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Dive into the research topics where Benjamin Cottam is active.

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Featured researches published by Benjamin Cottam.


Cancer Research | 2016

Radiotherapy Combined with Novel STING-Targeting Oligonucleotides Results in Regression of Established Tumors

Jason R. Baird; David Friedman; Benjamin Cottam; Thomas W. Dubensky; David B. Kanne; Shelly Bambina; Keith S. Bahjat; Marka Crittenden; Michael J. Gough

Cytotoxic therapies prime adaptive immune responses to cancer by stimulating the release of tumor-associated antigens. However, the tumor microenvironment into which these antigens are released is typically immunosuppressed, blunting the ability to initiate immune responses. Recently, activation of the DNA sensor molecule STING by cyclic dinucleotides was shown to stimulate infection-related inflammatory pathways in tumors. In this study, we report that the inflammatory pathways activated by STING ligands generate a powerful adjuvant activity for enhancing adaptive immune responses to tumor antigens released by radiotherapy. In a murine model of pancreatic cancer, we showed that combining CT-guided radiotherapy with a novel ligand of murine and human STING could synergize to control local and distant tumors. Mechanistic investigations revealed T-cell-independent and TNFα-dependent hemorrhagic necrosis at early times, followed by later CD8 T-cell-dependent control of residual disease. Clinically, STING was found to be expressed extensively in human pancreatic tumor and stromal cells. Our findings suggest that this novel STING ligand could offer a potent adjuvant for leveraging radiotherapeutic management of pancreatic cancer.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Expression of NF-κB p50 in Tumor Stroma Limits the Control of Tumors by Radiation Therapy

Marka Crittenden; Benjamin Cottam; Talicia Savage; Cynthia Nguyen; Pippa Newell; Michael J. Gough

Radiation therapy aims to kill cancer cells with a minimum of normal tissue toxicity. Dying cancer cells have been proposed to be a source of tumor antigens and may release endogenous immune adjuvants into the tumor environment. For these reasons, radiation therapy may be an effective modality to initiate new anti-tumor adaptive immune responses that can target residual disease and distant metastases. However, tumors engender an environment dominated by M2 differentiated tumor macrophages that support tumor invasion, metastases and escape from immune control. In this study, we demonstrate that following radiation therapy of tumors in mice, there is an influx of tumor macrophages that ultimately polarize towards immune suppression. We demonstrate using in vitro models that this polarization is mediated by transcriptional regulation by NFκB p50, and that in mice lacking NFκB p50, radiation therapy is more effective. We propose that despite the opportunity for increased antigen-specific adaptive immune responses, the intrinsic processes of repair following radiation therapy may limit the ability to control residual disease.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Optimizing Timing of Immunotherapy Improves Control of Tumors by Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy

Kristina Young; Jason R. Baird; Talicia Savage; Benjamin Cottam; David Friedman; Shelly Bambina; David J. Messenheimer; Bernard A. Fox; Pippa Newell; Keith S. Bahjat; Michael J. Gough; Marka Crittenden

The anecdotal reports of promising results seen with immunotherapy and radiation in advanced malignancies have prompted several trials combining immunotherapy and radiation. However, the ideal timing of immunotherapy with radiation has not been clarified. Tumor bearing mice were treated with 20Gy radiation delivered only to the tumor combined with either anti-CTLA4 antibody or anti-OX40 agonist antibody. Immunotherapy was delivered at a single timepoint around radiation. Surprisingly, the optimal timing of these therapies varied. Anti-CTLA4 was most effective when given prior to radiation therapy, in part due to regulatory T cell depletion. Administration of anti-OX40 agonist antibody was optimal when delivered one day following radiation during the post-radiation window of increased antigen presentation. Combination treatment of anti-CTLA4, radiation, and anti-OX40 using the ideal timing in a transplanted spontaneous mammary tumor model demonstrated tumor cures. These data demonstrate that the combination of immunotherapy and radiation results in improved therapeutic efficacy, and that the ideal timing of administration with radiation is dependent on the mechanism of action of the immunotherapy utilized.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Peripheral Myeloid Expansion Driven by Murine Cancer Progression Is Reversed by Radiation Therapy of the Tumor

