SUPPORTING CLINICAL TRIALS FOR COVID-19
|
|
The Mount Sinai Health System has been at the epicenter of the COVID-19 crisis worldwide and continues to care for a high number of severely ill patients. From the outset of the pandemic, TCI has been on the frontline of patient care delivery and at the forefront of advancing patient care.
With no proven therapies, we are collaborating with colleagues across the Health System to rapidly elucidate the pathogenic mechanisms of the virus in order to define new targets and therapeutic options.
Our clinicians and investigators quickly leveraged Mount Sinai’s robust research infrastructure to meet the challenge. On March 11, 2020, the same day the pandemic was announced by the World Health Organization, the Department of Medicine’s Clinical Trials Office (CTO) prescribed remdesivir, an investigational antiviral, under the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)’s Investigational New Drug (eIND) pathway to a patient at Mount Sinai West. Within days, a COVID-19 positive patient was enrolled in a randomized, placebo-controlled study of an investigational formulation of sarilumab, an IL06 receptor antagonist. The Department of Pharmacy’s
Investigational Drug Service
, the IRB, and clinical staff across the Mount Sinai Health System undertook focused efforts to implement these protocols. The CTO created an expedited and comprehensive system to garner the necessary approvals for multiple protocols and expanded access.
|
|
National Academy of Science
|
|
Miriam Merad, MD, PhD
, was elected to the
National Academy of Science
s
in honor of her transformational contributions to the fields of myeloid cell biology and innate immunity. Dr. Merad was one of 146 newly elected members recognized for their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research.
The National Academy of Sciences, established under a congressional charter signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863, recognizes achievement in science and—with the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Medicine—provides science, engineering, and health policy advice to the federal government and other organizations.
“We at TCI are so very proud of Dr. Merad and her recognition is well deserved. Election to the National Academy of Sciences is a rare honor and we are truly blessed to have such a talented colleague who is playing such an instrumental role at the Icahn School of Medicine, the Precision Immunology Institute, and The Tisch Cancer Institute,” said Ramon Parsons, MD, PhD, TCI Director. Dr. Merad joins TCI colleague
Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, PhD
, as a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
|
|
|
|
Research and Career Development Award
|
|
Dr. Grinspan works in the laboratory of
Amaia Lujambio, PhD
, where she studies the contribution of the microbiome to liver cancer development. Dr. Grinspan’s funded research aims to determine if the gut microbiota of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma affects tumor response to immunotherapy with the long-term goal of harnessing the microbiome to identify biomarkers for patient stratification and identification of therapeutic targets.
|
|
|
|
Makda Zewde
, student at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, has received an
ASH HONORS Award
. This “Hematology Opportunities for the Next Generation of Research Scientists” award, given by the American Society of Hematology, provides research funding to support work on a hematology-related research project. Ms. Zewde is a TCI Summer Scholar, working in the laboratory of
James Ferrara, MD
.
|
|
|
|
R01 - Study of cell adhesion and polarity
|
|
Jose Javier Bravo-Cordero, PhD
, is co-investigator on a newly awarded R01 grant from the National Cancer Institute in collaboration with
Rafael Garcia-Mata, PhD
, at the University of Toledo. The funded research will utilize high-resolution imaging techniques in the Bravo-Cordero Lab to study how cell adhesion and polarity are established and maintained in normal cells and lost in human cancers. The goal is to understand the fundamental mechanisms controlling the function of a novel Scribble/SGEF/Dlg1 protein complex that coordinates junctional assembly, barrier function, and lumen formation in epithelial cells, and also to understand the role of the protein complex in cancer
.
|
|
|
|
Institute for Medical Education Excellence in Teaching Awards
|
|
The IME’s Excellence in Teaching Awards honor faculty, trainees, students, and staff who have demonstrated outstanding achievement in teaching and have made meaningful contributions to the educational activities across the Mount Sinai Health System.
Dr. Gabrilove is The James F. Holland Professor of Medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. A world-renowned expert on the biology of hematopoietic growth factors in normal and malignant hematopoiesis, Dr. Gabrilove holds numerous leadership/directorship roles in education.
|
|
|
|
Thesis Award, Student Excellence in Teaching , and
Outstanding Faculty Mentor
|
|
|
Dr. Ferrara received the Outstanding Faculty Mentor Award from the student council.
These awards celebrate innovation, commitment, and excellence in medical education.
|
|
|
|
Mount Sinai's Alpha Omega Alpha Lambda Chapter
|
|
Vaibhav Patel, MD
, Chief Fellow, Division of Hematology and Medical Oncology, has been selected as a Housestaff Member of Icahn School of Medicine at
Mount Sinai’s
Alpha Omega Alpha (AOA) Lambda Chapter
. The Mount Sinai AOA Selection Committee, comprised of both current housestaff and faculty AOA members, selected Dr. Patel for this prestigious honor in recognition of his service as an outstanding clinician, scholar, mentor, teacher, and role model
.
|
|
|
|
GRANT OPPORTUNITIES
Damon Runyon-Rachleff
This award provides support for the next generation of exceptionally creative thinkers with “high-risk/high-reward” ideas that have the potential to significantly impact our understanding of and/or approaches to the prevention, diagnosis, or treatment of cancer.
- Application due date: July 1, 2020
The Hope Foundation for Cancer Research
This award supports
early and conceptual stages of innovative SWOG research projects. The proposed work should use resources from completed SWOG trials or be directly translatable to future clinical trials in SWOG and th
e National Clinical Trials Network.
