization
National Beverage Corp.
LuAnn Via
Terri Carr
Christopher & Banks Corporation
Russell Weiner
Wisteria Fashions
Cari Cook
Domino’s Pizza
Delta Delta Delta
Duncan Williams
Robert J. “Bob” Corliss
Duncan-Williams Inc.
CorlissMoore
Craig Witsoe
Jacqueline Corso
Elo Touch
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 50
Philanthropist
H & E Equipment Services LLC
Creative Fuels
Georgia Hobaica Frasch
Philanthropist
Marilena Greig
Philanthropist and Volunteer
Eileen Hutton
MillerCoors
Lattimore M. Michael
Back Yard Burgers Inc.
William N. Morris Jr.
The Morris Group
Jerry D. Neal
RF Micro Devices
Scott Nietschmann
SNL Restaurant Ventures
William C. Perez
Adams and Reese LLP
Nick J. Rahall
U.S. House of Representatives
Thomas M. Rashid MD
Physician
Brilliance Audio
(Retired)
Gary J. Rotella
Randa Fahmy Hudome
Andrew San Marco
Fahmy Hudome
International LLC
Lawrence K. Jensen
Commercial Advisors LLC
Linda Johansen-James
American Kiosk Management LLC
Gary J. Rotella & Associates PA
Tradition
Jack Soden
Elvis Presley Enterprises Inc.
Gary B. Stone
Strategic Thinking One on One
John L. Strauss
The John and Bonnie Strauss Foundation
Arent Fox LLP
U.S. House of Representatives
(former)
Prime Policy Group
Peter J. Tanous
Lepercq Lynx Investment Advisory
Amber Valletta
Model/Actress
Mac Winker
The Racquet Club of Memphis
(former)
ST. JUDE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Dr. William E. Evans
Director and Chief Executive Officer
James Boyett, PhD
Chair, Biostatistics
Mike Canarios
Senior Vice President
Chief Financial Officer
Andrew M. Davidoff, MD
Chair, Surgery
Robyn Diaz, JD
Chief Legal Officer
Senior Vice President
Peter Doherty, PhD
Nobel Laureate, Immunology
Pam Dotson, RN, MBA
Chief Nursing Officer
Senior Vice President, Patient Care Services
James Downing, MD
Scientific Director
Deputy Director
Executive Vice President
David W. Ellison, MD, PhD, MRCP (UK)
Chair, Pathology
Amar Gajjar, MD
Cochair, Oncology
Chair, Pediatric Medicine
Richard Gilbertson, MD, PhD
Director, Comprehensive Cancer Center
Executive Vice President
Douglas Green, PhD
Chair, Immunology
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 52
Gerard Grosveld, PhD
Charles Sherr, MD, PhD
Kip Guy, PhD
Elaine Tuomanen, MD
Chair, Genetics
Chair, Chemical Biology and Therapeutics
James Ihle, PhD
Chair, Biochemistry
Chair, Tumor Cell Biology
Chair, Infectious Diseases
Stephen White, PhD
Chair, Structural Biology
Larry Kun, MD
Clinical Director
Executive Vice President
Chair, Radiological Sciences
Wing Leung, MD
ALSAC SENIOR
LEADERSHIP TEAM
Robert Machen
Richard Shadyac Jr.
