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Dive into the research topics where Sylvia Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylvia Lee.


Current Oncology Reports | 2012

Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in melanoma

Sylvia Lee; Kim Margolin

Adoptive cell therapy using tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) is arguably the most effective treatment for patients with metastatic melanoma. With higher response rates than ipilimumab or IL-2, and longer durations of response than vemurafenib, TIL therapy carries the potential to transform current outcomes in melanoma, while also defining the way cell-based immunotherapy gets incorporated into mainstream cancer treatment. This paper will review the current state of TIL therapy in melanoma, the strategies to improve its efficacy, the current obstacles, and future directions to expand the availability of TIL to the general patient population.


Cancer | 2015

Phase 2 study of RO4929097, a gamma‐secretase inhibitor, in metastatic melanoma: SWOG 0933

Sylvia Lee; James J. Moon; Bruce G. Redman; Tarek Chidiac; Lawrence E. Flaherty; Yuanyuan Zha; Megan Othus; Antoni Ribas; Vernon K. Sondak; Thomas F. Gajewski; Kim Margolin

Aberrant Notch activation confers a proliferative advantage to many human tumors, including melanoma. This phase 2 trial assessed the antitumor activity of RO4929097, a gamma‐secretase inhibitor of Notch signaling, with respect to the progression‐free and overall survival of patients with advanced melanoma.


Nature Communications | 2017

Neutrophils dominate the immune cell composition in non-small cell lung cancer.

Julia Kargl; Stephanie E. Busch; Grace H. Y. Yang; Kyoung-Hee Kim; Mark L. Hanke; Heather E. Metz; Jesse J. Hubbard; Sylvia Lee; David K. Madtes; Martin W. McIntosh; A. McGarry Houghton

The response rate to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy for non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is just 20%. To improve this figure, several early phase clinical trials combining novel immunotherapeutics with immune checkpoint blockade have been initiated. Unfortunately, these trials have been designed without a strong foundational knowledge of the immune landscape present in NSCLC. Here, we use a flow cytometry panel capable of measuring 51 immune cell populations to comprehensively identify the immune cell composition and function in NSCLC. The results show that the immune cell composition is fundamentally different in lung adenocarcinoma as compared with lung squamous cell carcinoma, and that neutrophils are the most prevalent immune cell type. Using T-cell receptor-β sequencing and tumour reactivity assays, we predict that tumour reactive T cells are frequently present in NSCLC. These results should help to guide the design of clinical trials and the direction of future research in this area.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Combined IL-21–primed polyclonal CTL plus CTLA4 blockade controls refractory metastatic melanoma in a patient

Aude G. Chapuis; Sylvia Lee; John A. Thompson; Ilana M. Roberts; Kim Margolin; Shailender Bhatia; Heather L. Sloan; Ivy Lai; Felecia Wagener; Kendall C. Shibuya; Jianhong Cao; Jedd D. Wolchok; Philip D. Greenberg; Cassian Yee

Chapuis et al. demonstrate that the combination of adoptive cellular therapy with CTLA4 blockade induces long-term remission in a melanoma patient resistant to both modalities administered serially and individually.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016

T-Cell Therapy Using Interleukin-21–Primed Cytotoxic T-Cell Lymphocytes Combined With Cytotoxic T-Cell Lymphocyte Antigen-4 Blockade Results in Long-Term Cell Persistence and Durable Tumor Regression

Aude G. Chapuis; Ilana M. Roberts; John A. Thompson; Kim Margolin; Shailender Bhatia; Sylvia Lee; Heather L. Sloan; Ivy Lai; Erik A. Farrar; Felecia Wagener; Kendall C. Shibuya; Jianhong Cao; Jedd D. Wolchok; Philip D. Greenberg; Cassian Yee

