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04 Immunology

$18,707P30FY2022CANIH

University Of Tx Md Anderson Can Ctr, Houston TX

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT07407920Trial NCT07349641Trial NCT06651580Trial NCT05681026Trial NCT05223036Trial NCT05078866Trial NCT05057312Trial NCT05054296Trial NCT05044546Trial NCT05023967Trial NCT05011045Trial NCT04875728Trial NCT04870645Trial NCT04810091Trial NCT04751422Trial NCT04740164Trial NCT04668300Trial NCT04615013Trial NCT04505267Trial NCT04484909Trial NCT04483349Trial NCT04481204Trial NCT04474301Trial NCT04458610Trial NCT04447222Trial NCT04435691Trial NCT04430725Trial NCT04407247Trial NCT04373720Trial NCT04317781Trial NCT04311723Trial NCT04310826Trial NCT04310397Trial NCT04265430Trial NCT04257045Trial NCT04256941Trial NCT04239989Trial NCT04239976Trial NCT04239157Trial NCT04236882Trial NCT04228042Trial NCT04220827Trial NCT04220775Trial NCT04220008Trial NCT04219969Trial NCT04219904Trial NCT04216732Trial NCT04216563Trial NCT04216524Trial NCT04216472Trial NCT04215029Trial NCT04200534Trial NCT04199026Trial NCT04196972Trial NCT04189783Trial NCT04189770Trial NCT04189757Trial NCT04188418Trial NCT04188405Trial NCT04186884Trial NCT04186832Trial NCT04185337Trial NCT04181463Trial NCT04171622Trial NCT04171219Trial NCT04171037Trial NCT04169763Trial NCT04169737Trial NCT04169542Trial NCT04160052Trial NCT04151082Trial NCT04150939Trial NCT04140487Trial NCT04135326Trial NCT04134208Trial NCT04132843Trial NCT04132505Trial NCT04132440Trial NCT04129138Trial NCT04128748Trial NCT04128501Trial NCT04127721Trial NCT04125914Trial NCT04119037Trial NCT04106843Trial NCT04106245Trial NCT04090619Trial NCT04090567Trial NCT04087057Trial NCT04083378Trial NCT04082572Trial NCT04074746Trial NCT04066894Trial NCT04062305Trial NCT04062266Trial NCT04058964Trial NCT04054245Trial NCT04054167Trial NCT04054154Trial NCT04053517

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT The Immunology Program includes 30 members (26 primary, 3 associate, 1 adjunct) from 9 departments. The program is led by Dr. James Allison, an international authority on exploring fundamental mechanisms of the immune response and checkpoint control, with co-leaders Dr. Jeffrey Molldrem, providing expertise in stem cell and translational research, and Dr. Patrick Hwu, lending his extensive experience in novel vaccines and adoptive T-cell therapies. The scientific goal of the Immunology Program is to conduct important studies in basic immunology and translate the findings into effective cancer immunotherapy. The program focuses on 4 themes: 1) immune regulation, 2) immune checkpoint blockade, 3) cancer vaccines, and 4) T-cell therapies, each with a specific aim: Aim 1: To understand fundamental mechanisms involved in regulating innate and adaptive immune responses. Aim 2: To elucidate fundamental cellular and molecular mechanisms of immune checkpoints and their impact on the tumor microenvironment by using preclinical models and clinical trials to identify the basis for failure of response to therapy or relapse. Aim 3: To identify novel targets for cancer vaccine development that will enable vaccination strategies to be more widely applied to the prevention and treatment of cancer. Aim 4: To improve the success rate of T-cell-based therapies using a combinatorial approach (T-cell therapy and checkpoint control) to improve clinical responses. Work on the Immunotherapy Platform, led by program members Drs. Allison, Padmanee Sharma, and Hwu and funded by the cancer center, spans multiple aims and serves as a mechanism to foster iterative cycles of translation between basic and clinical work by providing immune monitoring of patient samples and driving new preclinical and clinical studies by generating mechanistic data to inform rational design of new drug combinations. As of May 1, 2018, 3,434 patients have been enrolled across 118 different clinical trials. Annual direct peer-reviewed funding for the Immunology Program is $6.4M, with $1.9M (30%) from NCI grants and $4.5M (70%) from other peer-reviewed sources. Since the last submission, the program has produced 464 published papers: 184 (40%) are intraprogrammatic collaborations, 250 (54%) are interprogrammatic collaborations, and 278 (60%) are external collaborations. Sixty-five percent of articles appeared in journals with IF >5, and 31% appeared in journals with IF >10, including N Engl J Med, Nature, Cell, Science, Cancer Discov, Immunity, and Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. Program members use all 14 shared resources. Notable accomplishments during the last grant period included the demonstration that anti- CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 therapies act on distinct T-cell populations, providing an explanation for the benefit achieved by combined therapy, and discovery of a positive correlation between gut microbiome diversity and response to immune checkpoint blockade therapy that is transferred along with fecal transplants. See the Program Highlights for other noteworthy accomplishments.

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