
Congratulations to Dr. Dawn Quelle, NETRF Board of Scientific Advisors co-chair, and the team at the University of Iowa Health, for winning a $10.7 million Specialized Program of Research Excellence (SPORE) grant from the National Cancer Institute. This prestigious award will support the study of new, targeted therapies for neuroendocrine tumors.
“Through this grant, we aim to improve the outcomes of patients with NETs by better understanding the biology of the tumors and developing improved diagnostic and therapeutic approaches,” Dr. Quelle says. She is co-principal investigator of the grant along with James Howe, MD, professor of surgery–surgical oncology and endocrine surgery, and Yusuf Menda, MD, professor of radiology–nuclear medicine.
The grant includes three translational research projects. One is focused on improving the efficacy of immunotherapy in pancreatic NETs through a new strategy of sensitizing the tumors to immune-enhancing (immune checkpoint inhibitor) therapy, which would deliver a tumor-killing blow while sparing normal tissues. The second strives to develop a new treatment paradigm for patients with lung neuroendocrine cancers by combining drugs that induce metabolic stress with radioligand therapy that targets a novel biomarker specific to these tumors. The third project addresses the potential of commonly used diabetes and obesity drugs (GLP-1 and GIP receptor agonists) to promote unwanted neuroendocrine cancer growth.
SPOREs are prestigious grants awarded to multidisciplinary teams of scientists who work together to translate cancer research discoveries from the laboratory into clinical practice. The UI is the only institution in the United States to have received a SPORE grant focused on neuroendocrine tumors. The grant brings together more than 20 faculty from UI as well as collaborators at Rutgers University.