Immunology and Cancer Immunotherapy (ICI) The overall goal of the Immunology and Cancer Immunotherapy (ICI) Program is to unite the efforts of basic and clinical immunologists to explore the immune system's impact on cancer development and progression, to develop novel strategies that use immunity to treat cancer, and to conduct clinical trials to test novel therapeutics and approaches to improve patient outcomes and increase overall survival. There are twenty-one members from six different academic departments and two professional schools. The current focus and initiatives of the ICI scientists are centered on three themes: Immune regulation, Immune effector mechanisms, and Translational immunotherapy. The immunotherapy approaches are focused on adoptive T cell therapy, vaccination, and immune regulation blockade. While basic research is a key focus, many faculty members actively are involved in translational bench-to-bedside research. Other members are clinicians (hematologists, oncologists or oncologic surgeons) who actively are involved in clinical research and clinical trials. This program joins established and experienced clinical trialists with NCI-funded cancer immunologists to design, execute, and complete Dartmouth-initiated immunotherapy trials in renal cell carcinoma, melanoma, glioblastoma, colorectal carcinoma, multiple myeloma and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. There are extensive collaborations between ICI members around common areas of interest in immunobiology and immunotherapy, as evidenced by joint publications and funded grants. Major contributions of the program to the mission of the NCCC have been the facilitation of new insights into the tumor microenvironment and how this is affected by leukocytes, the development of novel protein and cell therapies, the translation of Dartmouth investigator ideas into clinical trials, and the accrual of patients to these trials. NCCC has made substantial commitment to improving the depth and breadth of research and clinical translation of the ICI program through support of shared resources, financial awards for new pilot grants, and strategic recruitment of new investigators. More than 280 cancer-related articles have been published over the reporting period, with 46 (16%) appearing in high impact journals. Intra-programmatic publications (43=15%) involved 19 of our 22 members, and inter-programmatic publications (66=24%) involved 15 members. Total grant funding for the program currently is $6.4M, of which $5.5M is peer-reviewed and $2.2M is from NCI.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
3P30CA023108-39S4
Application #
9758098
Study Section
Subcommittee I - Transistion to Independence (NCI)
Program Officer
Belin, Precilla L
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2017-12-01
Budget End
2018-11-30
Support Year
39
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Dartmouth College
Department
Type
DUNS #
041027822
City
Hanover
State
NH
Country
United States
Zip Code
Shee, Kevin; Yang, Wei; Hinds, John W et al. (2018) Therapeutically targeting tumor microenvironment-mediated drug resistance in estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. J Exp Med 215:895-910
Gareen, Ilana F; Black, William C; Tosteson, Tor D et al. (2018) Medical Care Costs Were Similar Across the Low-dose Computed Tomography and Chest X-Ray Arms of the National Lung Screening Trial Despite Different Rates of Significant Incidental Findings. Med Care 56:403-409
Kuklinski, Lawrence F; Yan, Shaofeng; Li, Zhongze et al. (2018) VISTA expression on tumor-infiltrating inflammatory cells in primary cutaneous melanoma correlates with poor disease-specific survival. Cancer Immunol Immunother 67:1113-1121
Ji, Xiangming; Niu, Xinnan; Qian, Jun et al. (2018) A Phenome-Wide Association Study Uncovers a Role for Autoimmunity in the Development of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol 58:777-779
Miles, Randy; Wan, Fei; Onega, Tracy L et al. (2018) Underutilization of Supplemental Magnetic Resonance Imaging Screening Among Patients at High Breast Cancer Risk. J Womens Health (Larchmt) 27:748-754
Soneji, Samir S; Sung, Hai-Yen; Primack, Brian A et al. (2018) Quantifying population-level health benefits and harms of e-cigarette use in the United States. PLoS One 13:e0193328
Durand, Marie-Anne; Yen, Renata West; O'Malley, A James et al. (2018) What matters most: protocol for a randomized controlled trial of breast cancer surgery encounter decision aids across socioeconomic strata. BMC Public Health 18:241
Courtney, Andrea L; Rapuano, Kristina M; Sargent, James D et al. (2018) Brain Reward Responses Are Behaviorally Relevant: The Authors Respond. J Stud Alcohol Drugs 79:41-42
Tosteson, Anna N A; Yang, Qian; Nelson, Heidi D et al. (2018) Second opinion strategies in breast pathology: a decision analysis addressing over-treatment, under-treatment, and care costs. Breast Cancer Res Treat 167:195-203
Molodtsov, Aleksey; Turk, Mary Jo (2018) Tissue Resident CD8 Memory T Cell Responses in Cancer and Autoimmunity. Front Immunol 9:2810

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