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U19CA264338

Cooperative Agreement

Overview

Grant Description
Advancing Treatment and Understanding of Immunotherapy in Glioblastoma - Summary/Abstract

Immunotherapy holds great promise for the treatment of glioblastoma; still, certain characteristics of glioblastoma present inherent therapeutic challenges. Herein, two experienced interdisciplinary laboratory and clinical teams at UCSF's Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center and Northwestern University's Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center join efforts to develop innovative immunotherapy approaches against glioblastoma.

This proposal leverages industry and institutional support to address three specific objectives:

1) To improve our understanding of the role of immunotherapy approaches in glioblastoma.
2) To improve our understanding of how to overcome the limitation of the blood-brain barrier.
3) To develop innovative immunotherapy treatments for glioblastoma, with associated early clinical trials focused on patients suffering from recurrent glioblastoma.

Project 1, coordinated from Northwestern, will build on the team's preclinical results in mouse brain tumor models demonstrating an immunomodulatory and sensitization effect when immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy is preceded by an immunogenic dose of doxorubicin, an effect that can be further enhanced by ultrasound-based BBB opening. Support by innovative biotech companies (Agenus, AstraZeneca, Carthera) provides drugs or devices for preclinical and clinical investigation as well as specific expertise, assays, and technology for investigations at both institutions, making this collaboration a very powerful consortium. The ensuing clinical trial will investigate the novel anti-PD1 checkpoint inhibitor balstilimab in conjunction with doxorubicin, with and without sonication for BBB opening. By administration of immune therapy prior to surgery (induction therapy, neoadjuvant treatment), the immune effect enables us to evaluate in vivo immune response in the resected brain tissue. We have previously identified PERK/MAPK activation as a biomarker for benefit from anti-PD1 treatment in recurrent glioblastoma; this and other markers will be explored furthermore. Four prospectively treated cohorts will be treated with and without induction therapy, and with and without BBB opening. Translational endpoints include immune response (tumor tissue, peripheral) and drug tissue concentration.

Project 2, coordinated from UCSF, is a study based on the exciting novel synthetic Notch "SynNotch" receptor CART system and pioneering T cell circuits that recognize tumor cells based on a "prime-and-kill" strategy. In this system, the first antigen, which is expressed exclusively on GBM cells (EGFRVIII), primes the T cells to induce expression of a CAR that recognizes IL-13RA2 and EphA2, thereby eradicating GBM cells expressing either EphA2 or IL-13A2. Project 2's team hypothesizes that SynNotch CART cells can revolutionize the CART therapy for glioblastoma by overcoming the challenges of off-tumor toxicity, antigen heterogeneity, and CART cell exhaustion. Thus, these SynNotch-CART cells are hypothesized to be significantly more efficacious than conventional, constitutively expressed IL-13RA2/EphA2 CART cells. Investigators will optimize the efficacy of the lead agent and test this hypothesis in the first-in-human clinical trial of this new class of agents in glioblastoma patients.

This U19 proposal also has set aside funds for support of the distinctly important trans-GTN pilot projects and for two cores (administrative, immune monitoring & biospecimen) that will support the efforts of the two projects. By addressing the overall specific objectives described, the research proposed in this U19 application has a high likelihood of changing the way immunotherapy is understood and utilized in glioblastoma. The innovative research described in this proposal will take advantage of the exceptional resources assembled by the well-established, collaborative group of clinical and basic scientists.
Funding Goals
TO PROVIDE FUNDAMENTAL INFORMATION ON THE CAUSE AND NATURE OF CANCER IN PEOPLE, WITH THE EXPECTATION THAT THIS WILL RESULT IN BETTER METHODS OF PREVENTION, DETECTION AND DIAGNOSIS, AND TREATMENT OF NEOPLASTIC DISEASES. CANCER BIOLOGY RESEARCH INCLUDES THE FOLLOWING RESEARCH PROGRAMS: CANCER CELL BIOLOGY, CANCER IMMUNOLOGY, HEMATOLOGY AND ETIOLOGY, DNA AND CHROMOSOMAL ABERRATIONS, TUMOR BIOLOGY AND METASTASIS, AND STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY AND MOLECULAR APPLICATIONS.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Place of Performance
San Francisco, California 941432202 United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 370% from $885,236 to $4,164,857.
San Francisco Regents Of The University Of California was awarded Advancing treatment and understanding of immunotherapy in glioblastoma Cooperative Agreement U19CA264338 worth $4,164,857 from National Cancer Institute in September 2021 with work to be completed primarily in San Francisco California United States. The grant has a duration of 5 years and was awarded through assistance program 93.396 Cancer Biology Research. The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Glioblastoma Therapeutics Network (U19 Clinical Trial Required).

Status
(Ongoing)

Last Modified 9/24/25

Period of Performance
9/10/21
Start Date
8/31/26
End Date
82.0% Complete

Funding Split
$4.2M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.2M
Total Obligated
100.0% Federal Funding
0.0% Non-Federal Funding

Activity Timeline

Interactive chart of timeline of amendments to U19CA264338

Subgrant Awards

Disclosed subgrants for U19CA264338

Transaction History

Modifications to U19CA264338

Additional Detail

Award ID FAIN
U19CA264338
SAI Number
U19CA264338-467299150
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NC00 NIH National Cancer Institute
Funding Office
75NC00 NIH National Cancer Institute
Awardee UEI
KMH5K9V7S518
Awardee CAGE
4B560
Performance District
CA-11
Senators
Dianne Feinstein
Alejandro Padilla

Budget Funding

Federal Account Budget Subfunction Object Class Total Percentage
National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0849) Health research and training Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) $1,643,938 100%
Modified: 9/24/25