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Completed NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Targeting Integrins in Lung Cancer


Funder Veterans Affairs
Recipient Organization Va Northern California Health Care Sys
Country United States
Start Date Feb 01, 2021
End Date Jan 31, 2025
Duration 1,460 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10341045
Grant Description

Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer-related deaths in US veterans and worldwide. Molecularly targeted therapy and immunotherapy are two recent major breakthroughs in lung cancer treatment that have been shown to extend life and increase cure, but each of them benefits ~20% of non-small cell lung cancer

(NSCLC) patients. Novel therapeutic strategies are needed to identify new treatment targets and develop and validate the assays that select the appropriate patients for molecularly targeted therapy and cancer immunotherapy and monitor antitumor responses. We have recently generated and characterized high-affinity

peptide ligands for targeting tumor-specific and lymphocyte-specific integrins on the surface of multiple epithelial cancer types including NSCLC and microvesicle exosomes derived from the membranes of specific cancer or immune cells. We hypothesize that these high affinity peptide ligands can be used to improve the

sensitivity of detecting tumor- and immune cell-specific biomarkers in lung cancer patients. The overall objective of this proposal is to develop easily operable, low cost, sensitive, multiplex assays to improve the sensitivity of current molecular and immune biomarker tests, in a single blood draw or thoracentesis for clinical

decision-making in cancer treatment selection and monitoring. We will use biofluid samples collected from patients with advanced NSCLC under IRB-approved protocol to optimize our novel in vitro diagnostic platforms. In specific aim 1, we develop an assay for sensitive detection and enrichment of tumor cells from

malignant body fluids of NSCLC patients using LXY30 (for α3β1 integrin). In specific aim 2, we will develop a novel in vitro platform for rapid and simple isolation of tumor-specific exosomes yielding high quantity and quality tumor DNA to increase the success of clinical molecular biomarker assays. In specific aim 3, we will

develop a novel in vitro platform for rapid and simple isolation of functional immune cells in the blood from NSCLC patients for flow cytometry, T cell receptor diversity, and single cell genomic characterization. We anticipate that the clinical application of our novel, integrated, simple, low cost, in vitro diagnostic platform in a

serial noninvasive “liquid biopsy” can select the most effective treatment for cancer patients in real time and thus has great potential to advance individual cancer patient care towards the goal of precision medicine.

All Grantees

Va Northern California Health Care Sys

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