Purpose Peripheral blood-derived antigen-specific cytotoxic T cells (CTLs) provide a readily available source of effector cells that can be administered with minimal toxicity in an outpatient setting. In metastatic melanoma, this approach results in measurable albeit modest clinical responses in patients resistant to conventional therapy. We reasoned that concurrent cytotoxic T-cell lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) checkpoint blockade might enhance the antitumor activity of adoptively transferred CTLs. Patients and Methods Autologous MART1-specific CTLs were generated by priming with peptide-pulsed dendritic cells in the presence of interleukin-21 and enriched by peptide-major histocompatibility complex multimer-guided cell sorting. This expeditiously yielded polyclonal CTL lines uniformly expressing markers associated with an enhanced survival potential. In this first-in-human strategy, 10 patients with stage IV melanoma received the MART1-specific CTLs followed by a standard course of anti-CTLA-4 (ipilimumab). Results The toxicity profile of the combined treatment was comparable to that of ipilimumab monotherapy. Evaluation of best responses at 12 weeks yielded two continuous complete remissions, one partial response (PR) using RECIST criteria (two PRs using immune-related response criteria), and three instances of stable disease. Infused CTLs persisted with frequencies up to 2.9% of CD8+ T cells for as long as the patients were monitored (up to 40 weeks). In patients who experienced complete remissions, PRs, or stable disease, the persisting CTLs acquired phenotypic and functional characteristics of long-lived memory cells. Moreover, these patients also developed responses to nontargeted tumor antigens (epitope spreading). Conclusion We demonstrate that combining antigen-specific CTLs with CTLA-4 blockade is safe and produces durable clinical responses, likely reflecting both enhanced activity of transferred cells and improved recruitment of new responses, highlighting the promise of this strategy.


Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2014

Tetramer guided, cell sorter assisted production of clinical grade autologous NY-ESO-1 specific CD8 + T cells

Seth M. Pollack; Robin L. Jones; Erik Farrar; Ivy Lai; Sylvia Lee; Jianhong Cao; Venu G. Pillarisetty; Benjamin Hoch; Ashley Gullett; Marie Bleakley; Ernest U. Conrad; Janet F. Eary; Kendall C. Shibuya; Edus H. Warren; Jason N Carstens; Shelly Heimfeld; Stanley R. Riddell; Cassian Yee

BackgroundAdoptive T cell therapy represents an attractive modality for the treatment of patients with cancer. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells have been used as a source of antigen specific T cells but the very low frequency of T cells recognizing commonly expressed antigens such as NY-ESO-1 limit the applicability of this approach to other solid tumors. To overcome this, we tested a strategy combining IL-21 modulation during in vitro stimulation with first-in-class use of tetramer-guided cell sorting to generate NY-ESO-1 specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL).MethodsCTL generation was evaluated in 6 patients with NY-ESO-1 positive sarcomas, under clinical manufacturing conditions and characterized for phenotypic and functional properties.ResultsFollowing in vitro stimulation, T cells stained with NY-ESO-1 tetramer were enriched from frequencies as low as 0.4% to >90% after single pass through a clinical grade sorter. NY-ESO-1 specific T cells were generated from all 6 patients. The final products expanded on average 1200-fold to a total of 36 billion cells, were oligoclonal and contained 67-97% CD8+, tetramer+ T cells with a memory phenotype that recognized endogenous NY-ESO-1.ConclusionThis study represents the first series using tetramer-guided cell sorting to generate T cells for adoptive therapy. This approach, when used to target more broadly expressed tumor antigens such as WT-1 and additional Cancer-Testis antigens will enhance the scope and feasibility of adoptive T cell therapy.


Translational lung cancer research | 2014

A new addition to the PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors for non-small cell lung cancer-the anti-PDL1 antibody-MEDI4736.

