Immune checkpoint inhibitors

Drugs that either "uncloak" cancer cells or "unchain" immune cells so the immune system can mount a response against the cancer

Axl as a target to reverse EMT, treatment resistance and immunosuppression

Targeted Therapeutics Research Award
Lauren Averett Byers, MD
MD Anderson Cancer Center
Houston
TX
Don Gibbons, Jr., MD, PhD
MD Anderson Cancer Center
Houston
TX

Drs. Byers and Gibbons have discovered that lung cancer cells acquire the ability to hide from the immune system during epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition—a process through which cancer cells develop the ability to spread to other parts of the body (metastasis). The LUNGevity award will help Drs. Byers and Gibbons study the effect of a new drug that can reverse the EMT process and make lung cancer cells more visible to the immune system.

Response to PD-1 inhibitors in lung cancer and melanoma patients with brain metastases

Targeted Therapeutics Research Award
LUNGevity Foundation, in partnership with the Melanoma Research Alliance and the Lung Cancer Research Foundation, is co-funding research on PD-I inhibitor treatment options for both non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and metastatic melanoma (MM) patients
Lucia Beatrice Jilaveanu, MD, PhD
Yale University
New Haven
CT
Brain metastases are extremely common in both NSCLC and melanoma patients. Two new immunity-boosting drugs are showing promise against both of these kinds of cancer. However, whether these drugs work on cancer cells that metastasize and lodge in the brain is not known. Dr. Jilaveanu will study patients with brain metastases treated with the new drugs to find biomarkers that could predict the patients’ response to this treatment.

Antagonism of adenosine A2A receptor to improve lung cancer immunotherapy

Targeted Therapeutics Research Award
Alberto Chiappori, MD
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute
Tampa
FL
Scott Antonia, MD, PhD
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute
Tampa
FL
Cancer cells have found ways to block the body’s own immune system from helping to destroy the tumor. However, newly developed drugs can make the patient’s own immune system more efficient. This team will administer two different immunotherapy drugs to lung cancer patients and determine whether the addition of another drug, PFB-509, can improve the anti-tumor effects and patient outcomes.

Neoadjuvant anti-PD-1 antibody, Nivolumab, in resectable NSCLC

Career Development Award
Patrick Forde, MD (MB, BCh)
Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center
Baltimore
MD

Dr. Forde is working to apply a kind of immunotherapy that has been successful in people with lung cancer in later stages to people with early-stage lung cancer, stimulating their immune system to attack cancer cells. This treatment, nivolumab, uses anti PD-1 antibodies to release the “brakes” on the immune system.