U.S., Canada research institutions to participate in NCI's Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Network

Research institutions at 27 sites in the U.S. and Canada have been selected to participate in the Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Network (CITN), a new initiative in immunotherapy funded by the National Cancer Institute and headquartered at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. CITN will establish a network of top academic immunologists to conduct multicenter research on promising new agents that boost patients' own immune systems to fight their cancer.

Immunotherapies hold promise as an alternative to traditional treatments such as chemotherapy, surgery and radiation. The approach teaches the immune system to recognize a cancer cell as a foreign invader (such as a virus) and seek out and destroy residual tumor cells, typically with minimal side effects.

The mission of CITN is to select, design and conduct early-phase trials using priority agents with known and proven biologic function and to provide the high-quality research data essential to develop treatments for patients. By coordinating the efforts of academia, industry and philanthropic foundations CITN is charged with accelerating the development of new compounds that have already been discovered but are not commonly available for use to treat patients with cancer.

An open competition was held for institutions to apply for member site status in the network. Candidate institutions were evaluated on the experience, participation and collaboration of the investigators and their institutions in immunotherapy trials and their ability to provide laboratory expertise in tumor immunology to support the research.

In September 2010, the NCI awarded $17 million to the Hutchinson Center to serve as the network's Central Operations and Statistical Center, which will provide overall leadership and infrastructure for the network. Principal investigator Martin A. "Mac" Cheever, M.D., a member of the Hutchinson Center's Clinical Research Division, directs the network.

CITN arose from a series of three NCI immunotherapy workshops conducted between 2007 and 2009 during which participants prioritized a list of agents with high potential to serve as immunotherapeutic drugs for cancer. While all of these agents had proven immunologic or physiologic function, even today, none are broadly available for testing in patients with cancer.

"The goal of the CITN is to conduct studies likely to make effective immunotherapy agents broadly available for cancer therapy," said Cheever. "The testing of novel immunotherapy agents for clinical use in cancer treatment involves several hurdles to clear. A network of top immunotherapists will have better access to the priority agents and be better suited to design and carry out the trials than individual scientists running single trials alone," said Cheever.
There are many existing agents for activating and augmenting immune responses. One of the difficulties in developing cancer immunotherapy agents is that the drugs are not likely to do much on their own, but will need to be used in combinations of two or more, said Cheever. The reason for this is that T cells, the immune cells that have the potential to specifically attack cancer cells, need to be selectively activated, expanded in number and stimulated to survive long-term. It is unlikely that a single compound could accomplish all of these steps, especially as the treatments will also need to override the natural checks and balances our bodies have in place to prevent overexpansion of T cells.

The CITN will be managed in concert with the federally funded HIV Vaccine Trials Network, also based at the Hutchinson Center. Data coordination will be operated by the NCI's Cancer Trials Support Unit, managed by Westat, a Washington-based contract research organization.

CITN member institutions and their principal investigators are listed in the table below:

InstitutionPrincipal Investigator(s)
Baylor Research Institute & Mt. Sinai School of MedicineKarolina Palucka, MD, PhD
Case Western Reserve UniversityPierre Triozzi, MD
Dana Farber Cancer CenterSteven Hodi, MD
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer CenterMarc Ernstoff, MD
Duke University Medical CenterKim Lyerly, MD, FACS
Emory UniversityEdmund Waller, MD, PhD
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research CenterJohn A. Thompson, MD
MD Anderson Cancer CenterLaurence J.N. Cooper, MD, PhD
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer CenterScott J. Antonia, MD, PhD
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer CenterJedd D. Wolchok, MD, PhD
New York University Cancer InstituteNina Bhardwaj, MD, PhD
Ohio State UniversityWilliam E. Carson, MD
Providence Cancer CenterWalter J. Urba, MD, PhD
Roswell Park Cancer CenterKunle Odunsi, MD, PhD
Rush University Cancer CenterHoward Kaufman, MD
Stanford UniversityRonald Levy, MD
University of California, San DiegoThomas J. Kipps, MD, PhD
University of California, San FranciscoLawrence Fong, MD
University of ChicagoThomas Gajewski, MD, PhD
University of MiamiJoseph D. Rosenblatt, MD
University of MinnesotaJeffrey S. Miller, MD
University of PennsylvaniaCarl June, MD
University of PittsburghRobert L. Ferris, MD, PhD & Hassane M. Zarour, MD
University of Toronto Ontario Cancer InstitutePamela Ohashi, PhD
University of VirginiaCraig Slingluff, MD
University of WisconsinPaul M. Sondel, MD, PhD
Yale UniversityMario Sznol, MD

Comments

  1. Dan Fu Dan Fu Canada says:

    To the NCI Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Network:

    I am a human anatomy mapper by nature, at the same time, I do have the ability to scan, detect and diagnose a disease that might grow or occur in one's body such as cancer, tumor, brain disorder, etc. I wish that I could contribute some of the knowledge that I think will be useful for the medical world. Therefore, I appreciate if you could give me proper guidance and advice how I can be a part of the research institute and contribute for the benefit of revolutionizing science and technology.

    I appreciate your consideration and I look forward hearing from you. Thank you.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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