Marka Crittenden; Talicia Savage; Benjamin Cottam; Keith S. Bahjat; William L. Redmond; Shelly Bambina; Melissa J Kasiewicz; Pippa Newell; Andrew M. Jackson; Michael J. Gough

Expansion of myeloid-lineage leukocytes in tumor-bearing mice has been proposed as a cause of systemic immunosuppression. We demonstrate that radiation therapy of tumors leads to a decline in myeloid cell numbers in the blood and a decrease in spleen size. The frequency of myeloid cells does not decline to the level seen in tumor-free mice: we demonstrate that metastatic disease can prevent myeloid cell numbers from returning to baseline, and that tumor recurrence from residual disease correlates with re-expansion of myeloid lineage cells. Radiation therapy results in increased proliferation of T cells in the spleen and while T cell responses to foreign antigens are not altered by tumor burden or myeloid cell expansion, responses to tumor-associated antigens are increased after radiation therapy. These data demonstrate that myeloid cell numbers are directly linked to primary tumor burden, that this population contracts following radiation therapy, and that radiation therapy may open a therapeutic window for immunotherapy of residual disease.


Radiation Research | 2014

Expression of Arginase I in Myeloid Cells Limits Control of Residual Disease after Radiation Therapy of Tumors in Mice

Marka Crittenden; Talicia Savage; Benjamin Cottam; Jason R. Baird; Paulo C. Rodriguez; Pippa Newell; Kristina Young; Andrew M. Jackson; Michael J. Gough

An accumulating body of evidence demonstrates that radiation therapy can generate adaptive immune responses that contribute to tumor control. However, in the absence of additional immune therapy, the adaptive immune response is insufficient to prevent tumor recurrence or affect distant disease. It has been shown in multiple models that tumor-infiltrating myeloid cells exhibit alternative activation phenotypes and are able to suppress adaptive immune responses, and recent data suggests that the myeloid response in tumors treated with cytotoxic therapy limits tumor control. We hypothesized that tumor myeloid cells inhibit the adaptive immune response after radiation therapy through expression of the enzyme arginase I. Using a myeloid cell-specific deletion of arginase I in mice, we demonstrate an improved tumor control after radiation therapy. However, tumors still recurred despite the conditional knockdown of arginase I. Since multiple alternative factors may combine to inhibit adaptive immunity, we propose that targeting macrophage differentiation may be a more effective strategy than targeting individual suppressive pathways.


Cancer immunology research | 2014

TGFβ inhibition prior to hypofractionated radiation enhances efficacy in preclinical models

Kristina Young; Pippa Newell; Benjamin Cottam; David Friedman; Talicia Savage; Jason R. Baird; Emmanuel T. Akporiaye; Michael J. Gough; Marka Crittenden

Young and colleagues demonstrate in syngeneic mouse models of colorectal and pancreatic cancers that TGFβ inhibition with the oral, small-molecule inhibitor SM16 enhanced adaptive immunity in the tumor microenvironments and significantly improved the efficacy of subsequent radiotherapy. The immune infiltrate in colorectal cancer has been correlated with outcome, such that individuals with higher infiltrations of T cells have increased survival independent of the disease stage. For patients with lower immune infiltrates, overall survival is limited. Because the patients with colorectal cancer studied have received conventional cancer therapies, these data may indicate that the pretreatment tumor environment increases the efficacy of treatments such as chemotherapy, surgery, and radiotherapy. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that an improved immune environment in the tumor at the time of treatment will increase the efficacy of radiotherapy. We demonstrate that inhibition of TGFβ using the orally available small-molecule inhibitor SM16 improved the immune environment of tumors in mice and significantly improved the efficacy of subsequent radiotherapy. This effect was not due to changes in radiosensitivity, epithelial–mesenchymal transition, or changes in vascular function in the tumor; rather, this effect was dependent on adaptive immunity and resulted in long-term protective immunity in cured mice. These data demonstrate that immunotherapy is an option to improve the immune status of patients with poor tumor infiltrates and that pretreatment improves the efficacy of radiotherapy. Cancer Immunol Res; 2(10); 1011–22. ©2014 AACR.