Jeffrey T. Pearson
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Financial Officer
Emily Callahan
William Reeser
Chief Marketing Officer
Christopher Boysen
Diane Heyman
Nila Carrington
Senior Vice President
Human Resources
Vice President
Human Resources
Steven Froehlich
Karen White
Sherry Lear-Park
Senior Vice President
National Direct Marketing
Senior Vice President
Strategic Partnerships
Vice President
Donor Care
Melanee Hannock
Brenda Abshure
Betty MacDougall
Vice President
Executive Projects
Vice President
CEO Affairs and Executive Communication
Wilfred Busby
Cecilia Villa
Senior Vice President
Field Operations
Chief Investment Officer
Emily Greer
George P. Shadroui
Chief Administrative Officer
Chief Strategy Officer
Senior Vice President
Marketing/iGroup
Sara Hall
Pat Wyatt
Sue Harpole
Chief Legal Officer
Chair, Bone Marrow Transplantation
and Cellular Therapy
Chief Information Officer
Chief Development Officer
Senior Vice President
Gift Planning
Vice President
Call Centers
Executive Director
International Partnerships
Thomas Merchant, DO, PhD
Chair, Medical Executive Committee
James Morgan, PhD
Chair, Developmental Neurobiology
Clayton Naeve, PhD
Chief Information Officer
Senior Vice President
Sean Phipps, PhD
Chair, Behavorial Medicine
Ching-Hon Pui, MD
Chair, Oncology
Mary Anna Quinn
Chief Operations and Support Officer
Senior Vice President
Mary Relling, PharmD
Chair, Pharmaceutical Sciences
“AT ST. JUDE, WE SET THE
STANDARD FOR RESEARCHING
AND TREATING CHILDHOOD
CANCER AND OTHER DEADLY
DISEASES, BECAUSE WE
WON’T SETTLE FOR ANYTHING
LESS THAN EXCELLENCE FOR
THE CHILDREN WHO NEED
OUR CARE.”
Les Robison, PhD
Chair, Epidemiology and Cancer Control
—DR. WILLIAM E. EVANS
DIRECTOR AND CEO
ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S RESEARCH HOSPITAL
IZARAH
AT AGE 5
ACUTE LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA
“YOUR SUPPORT MEANS FAMILIES
CAN FOCUS ON THEIR CHILDREN
AND NOT ON LOOMING MEDICAL
BILLS. YOUR GENEROSITY
FREES OUR DOCTORS AND
SCIENTISTS TO KEEP LOOKING
FOR THE BREAKTHROUGHS THAT
WILL SAVE CHILDREN’S LIVES.”
—RICHARD SHADYAC JR.
CEO
ALSAC
YEARS ENDED JUNE 30 (IN THOUSANDS) 2013 2012
REVENUES
Total Support
$881,249 Net Patient Service Revenue
Research Grants
93,786 95,190
Net Investment Income
201,570 (26,055)
Other
10,778 8,636
104,014 TOTAL REVENUES1,291,397 $805,670
95,537
978,978
EXPENSES
Program Expenses
Patient Care Services
299,875 289,490
Research 315,815 309,832
Education, Training and JORGE
AT AGE 8
OSTEOSARCOMA
Community Support
76,226 71,524
TOTAL PROGRAM EXPENSES
691,916 670,846
Fundraising 149,477 143,086
Administrative and General
94,358 86,921
TOTAL EXPENSES 935,751 900,853
ALSAC/ST. JUDE CHILDREN’S RESEARCH HOSPITAL
COMBINED FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS FOR FISCAL YEAR 2013
GAIN (LOSS) ON DISPOSAL OF PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
(2,008)
354,573 76,117
CHANGE IN NET ASSETS
BEGINNING NET ASSETS2,617,756 2,541,639
ENDING NET ASSETS
2,972,329 2,617,756
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 54
(1,073)
HILLARY
AT AGE 20
NON-HODGKIN LYMPHOMA
YOU CAN HELP
St. Jude is finding the cures that save children’s lives—every day.
That is because people like you support St. Jude.
Because of you, no family ever receives a bill from St. Jude.
Because of you, our doctors and scientists can seek the knowledge
that translates into effective treatments against cancer and other
deadly diseases. Because of you, families with critically ill children
have hope.
BECAUSE OF YOU, THERE IS ST. JUDE.
Visit stjude.org to join our mission today.
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT | Page 56
©2014 ALSAC/St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital (16087)
ONLY ST. JUDE 2013 ANNUAL REPORT
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