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Active OTHER RESEARCH-RELATED NIH (US)

A systems biology approach to elucidate the biology of immune-associated outcomes in breast cancer

$1.73M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of California, San Francisco
Country United States
Start Date Aug 03, 2023
End Date Jul 31, 2028
Duration 1,824 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10644415
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY This K01 application seeks protected time for mentored research and career development training for Dr. Rosalyn Sayaman, PhD to successfully transition to tenure-track faculty with an independent research program in computational and systems biology, supported by the Chair of Department of Laboratory Medicine. Leveraging

the advances in computational and Machine Learning methods and spearheading multi-omic technologies, Dr. Sayaman seeks to develop a highly integrative research program that can bridge the gap between in-silico research and translational medicine, with specific focus on advancing personalized medicine in breast cancer.

As a computational biologist with broad training and methodological experience, and a solid experimental background, Dr. Sayaman is uniquely positioned to carry out this comprehensive study incorporating the parallel multi-omic dataset for ~2000 women from the I-SPY 2 Trial. The I-SPY 2 neoadjuvant breast cancer clinical trial

is a personalized, adaptive trial designed to improve outcomes in high-risk breast cancer patients. Dr. Sayaman’s research proposal employs computational and Machine Learning approaches to dissect the complex interactions between intrinsic host germline and tumor somatic mutations, and extrinsic tumor

microenvironment (TME) features that mediate the tumor immune response. In Aim 1, Dr. Sayaman elucidates the role of genomic and TME features in determining the topography of immune populations in the tumor bed. In Aim 2, she assesses the relative predictive value of these genomic and TME features in predicting subtype-

specific response to neoadjuvant therapy, and 5-year survival in patients who do not respond to therapy. This work has the potential to generate response-predictive biomarkers that could inform optimal treatment decisions. To address the multi-disciplinary aspect of this study, Dr. Sayaman has assembled an exemplary team

of mentors who have complementary domains of expertise. Dr. Sayaman’s primary mentor is Dr. Laura van ‘t Veer, the Co-Leader of the NCI-designated Breast Oncology Program (BOP) and Director of Applied Genomics at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), and Chair of the I-SPY 2 Biomarker Committee. Dr. van ‘t

Veer is the inventor of the FDA-cleared MammaPrint® test included in many national and international breast cancer guidelines. Dr. Sayaman’s co-mentors include Dr. Laura Esserman, the Director of the UCSF Breast Care Center, the Clinical Co-Leader of the BOP, and the national Principal Investigator of the I-SPY 2 trial; Dr.

Elad Ziv, a leading cancer geneticist with expertise in statistical genetics and computational approaches in cancer genomics; and Dr. Michael Campbell, an expert in cancer immunology, who leads the development of multiplex Immune-Fluorescence assays for immune profiling in breast cancer. Dr. Sayaman’s proposed work

benefits from the world-class research and clinical expertise of the I-SPY 2 Trial Consortium and the rich institutional environment of UCSF and the Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, one of the premier cancer centers in the country.

All Grantees

University of California, San Francisco

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