A promising treatment for leukemia uses a patient’s own cells to recognize and attack cancer, but its potential side effects include seizures and even comas.
A hormonal therapy for prostate cancer works well until the cancer finds a workaround and becomes resistant.
A colorectal cancer treatment plan could save a life, but not if the patient must catch three buses for an appointment, can’t get a ride home after a procedure or can’t afford the prescription co-pays.
Three research fellows at Fred Hutch Cancer Center focusing on these problems won Young Investigator Awards this year from Conquer Cancer, the ASCO Foundation. They were honored at the American Society of Clinical Oncology annual meeting in Chicago last week.
The winners — Emily Liang, MD, Steve Blinka, MD, PhD, and Natasha Kwendakwema, MD — represent the wide range of research supported by the Hematology/Oncology Fellowship Program at Fred Hutch and the University of Washington.
The program helps physicians who have completed their residency launch academic research careers in hematology and/or oncology.
“The primary motivation of our fellowship is to train physicians for academic careers in basic science, translational research or clinical research, via a mentored-training program,” said program director Manoj P. Menon MD, MPH. “Although each of our fellows are highly motivated, each really benefitted from our program and our program benefitted from them.”
The award includes a one-year, $50,000 research grant.
“The winners of this prestigious award, and the mentors who guide their studies, represent the core of our mission to unite innovative research and compassionate care,” said Sara Hurvitz , MD, FACP, senior vice president and director of clinical research at Fred Hutch.
Helping patients tolerate a potentially transformative therapy
Liang, who was raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, found her research path after a rotation in the leukemia ward.
“What was most rewarding was getting to know the patients from all different ages and walks of life,” Liang said. “It’s a very long journey through that process.”
Her Fred Hutch fellowship included a year and a half of time-consuming clinical work.
“Despite that, Emily during those 18 months was extremely productive,” Menon said. “She published a number of manuscripts and presented on the national stage at multiple conferences, including the American Society of Hematology.”
Her research focuses on a therapy that tunes a patient’s own immune system to better fight cancer.
Chimeric antigen receptor-modified (CAR) T-cell therapy removes a patient’s T cells, genetically modifies them to better combat tumors, and then returns them to the patient.
“It engineers a patient’s own cells to recognize and attack the cancer,” Liang said.
It is a complex therapy that can only be administered at cancer centers such as Fred Hutch. Patients must be healthy enough to withstand the inflammatory side effects of the treatment, which can include fever, low blood pressure, confusion, seizure or even coma.
“You’re getting a treatment to try to cure cancer, but then you may die or suffer really severe consequences from the treatment itself,” Liang said.
A clinical trial is underway testing whether a medication used in rheumatoid arthritis can reduce the inflammation of CAR T-cell therapy. Liang will use her award money to fund experiments on samples from blood and lymph node tumors collected during the clinical trial.
Applicants for the Young Investigator Award must have mentors. Liang is the first fellow that hematologist-oncologist Jordan Gauthier, MD, MSc, has mentored in the program.
“Dr. Gauthier and I are interested in basically trying to reduce these side effects,” she said. “That way more patients can receive CAR T-cell therapy and people will do better when they’re getting the treatment.”
Liang also won support for her work this year from The Hartwell Innovation Fund, which supports high-risk/high-reward projects led by young investigators at Fred Hutch or UW Medicine. This year’s funding was made possible by Swim Across America, an annual event benefiting Fred Hutch.
She presented two studies at ASCO on predicting hematotoxicity (the adverse effect of a drug or agent on blood or bone marrow), which is a major cause of death following CAR-T cell therapy.
Other Fred Hutch-UW Hematology/Oncology fellows who presented work at ASCO this year:
- Jennifer Huang MD, PhD
- Natalie Miller MD, PhD
- Blossom Raychaudhuri, MD
- Ruben Raychaudhuri, MD
- Lauren Shih, MD