top of page


WHAT MOST PEOPLE DON’T SEE BEHIND A CANCER RESEARCH BREAKTHROUGH
When people hear about a cancer research breakthrough, the story often sounds simple. A discovery is announced. A new therapy shows promise. A headline declares progress.
But what most people don’t see behind cancer research breakthroughs is the long, demanding path that leads to that moment. Scientific progress rarely arrives in a single dramatic leap. It comes through years of incremental work, careful experimentation, and persistence from researchers who are trying to a
9 hours ago4 min read


THE HIDDEN WORK BEHIND SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS: WHY PRIVATE PHILANTHROPY STILL MATTERS
But what they don’t see is the grind behind the scenes. The years of effort, the research that doesn’t get funded, and the scientists struggling to keep momentum without institutional support.
Feb 32 min read


FUNDING SCIENCE LIKE A STARTUP: WHAT NONPROFITS CAN LEARN FROM ENTREPRENEURS
Most people think of philanthropy as charity. I think of it as an investment, with an expected return measured in discoveries, not dollars. At the JKTG Foundation, we don’t fund cancer research the traditional way. We don’t issue massive RFPs or wait for consensus to form. We move quickly, prioritize bold thinkers, and stay close to the science. Why? Because the diseases we’re up against, like breast cancer, won’t wait.
Dec 16, 20252 min read


JKTG SYMPOSIUM 2025: ADVANCING BREAST CANCER RESEARCH BY TARGETING TUMOR–IMMUNE INTERACTIONS
You get results: faster, sharper, and more aligned with what patients truly need. That was the driving force behind the 9th annual JKTG Symposium, held October 15, 2025 in Washington D.C. This year’s theme, "Improving Breast Cancer Outcomes: Revealing and Targeting Tumor–Immune Interactions," was more than a title. It was a call to action.
Oct 21, 20252 min read


WHY BUREAUCRACY KILLS BREAKTHROUGHS AND WHAT PHILANTHROPY CAN DO ABOUT IT
If you want to slow progress down, wrap it in red tape. That’s the reality for far too much medical research in this country. Scientists with bold ideas spend more time formatting grant proposals than actually running experiments. And when the funding does come through, it’s often a year too late, tied up in approval cycles, institutional requirements, and layers of administrative overhead. The worst part? Some of the most promising ideas never even get submitted. They’re too
Oct 7, 20252 min read


THE COST OF CHASING WHAT’S POPULAR IN SCIENCE
Every field has its trends, and science is no exception. One year, it’s immunotherapy. Next, it’s AI in diagnostics. Big breakthroughs and high-impact journals are great. But when funding begins to chase popularity instead of substance, something gets lost. The cost of chasing what’s popular in science is high. It’s paid by researchers working on foundational problems who can’t get funded. It’s paid by patients waiting for treatments that don’t check the right boxes. And it’s
Sep 9, 20253 min read


THE RISK GAP IN CANCER RESEARCH: WHY PHILANTHROPY HAS TO LEAD
If a project is safe, it will get funded. If it’s bold, uncertain, or disruptive, it probably won’t. That’s the problem.
High-risk cancer research is exactly where the biggest breakthroughs often happen. But in most traditional funding models, the riskiest projects get pushed aside, not because they’re wrong, but because they don’t fit the system. This is where philanthropy comes in. And this is why the JKTG Foundation exists...
Aug 12, 20252 min read
bottom of page