Sylvia Lee; Laura Q. Chow

It has been over two years since the phase I studies of the programmed death-1 (PD-1) checkpoint inhibitors— antibodies against PD-1 and its ligand PD-L1—were first presented and published internationally, demonstrating prolonged tumor regressions and improvements in survival (1,2). These results created a paradigm shift in the field of immunotherapy, in that responses were not only observed in melanoma and renal cell cancer, but also in cancers not historically thought to be immunogenic, including lung and ovarian cancer. The past few years have witnessed the rapid development of these agents into phase III registration trials. As shown in Table 1, over seven pharmaceutical companies are now racing to develop and obtain indication of a variety of PD-1 checkpoint inhibitors in a variety of solid tumors.


Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2015

29th Annual meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC)

Arthur A. Hurwitz; Sylvia Lee; Susan J. Knox; Holbrook Kohrt; Grégory Verdeil; Emanuela Romano; Kim Margolin; Walter J. Urba; Daniel E. Speiser

The 29th annual meeting of the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) was held November 7-9, 2014 in National Harbor, MD and was organized by Dr. Arthur A. Hurwitz (National Cancer Institute), Dr. Kim A. Margolin (Stanford University), Dr. Daniel E. Speiser (Ludwig Center for Cancer Research, University of Lausanne) and Dr. Walter J. Urba (Earle A. Chiles Research Institute, Providence Cancer Center). This meeting included over 1,600 registered participants from 28 separate countries, making it the largest SITC meeting held to date. It highlighted significant worldwide progress in the development and application of cancer immunology to the practice of clinical oncology, including advances in diagnosis, prognosis and therapy, utilizing several immunological pathways and mechanisms for a variety of oncologic conditions. Presentations and posters demonstrated that many concepts that had been pursued preclinically in the past are now being translated into clinical practice, with clear benefits for patients.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2018

Tumor infiltrating BRAFV600E-specific CD4 T cells correlated with complete clinical response in melanoma

Joshua Veatch; Sylvia Lee; Matthew Fitzgibbon; I-Ting Chow; Brenda Jesernig; Thomas M. Schmitt; Ying Ying Kong; Julia Kargl; A. McGarry Houghton; John A. Thompson; Martin W. McIntosh; William W. Kwok; Stanley R. Riddell

T cells specific for neoantigens encoded by mutated genes in cancers are increasingly recognized as mediators of tumor destruction after immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy or adoptive cell transfer. Unfortunately, most neoantigens result from random mutations and are patient specific, and some cancers contain few mutations to serve as potential antigens. We describe a patient with stage IV acral melanoma who achieved a complete response following adoptive transfer of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs). Tumor exome sequencing surprisingly revealed fewer than 30 nonsynonymous somatic mutations, including oncogenic BRAFV600E. Analysis of the specificity of TILs identified rare CD4+ T cells specific for BRAFV600E and diverse CD8+ T cells reactive to nonmutated self-antigens. These specificities increased in blood after TIL transfer and persisted long-term, suggesting they contributed to the effective antitumor immune response. Gene transfer of the BRAFV600E-specific T cell receptor (TCR) conferred recognition of class II MHC–positive cells expressing the BRAF mutation. Therapy with TCR-engineered BRAFV600E-specific CD4+ T cells may have direct antitumor effects and augment CD8+ T cell responses to self- and/or mutated tumor antigens in patients with BRAF-mutated cancers.


Laryngoscope | 2017

Predictors of outcome with cetuximab and paclitaxel for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma

Bruna Pellini Ferreira; Mary W. Redman; Kelsey K. Baker; Renato Martins; Keith D. Eaton; Laura Quan Man Chow; Christina S. Baik; Bernardo Goulart; Sylvia Lee; Rafael Santana-Davila; Cristina P. Rodriguez

Identify predictors of outcome in patients with recurrent/metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (RMHNSCC) treated with weekly cetuximab and paclitaxel (CP).

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Keith D. Eaton

University of Washington

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Renato Martins

University of Washington

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Kim Margolin

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Mary W. Redman

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Laura Quan Man Chow

University of Colorado Boulder

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Laura Q. Chow

University of Washington

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