- Letter of intent due date: July 1, 2020
- Application due date: September 1, 2020
Note: The TCI Development team can assist with preparing the sponsor components for these grant applications. Please contact
Honour Marlowe
|
|
Stand Up To Cancer
- Letter of intent due date: September 1, 2020
Memorial Sloan Kettering Lymphoma SPORE
Investigators at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, Rockefeller University, Weill Cornell Medical Center, Columbia University, Mount Sinai, and NYU are eligible.
- Proposal due date: July 1, 2020
|
|
Epithelial plasticity can generate multi lineage phenotypes in human and murine bladder cancers
|
|
|
This paper reports that single cell transcriptome analyses of mouse and human model systems of bladder cancer show that tumor cells with multiple lineage subtypes not only cluster together at the transcriptional level but can maintain concomitant gene expression of a least one mRNA subtype. Functional studies reveal that tumor initiation and cellular plasticity may contribute to innate tumor heterogeneity, which informs clinical implications regarding the classification and treatment of bladder cancer. Findings help explain the variable behavior and treatment of bladder cancers to clinical treatments. The potentially dynamic nature of molecular subtypes during cancer treatment may justify repeat tumor sampling with serial lines of treatment being required to optimize the use of gene expression data to guide precision medicine strategies.
|
|
Persistent leukocytosis in polycythemia vera is associated with disease evolution but not thrombosis
|
|
|
There are unresolved questions regarding the association between persistent leukocytosis and risk of thrombosis and disease evolution in polycythemia vera (PV). To address this knowledge gap, the researchers analyzed a retrospective database of 520 PV patients seen at 10 academic institutions across the United States. They found that persistently elevated leukocyte trajectories were not associated with hazard of thrombotic event, but were significantly associated with increased hazard of disease evolution in an ascending stepwise manner. Additionally, they found that neither hematocrit nor platelet count were significantly associated with hazard of thrombosis or disease evolution.
|
|
|
|
Mouse models of oncoimmunology in hepatocellular carcinoma
|
|
|
This review lists ongoing clinical trials testing immunotherapy in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), briefly discusses the unique immunosuppressive environment of the liver, and then delves into the most applicable current murine model systems to study oncoimmunology within the context of HCC, including syngeneic, genetically-engineered, and humanized models.
|
|
Atezolizumab with or without chemotherapy in metastatic urothelial cancer (IMvigor130): a multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial
|
|
|
In this study, the researchers report the final analysis of progression-free survival and the interim analysis of overall survival for IMvigor130, the first phase 3 trial to assess a PD-L1 and PD-1 inhibitor alone or in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy versus platinum-based chemotherapy alone in untreated metastatic urothelial carcinoma, and the first trial to include both cisplatin-ineligible and cisplatin-eligible patients. Addition of atezolizumab to platinum-based chemotherapy was associated with a significant prolongation of progression-free survival, encouraging interim overall survival data, an increased complete response rate, and a safety profile consistent with those seen with the individual agents. IMvigor130 has already affected clinical practice, providing context for an evolving landscape of treatment approaches for first-line metastatic urothelial carcinoma, fortifying a potential role for monotherapy in select patients, and supporting atezolizumab plus platinum-based chemotherapy as a potential treatment option.
|
|
Insulin resistance contributes to racial disparities in breast cancer prognosis in US women
|
|
|
This multi-center, cross-sectional study of U.S. women with newly diagnosed invasive breast cancer found that insulin resistance is one factor that contributes to the worse prognosis in breast cancer between black and white women, potentially through direct effects of insulin on the tumor insulin receptor (IR). Given the differences in circulating insulin levels and tumor IR expression between black women and white women, the researchers emphasize the importance of exploring in future studies whether lowering insulin levels or targeting IR signaling will improve disparities in breast cancer survival.
|
|
Advancing scientific knowledge in times of pandemics
|
|
|
The COVID-19 pandemic has been matched by an impressive rise in related publications in both preprint servers and peer-reviewed journals. In an effort to help curate this unprecedented flow of scientific date, scientists at Mount Sinai’s
Human Immune Monitoring Center
are ranking COVID-19-related preprints according to immunological relevance.
|
|
- Krystal Pauline Cascetta, MD, presented CT262 - Multicenter, phase I/II trial of anastrozole, palbociclib, trastuzumab, and pertuzumab in HR-positive, HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer. Authors: Krystal Pauline Cascetta, Poulikos Poulikakos, Charles Shapiro, Julie Fasano, Aarti Bhardwaj, Hanna Irie, Anupama Goel, Paula Klein, Meng Ru, Amy Tiersten.
|
|
|
For a representative list of ASCO presentations from TCI, click
here
|
|
Resuming on-site cancer care
|
|
From the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, our cancer care services have remained open for patients whose treatment could not wait. We are now ramping up on-site cancer visits across the Health System for optimal patient outcomes, with strict
safety measures
in place to protect everyone who enters our facilities.
|
|
CLL/SLL Roundtable: Updates On Patient Management
|
|
A Smiling Hero Keeps the Team Going
Rachel Pappalardo, RN, with the lung cancer program, has been working tirelessly through the COVID-19 pandemic. Thanks to Rachel, and to
|
|
National Cancer Survivors Day
|
|
BroadcastMed Physician Channel
|
|
Do you have news for the next issue of
TCI Connections
?
Remember to share
breaking news
and
high impact news
that might be appropriate for media coverage with
Marlene Naanes
(929-237-5802) in the Press Office. This may include pending FDA drug/device approvals, studies/trial results being published in high-impact journals, and patient stories. The more lead time you can give Marlene, the better—ideally, four weeks or when a paper is accepted by the journal. Embargoes will always be honored and news will only be released with your approval.
|
|
|
Ramon Parsons, MD, PhD, Director
Co-editors: Janet Aronson and Rhaisili Rosario
|
|
|
|
|
|
|