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Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy Program

$82,721P30FY2015CANIH

Roswell Park Cancer Institute Corp, Buffalo NY

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT07082270Trial NCT06202066Trial NCT05589844Trial NCT05338905Trial NCT05292521Trial NCT05231122Trial NCT04607291Trial NCT04533542Trial NCT04530812Trial NCT04526587Trial NCT04379518Trial NCT04358315Trial NCT04348747Trial NCT04298606Trial NCT04290962Trial NCT04269213Trial NCT04231539Trial NCT04207190Trial NCT04119830Trial NCT04110249Trial NCT04109924Trial NCT04093323Trial NCT04081389Trial NCT04073745Trial NCT04068649Trial NCT04067830Trial NCT04060446Trial NCT04032418Trial NCT04000581Trial NCT03965234Trial NCT03935347Trial NCT03899987Trial NCT03897270Trial NCT03895918Trial NCT03881735Trial NCT03880422Trial NCT03879694Trial NCT03865472Trial NCT03851081Trial NCT03793907Trial NCT03789877Trial NCT03751449Trial NCT03751436Trial NCT03736720Trial NCT03735589Trial NCT03735095Trial NCT03727789Trial NCT03727061Trial NCT03709550Trial NCT03691376Trial NCT03688945Trial NCT03685695Trial NCT03683147Trial NCT03680235Trial NCT03679585Trial NCT03679559Trial NCT03678350Trial NCT03630601Trial NCT03574792Trial NCT03457142Trial NCT03403634Trial NCT03384836Trial NCT03358719Trial NCT03348748Trial NCT03333486Trial NCT03297489Trial NCT03211416Trial NCT03206047Trial NCT03192397Trial NCT03090412Trial NCT03017131Trial NCT03011736Trial NCT02965976Trial NCT02955290Trial NCT02953457Trial NCT02947386Trial NCT02877641Trial NCT02857374Trial NCT02853318Trial NCT02833506Trial NCT02713373Trial NCT02650986Trial NCT02575885Trial NCT02575508Trial NCT02531906Trial NCT02474095Trial NCT02455557Trial NCT02452463Trial NCT02414724Trial NCT02399215Trial NCT02393755Trial NCT02334865Trial NCT02287727Trial NCT02227940Trial NCT02170389Trial NCT02166905Trial NCT02159950Trial NCT02119728Trial NCT02100254Trial NCT02072486

Abstract

It is now clear that tumor-immune system interactions are far more complex than simple CTL-mediated tumor cell killing, and that effectively harnessing the immune system to control human cancers requires an integrated understanding of immune interactions ranging from clinically significant anti-tumor immunity, to counter-regulatory limitation of this immunity, to immune responses that actually support tumor development and survival. The overall goal of the Tumor Immunology and Immunotherapy (Til) program is to translate the understanding of the immune responses to cancer (both anti-tumor and pro-survival) into innovative approaches for the assessment and treatment of patients with cancer. To accomplish this, TH research is focused around four inter-related themes: Theme 1: Biology of immune cell cancers; Theme 2: Mechanisms of immunological tumor rejection; Theme 3; Microenvironment and host-tumor interactions and Theme 4; Immunotherapy and clinical discovery. The Program is co-led by Kelvin Lee, MD and Kunle Odunsi MD, PhD, who have strong interests in both basic and clinical/population aspects of tumor immunology and immunotherapy. Dr. Lee's leadership efforts focus on the basic and preclinical/translational research in the Program, which dovetails with Dr. Odunsi's leadership focus on the translation and clinical research efforts. The ability to translate research is a particular strength of TH, due in large part to the robust and longstanding inter-programmatic and basic science-clinical interactions. This strength has been enhanced over the last funding cycle by the establishment of the RPCI Center for Immunotherapy (CFI), led by Dr. Odunsi. The CFl houses all the RPCI immunotherapy clinical trials and infrastructure, including new cGMP production and clinical immunomonitoring facilities. These initiatives have occurred in conjunction with relocation (in 2008) of TH membership into 50,000 square feet of new contiguous laboratory space in the new RPCI Center for Pharmacology & Genetics, and the ongoing complete renovation of 36,800 sf in the Cancer Cell Center (supported by C06 RR 020132-01 A l , K. Lee PI) to house TH and CFI members. The Program is comprised of 28 members from 8 RPCI departments (Immunology, Pediatrics, Neurosurgery, Medicine, Molecular and Cellular Biology, Gynecologic Oncology, Cancer Prevention and Control, Surgical Oncology and Pathology), whose total peer-reviewed funding is $10.9M (NCI funding $3.2M) and a total funding of $14.2M. This compares to $6.9M peer reviewed/$9.0M total funding at the last renewal. Since the last renewal, 5 TH members have left the Institute and 3 others have moved to other Programs, while 15 new members (9 recruited from outside the Institute) have joined. Of the 481 publications generated over the last funding cycle, 22% are intra-programmatic and 20% are inter-programmatic, 50 publications are in journals with Impact Factor>10. The Program continues to actively translate its basic science into the clinical arena, with 16 active investigator-initiated trials currently accruing.

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