Projects and Grants per year
Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Macrophage regulation of peritoneal carcinomatosis in gastric adenocarcinoma
Gastric cancer remains a lethal global health concern. It is the 3rd most common leading cause of cancer
related mortality worldwide. The peritoneum is the most common site of synchronous and metachronous
metastasis, accounting for 60% of recurrences. Peritoneal carcinomatosis results in 65% of gastric cancer
associated deaths, resulting in median overall survival of 3-6 months with standard of care chemotherapy.
Programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) checkpoint-based immunotherapy has produced unprecedented
results in metastatic gastric cancer, as the only modality to effectively increase overall survival to 13
months. However, most patients remain resistant to immune check-point blockade (ICB). Therefore,
understanding mechanisms of resistance, biomarker selection and nominating combinatorial therapies to
bolster immune responses remains a clinically unmet need. In its resting state, the peritoneal cavity
harbors a rich milieu of immune cells, which have been implicated in response to infection and
inflammation. Macrophages are the predominant antigen presenting cells in the peritoneum initiating
innate and adaptive responses. In gastric cancer, infiltration of tumor associated macrophages in the
peritoneum portends a poorer prognosis. Interleukin 8/ C-X-C motif chemokine ligand 8 (IL8/CXCL8) is
a cytokine secreted by gastric tumors with pleotropic effects on various cell types, including
macrophages. Its expression is associated with poor survival in gastric cancer and limited response to
ICB. In a Phase 1 trial of advanced solid organ tumors, anti-IL8/CXCL8 monotherapy was safe and
tolerable. Thus, we seek to understand how gastric cancer cells pervert anti-tumor immunity and promote
peritoneal carcinomatosis via macrophage dependent mechanisms. We hypothesize that tumoral
IL8/CXCL8 secretion promotes tolerogenic macrophage transformation, macrophage mediated T cell
immunosuppression and ICB resistance.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 2/1/24 → 4/30/25 |
Funding
- National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
Fingerprint
Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Projects
- 1 Active
-
Kentucky Center for Clinical and Translational Science - Institutional Career Development Core
Kelly, T. (PI), Barry-Hundeyin, M. (CoI), Curry, T. (CoI), DiPaola, R. (CoI), Evers, B. M. (CoI), Giannone, P. (CoI), Guy, R. K. (CoI), Helmy, Y. A. (CoI), Jicha, G. (CoI), Kern, P. (CoI), King, V. (CoI), Lephart, S. (CoI), Liu, J. (CoI), Talbert, J. (CoI), Trout, A. (CoI), Williams, L. (CoI), Bush, M. (CoPI), Arnett, D. (Former CoI), Duncan, M. (Former CoI), Heath, E. (Former CoI), Lacy Leigh, M. (Former CoI), McLouth, L. (Former CoI), Roberts, J. (Former CoI), Samaan, M. (Former CoI) & Supinski, G. (Former CoI)
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
8/15/16 → 6/30/26
Project: Research project