Oncotarget | 2016

Mertk on tumor macrophages is a therapeutic target to prevent tumor recurrence following radiation therapy

Marka Crittenden; Jason R. Baird; David J. Friedman; Talicia Savage; Lauren Uhde; Alejandro Alice; Benjamin Cottam; Kristina Young; Pippa Newell; Cynthia Nguyen; Shelly Bambina; Gwen Kramer; Emmanuel T. Akporiaye; Anna Malecka; Andrew M. Jackson; Michael J. Gough

Radiation therapy provides a means to kill large numbers of cancer cells in a controlled location resulting in the release of tumor-specific antigens and endogenous adjuvants. However, by activating pathways involved in apoptotic cell recognition and phagocytosis, irradiated cancer cells engender suppressive phenotypes in macrophages. We demonstrate that the macrophage-specific phagocytic receptor, Mertk is upregulated in macrophages in the tumor following radiation therapy. Ligation of Mertk on macrophages results in anti-inflammatory cytokine responses via NF-kB p50 upregulation, which in turn limits tumor control following radiation therapy. We demonstrate that in immunogenic tumors, loss of Mertk is sufficient to permit tumor cure following radiation therapy. However, in poorly immunogenic tumors, TGFb inhibition is also required to result in tumor cure following radiation therapy. These data demonstrate that Mertk is a highly specific target whose absence permits tumor control in combination with radiation therapy.


Hepatology Research | 2017

Programmed cell death-1 blockade enhances response to stereotactic radiation in an orthotopic murine model of hepatocellular carcinoma

David P. Friedman; Jason R. Baird; Kristina Young; Benjamin Cottam; Marka Crittenden; Scott L. Friedman; Michael J. Gough; Pippa Newell

Small, solitary hepatocellular carcinoma is curable with stereotactic radiation or other methods of tumor ablation, however, regional and systemic tumor recurrence occurs in over 70% of patients. Here we describe the ability of immunoradiotherapy to induce an antitumor immune response and delay the growth of tumors in immunocompetent mice.


Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2014

Preparative immunotherapy with anti-OX40 and anti-CTLA4 improves the response to chemotherapy

David Friedman; Kristina Young; Jason R. Baird; Benjamin Cottam; Talicia Savage; Pippa Newell; Melissa J. Kasiewicz; William L. Redmond; Brendan D. Curti; Todd Crocenzi; Michael J. Gough; Marka Crittenden

Meeting abstracts Recent studies have reported that decreased T cell infiltrate alone, or co-ordinate with increased macrophage infiltrate, correlate with decreased survival in a range of cancers, including patients with pancreatic cancer. Importantly, in mouse models of pancreatic cancer,


JAMA Surgery | 2018

Association of Immunologic Markers With Survival in Upfront Resectable Pancreatic Cancer

Ephraim Tang; Philippa Newell; Ronald F. Wolf; Paul D. Hansen; Benjamin Cottam; Carmen Ballesteros-Merino; Michael J. Gough

in agricultural areas because of atrazine exposure,4,5 one of the most common herbicides used in the United States, this herbicide is rarely used in forested areas and is more commonly used for corn in the Midwest. A previous study in the San Joaquin Valley in California from 1997 to 2006 also did not find evidence of this association.6 The primary limitation of this study is that it was retrospective and observational, using an administrative database, and thus relied on accurate coding. The rising risk of gastroschisis in rural counties in California is not clearly owing to agricultural exposures. Future studies should consider other risk factors that may be more common in these areas.

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Michael J. Gough

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Marka Crittenden

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Pippa Newell

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Talicia Savage

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Jason R. Baird

Providence Portland Medical Center

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David Friedman

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Keith S. Bahjat

Providence Portland Medical Center

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Shelly Bambina

Providence Portland Medical Center

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David J. Friedman

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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