Going global
The experience sparked what would become an abiding interest in HIV and the immune system. After medical school, Uldrick gravitated toward HIV-associated cancers during his residency and postdoctoral clinical training in hematology and medical oncology at New York Presbyterian/ Columbia University Medical Center.
Cancer was part of HIV/AIDS from the epidemic’s beginning. In the earliest days, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, the once-rare Kaposi sarcoma and, in women, cervical cancer became known as AIDS-defining cancers. They signaled that a person’s HIV infection had progressed to full-blown AIDS.
Since the advent of antiretroviral therapy for HIV in 1996, full-blown AIDS and AIDS deaths have dropped dramatically. But the association between HIV and cancer remains. Even on antiviral treatment, HIV patients are at higher risk of developing cancer, not just the traditional AIDS-defining cancers but across the board. Among the 37 million people around the world living with HIV, cancer is now a leading cause of suffering and death.
In New York, the HIV-related cancers Uldrick saw were mostly lymphomas. In a postdoctoral fellowship in Durban, South Africa, in 2008 — shortly after antiretroviral therapy became available there — he saw lymphomas and more, including Kaposi sarcoma, a cancer caused by infection with a herpes virus now known as Kaposi sarcoma herpesvirus, or KSHV. The virus leads to cancer mostly in people who also have a weakened immune system, thus its association with HIV/AIDS.
Uldrick spent three months helping Dr. Anisa Mosam of University of KwaZulu-Natal analyze data from a clinical trial she had done on an experimental Kaposi treatment, but the experience resonated much longer. Over the years, he maintained that and other relationships he made in South Africa, collaborating on research papers and advising students on their master’s theses.
“In South Africa, where the HIV epidemic is worse than any place else in the world and the majority of lymphomas were HIV-associated, I became acutely aware of the need for really innovative, high-impact research in this area,” he said of this second career-defining experience. “I felt that my research interest could potentially have a very big impact if I focused on international projects.”
A new interest in immunotherapies
Uldrick returned from Durban to lay the groundwork for a research collaboration between Columbia and KwaZulu-Natal universities that continues today. (Around the same time — beginning in 2004 and formalized in 2008 — Fred Hutch was establishing its own Global Oncology program in Kampala, Uganda, partnering with the Uganda Cancer Institute.) Then the National Cancer Institute lured Uldrick away with a job offer that allowed him to hone his skills as a clinical investigator, designing and running novel clinical trials in HIV-associated malignancies as well as natural history studies evaluating the pathogenesis of KSHV-associated diseases. He worked under mentor Dr. Robert Yarchoan, who did some of the earliest HIV antiretroviral therapy trials at the NCI, then moved on to Kaposi sarcoma.
Uldrick spent the next 10 years at the NCI, rising to clinical director of the HIV & AIDS Malignancy Branch. Witnessing the advent of new immunotherapies that were beginning to transform cancer treatment, he became principal investigator for an ongoing, multi-center study — developed with immunotherapy researcher Dr. Martin “Mac” Cheever, who leads the NCI-funded, Fred Hutch-based Cancer Immunotherapy Trials Network — on a category of immunotherapies called checkpoint inhibitors in people with HIV and cancer.
In November, he presented early results from the study: The treatment, pembrolizumab (Keytruda), appears safe to use in patients with both advanced malignancies and HIV. Safety concerns had excluded this population from earlier trials of such therapies. This finding was a key first step in finding new treatments for them.
Recruited to join Fred Hutch Global Oncology, Uldrick was enthralled by the chance to continue his exploration of immunotherapy in Kaposi sarcoma and other HIV-related cancers in a part of the world where the burden is the greatest — as is the chance to make an impact.
“I was at a point in my career where I was hoping to focus more of my effort on high-impact global oncology research,” he said. “Fred Hutch is a leader in that.”