The primary objective of the Biostatistics Core is to contribute to the science and operation of the program project by participating fully in its activities as it has for the preparation of this application. This includes assistance and direction in experimental design, quality control, data collection and management, and statistical data analysis through consultation and collaboration. The team that helps prepare the application and will provide biostatistical supports for this program project consists of the following statisticians from the University of Minnesota and the Masonic Cancer Center: Chap Le (Core Director), Xianghua Luo (core Co- Director), Todd DeFor, and Yen-Yi Ho, an expert in Biostatistics and in Computational Biology. For the A1 revised application, Dr. Koopmeiners has been added for his expertise in trial monitoring and adaptive design. This team is strengthened with the addition of the team from Tao Wang, a statistical geneticist from the Medical College of Wisconsin and CIBMTR. Dr. Wang will contribute to provide statistical supports for Projects 1 and 3. The assignment of biostatistician support is logical and based on whether the data is collected and stored at the University of Minnesota or transplant data through the National Marrow Donor Program and the CIBMTR at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Public Health Relevance

The primary objective of the Biostatistics Core B is to contribute to the science and operation of the program project by participating fully in its activities as it has for the preparation of this application. This includes assistance and direction in experimental design, quality control, data collection and management, and statistical data analysis through consultation and collaboration.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
2P01CA111412-11A1
Application #
8998773
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1)
Project Start
2004-12-01
Project End
2021-03-31
Budget Start
2016-04-05
Budget End
2017-03-31
Support Year
11
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Department
Type
DUNS #
555917996
City
Minneapolis
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55455
Romee, Rizwan; Cooley, Sarah; Berrien-Elliott, Melissa M et al. (2018) First-in-human phase 1 clinical study of the IL-15 superagonist complex ALT-803 to treat relapse after transplantation. Blood 131:2515-2527
Oh, Felix; Todhunter, Deborah; Taras, Elizabeth et al. (2018) Targeting EGFR and uPAR on human rhabdomyosarcoma, osteosarcoma, and ovarian adenocarcinoma with a bispecific ligand-directed toxin. Clin Pharmacol 10:113-121
Rashidi, Armin; Ebadi, Maryam; Said, Bassil et al. (2018) Absence of early HHV-6 reactivation after cord blood allograft predicts powerful graft-versus-tumor effect. Am J Hematol :
Bachanova, Veronika; Sarhan, Dhifaf; DeFor, Todd E et al. (2018) Haploidentical natural killer cells induce remissions in non-Hodgkin lymphoma patients with low levels of immune-suppressor cells. Cancer Immunol Immunother 67:483-494
de Witte, Moniek A; Sarhan, Dhifaf; Davis, Zachary et al. (2018) Early Reconstitution of NK and ?? T Cells and Its Implication for the Design of Post-Transplant Immunotherapy. Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 24:1152-1162
Pugh, Jason L; Nemat-Gorgani, Neda; Norman, Paul J et al. (2018) Human NK Cells Downregulate Zap70 and Syk in Response to Prolonged Activation or DNA Damage. J Immunol 200:1146-1158
Cichocki, Frank; Wu, Cheng-Ying; Zhang, Bin et al. (2018) ARID5B regulates metabolic programming in human adaptive NK cells. J Exp Med 215:2379-2395
Grzywacz, Bartosz; Moench, Laura; McKenna Jr, David et al. (2018) Natural Killer Cell Homing and Persistence in the Bone Marrow After Adoptive Immunotherapy Correlates With Better Leukemia Control. J Immunother :
Sarhan, Dhifaf; Hippen, Keli L; Lemire, Amanda et al. (2018) Adaptive NK Cells Resist Regulatory T-cell Suppression Driven by IL37. Cancer Immunol Res 6:766-775
Williams, Robin L; Cooley, Sarah; Bachanova, Veronika et al. (2018) Recipient T Cell Exhaustion and Successful Adoptive Transfer of Haploidentical Natural Killer Cells. Biol Blood Marrow Transplant 24:618-622

Showing the most recent 10 out of 108 publications