Cancer Center Lands Prestigious NCI Grant to Advance Immunotherapy in Head and Neck Cancer

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April is Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Month, and a promising new research initiative at UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center could lead to a new and far more effective standard of care for this group of cancers.

Primo “Lucky” Lara Jr., MD

Primo “Lucky” Lara Jr., MD, director, UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center

April is Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Month and a promising new research initiative at UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center could lead to a new and far more effective standard of care for this group of cancers.

The research is being funded by the cancer center’s first ever Specialized Programs of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI). The prestigious five-year $9.8 million federal grant is intended to translate cancer research into clinical intervention.

“We are so proud to take the lead in developing what we hope will be a clinical trial that will revolutionize treatment for head and neck cancer,” said UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center Director Primo “Lucky” Lara, Jr. “Along with harnessing a breakthrough therapy to treat these difficult and debilitating cancers, we are also advancing interdisciplinary team science and innovative new technologies.”

The grant comes with the recent appointment of the cancer center’s new chief science officer Xiao-Jing Wang, who came to UC Davis in 2022. Wang is building a team to investigate the potential application of immunotherapy to treat head and neck cancers. Immunotherapy uses a body’s own immune system to fight cancer.

Along with her chief science officer role, Wang is associate director of basic science at the cancer center and a professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine.

She began her project under the SPORE program at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus with her co-principal investigator, Antonio Jimeno.

The researchers are using mouse models to study how cancer cells evade the body’s immune system. The team wants to learn more about biomarkers through which immunotherapy can more effectively target head and neck cancer. The work will lead directly to a clinical trial to be initiated in the next year. It will test the efficacy of an immunotherapy drug in combination with radiation to treat patients with recurrent head and neck cancers.

“Each SPORE project requires a patient endpoint demonstrating impact to patients, in either prevention or treatment of disease, through at least one new investigator-initiated therapeutic trial,” said Wang, who holds the Robert E. Stowell Endowed Chair in Experimental Pathology at UC Davis.

“Our trial will involve UC Davis and the University of Colorado jointly recruiting participants for therapeutic intervention,” Wang said.

High incidence of head and neck cancer in Sacramento region

The trial holds particular importance for the Sacramento region where incidence of tobacco-related head and neck cancer is more prevalent than in many other areas of the nation.

“Consumption of smoking and chewing tobacco is high among farmworker populations in California’s Central Valley. Members of rural underserved populations who develop head and neck cancers typically delay seeing a doctor until their disease is in advanced stages. Those populations tend to have recurrent therapeutic resistance, the worst prognosis,” explained Wang, who works with clinical oncologists to design clinical trials.

Wang obtained her bachelor’s, M.D. and Ph.D. degrees at Beijing Medical University. After postdoctoral training at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, she joined the faculty of Baylor College of Medicine, also in Houston.

“At Baylor I was fortunate to have a great mentor who guided me in gaining the expertise to develop genetically engineered mouse models for studying skin cancer. But after the head and neck department at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland recruited me as a full professor in 2003, I realized that very few scientists or physician-scientists were involved in head and neck cancer research at the time, and no genetically engineered animal model existed for head and neck cancer.”

That prompted her to seek and earn a grant in 2005 from the National Institutes of Health to create genetically engineered mouse models that could mimic head and neck cancer, enabling comparisons between mice and human cancer patients.

“That was my first grant, almost 20 years ago, and that started my head and neck cancer research career,” Wang said.

The SPORE grant will serve as an “incubator,” in Wang’s view, to spur building successful teams of investigators, which harmonizes with her philosophical spirit.

“My two biggest passions are team science and mentoring, particularly for physician-scientists,” Wang said.

Reactivating the immune system

Wang’s research project is important because radiation therapy — the current standard of care for head and neck cancer — not only kills tumors but also causes immune system suppression, thereby diminishing the body’s ability to fight cancer naturally.

“Immunotherapy recognizes cancer cells as foreign and then utilizes your immune system to wipe them out. But that doesn’t work for someone whose immune system isn’t functioning optimally,” Wang explained.

The major emphasis of her research is on how to make the immune system emerge from that immunosuppressive exhaustion stage and become reactivated, in combination with radiation. While she remains in the process of assembling her full team, research leading to the clinical trial is underway.

“We are determining which drug would hit the target and would be most likely to succeed,” she said. “The first direct impact of this project will be opening a new clinical trial. And the second, if that works, will be to deliver a new therapeutic intervention at UC Davis Comprehensive Cancer Center.”

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