How to Starve Cancer: Cut Off the Nutrients That Help Tumors Grow

By Ashley Han | UCSF.edu | April 24, 2026

Rushika M. Perera, PhD, delivers the 2026 Byers Lecture.

Cancer always seems to break the rules — defying normal biology and finding new ways to survive, grow, and spread.

That ability fascinated Rushika M. Perera, PhD, when she was younger. It’s what originally attracted her to cell biology — and ultimately, to discovering how one of the deadliest cancers accomplishes that feat.

Perera, the Deborah Cowan Professor and vice chair of the Department of Anatomy, and chief scientific officer of UCSF’s Pancreas Center, shared her insights April 16 when she presented the 2026 Byers Award Lecture in Basic Science. The award, hosted by the Sandler Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research (PBBR), supports high-risk, high-reward science that can lead to innovative discoveries. It is considered one of UCSF’s highest honors for early- and mid-career scientists.

Perera studies pancreatic cancer, a disease known for spreading quickly and evading treatment. She looks deep inside the cell at a structure called the lysosome to understand how the cancer fuels itself.

“Pancreatic cancer cells get their nutrients in very unconventional ways, making them highly adaptable,” Perera said. “Understanding how the lysosome drives this adaptability and reshapes metabolism during disease progression could help us uncover its vulnerabilities.”

Her work is changing how scientists understand pancreatic cancer and is creating new possibilities for cutting off the disease’s fuel supply. Perera found that the lysosome, once thought to simply break down cellular material, is a central hub that also repurposes nutrients, making pancreatic cancer cells professional nutrient scavengers.

A new way to understand pancreatic cancer

Perera’s path to UCSF spans four countries and multiple scientific disciplines, guided by her willingness to take risks and pursue answers to difficult questions.

Read more at UCSF.edu