May 25, 2012 06:55 PM Eastern Daylight Time DUARTE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--City of Hope
was granted a $5,217,004 early translational research award by the California
Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) to support the development of a T
cell-based immunotherapy that re-directs a patient’s own immune response
against glioma stem cells. City of Hope
has been awarded more than $49.7 million in grant support from CIRM since
awards were first announced in 2006. “Because cancer stem cells are heterogeneous, our proposed therapy will
target multiple antigens to cast as wide a net as possible over this malignant
stem cell population” . City of Hope
is a pioneer in T cell immunotherapy research, helping to develop genetically
modified T cells as a treatment for cancer. This strategy, termed “adoptive T
cell therapy,” focuses on redirecting a patient’s immune system to specifically
target tumor cells, and has the potential to become a promising new approach
for treatment of cancer.“In this
research, we are genetically engineering a central memory T cell that targets
proteins expressed by glioma stem cells,” said Stephen J. Forman, M.D., Francis
and Kathleen McNamara Distinguished Chair in Hematology and Hematopoietic Cell
Transplantation and director of the T Cell Immunotherapy Research Laboratory.
“Central memory T cells have the potential to establish a persistent, lifelong
immunity to help prevent brain tumors from recurring.”The American Cancer
Society estimates that more than 22,000 people in the U.S. will be diagnosed with a brain
tumor this year, and 13,700 will die from the disease. Glioma is a type of
brain tumor that is often difficult to treat and is prone to recurrence.
Currently, less than 20 percent of patients with malignant gliomas are living
five years after their diagnosis. This poor prognosis is largely due to the
persistence of tumor-initiating cancer stem cells, a population of malignant cells
similar to normal stem cells in that they are able to reproduce themselves
indefinitely. These glioma stem cells are highly resistant to chemotherapy and
radiation treatments, making them capable of re-establishing new
tumors.Researchers at City of Hope
previously have identified several proteins as potential prime targets for the
development of cancer immunotherapies, such as interleukin 13 receptor alpha 2,
a receptor found on the surface of glioma cells, and CD19, a protein that is
active in lymphoma and leukemia cells. Both investigational therapies are
currently in phase I clinical trials. Forman is the principal investigator for
the newly granted study which will develop a T cell that targets different
proteins expressed by glioma stem cells. Christine Brown, Ph.D., associate
research professor, serves as co-principal investigator, and Michael Barish,
Ph.D., chair of the Department of Neurosciences, and Behnam Badie, M.D.,
director of the Brain Tumor Program, serve as co-investigators on the project.“Because cancer stem cells
are heterogeneous, our proposed therapy will target multiple antigens to cast
as wide a net as possible over this malignant stem cell population,” said
Brown.“While in this
effort, we are targeting a neurological cancer, our approach will lead to
future studies targeting other cancers, including those that metastasize to the
brain,” added Barish.“The CIRM grant
will help us to build a targeted T cell therapy against glioma that can offer
lasting protection, determine the best way to deliver the treatment, establish
an efficient process to manufacture these T cells for treatment, and get
approval for a human clinical trial,” said Badie.City of Hope is also a collaborative partner –
providing process development, stem cell-derived cell products and regulatory
affairs support – in two other CIRM-funded projects that received early
translational research grants. Larry Couture, Ph.D., senior vice president of
City of Hope ’s Sylvia R. & Isador A. Deutch
Center for Applied Technology Development and director of the Center for
Biomedicine & Genetics, is working with Stanford University
and Children’s Hospital of Orange County Research Institute on their respective
projects.
About CIRMCIRM was established in November 2004 with the passage of Proposition 71, the California Stem Cell Research and Cures Act. The statewide ballot measure, which provided $3 billion in funding for stem cell research at
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