Brain tumors - the most common solid malignancies of childhood - have limited therapeutic options. For medulloblastoma (MB), the most prevalent pediatric malignancy, the standard treatment is surgery followed by chemo-radiation. Although potentially curative, treatment often leads to devastating treatment-induced morbidities, including severe cognitive impairment and socio-psychological problems. Moreover, a significant fraction of patients experience disease relapse, and there are limited therapeutic options for recurrent disease. In other brain tumors (ependymoma, glioma, atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor), there are even fewer efficacious therapies. Safer treatments that minimize or eliminate toxic therapies without compromising efficacy are urgently needed. With the support of this Outstanding Investigator Award (OIA), I will dedicate myself to improving survival outcomes of pediatric brain tumor patients and to alleviate or eliminate the devastating, permanent and life-impairing toxicities suffered by these children after therapy. Over my three- decade career in cancer research, I have investigated various aspects of the tumor microenvironment of adult cancers to understand barriers to effective therapies and overcome them in clinical practice. In this OIA proposal, we will target the tumor microenvironment of pediatric cancers to similarly improve outcomes in children with brain tumors. We have recently discovered a new target in the microenvironment of pediatric MB - placental growth factor (PlGF) - that is expressed across all four molecular subtypes of MB (Cell 2013). Targeting PlGF blocks MB growth and spread without causing significant side effects in mice. Given the high levels of expression of PlGF in other pediatric brain tumors, we hypothesize that blocking PlGF may also be effective in these tumors. In collaboration with a multidisciplinary team of basic scientists, pathologists, immunologists and pediatric oncologists, I will leverage our collective experience and insight in adult tumor microenvironment to develop a comprehensive program to further explore underlying mechanisms as well as other therapeutic opportunities unique to pediatric brain tumor microenvironment to improve the outcome of chemo-radiation, targeted therapies and immunotherapies. Our ultimate goal is to translate our findings into innovative treatments for pediatric brain tumors. To this end, we have developed powerful, non-invasive, high-resolution imaging technologies that provide unprecedented molecular, cellular, structural and functional insight (Nature Med 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2009, 2013) and reveal various steps of tumor progression (Nature Rev. Cancer 2002; Nature Methods 2009, 2010; Science 2002; Nature 2004). We will use these techniques and our unique expertise to uncover the role of host-tumor interactions in tumor progression and treatment in genetically engineered mouse models of various pediatric brain tumors, available through our collaborators. Similar to our findings on VEGF blockade in adult tumors (Nature Med. 2004; Cancer Cell 2007; New England J. Med. 2009; PNAS 2013), our findings on PlGF-blockade will inform future clinical trials in pediatric tumors.
Current treatments for medulloblastoma, the most common malignant brain tumor in children, and other pediatric brain tumors cause significant adverse effects with tumor relapse in a significant fraction of patients. To improve therapeutic outcomes and eliminate the devastating, life-stealing toxicities of current therapies, we will study novel approaches targeting the interaction between pediatric brain tumors with the developing brain in which they grow. Our findings will directly inform the design of potential clinical trials in pediaric brain tumor patients and help interpret the results, beginning with studies of placental growth factor blockade as a potentially broad and safer approach in medulloblastoma and other pediatric brain tumors.
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