

Volume 10
Journal of Cancer Science & Therapy
ISSN: 1948-5956
Euro Cancer 2018
July 23-25, 2018
Page 81
conference
series
.com
July 23-25, 2018 | Rome, Italy
29
th
Euro-Global Summit on
Cancer Therapy & Radiation Oncology
Ibrahim Khalifeh, J Cancer Sci Ther 2018, Volume 10
DOI: 10.4172/1948-5956-C8-144
Monitoring immune response in tumors
T
here is growing awareness and importance of the input and insights of different specialties to understand and monitor tumor
microenvironment and consequently understand the mechanisms of response and resistance to various cancer treatments.
Although current immune monitoring strategies pose clinical challenges, advances in approaches and techniques are improving
our ability to better understand immune responses in the tumor microenvironment. In addition to this, improvements in genomic
profiling have allowed for a deeper understanding of the influence of mutational burden and other genomic factors on anti-tumor
immunity. Continued progress in immune monitoring strategies will help us better understand who will benefit from therapy and
will help guide rational choice of treatment as well as proper timing, sequence, and combinations of therapeutic regimens. With
the increasing use of immunomodulatory agents in clinical practice, there is a growing interest in assessing anti-tumor immune
responses via tissue-based and blood- based assays. However, complexities exist in this analysis, particularly when considering
use of archival versus fresh tissue cryopreservation has been shown to alter certain immune cell subsets and cytokine profiles as
well as gene expression profiles formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE): mutational burden and neoantigen prediction, genomic
variants are lost by using FFPE dynamic properties of the immune system and that archival tissue is often collected in advance of
treatment of interest may make data obtained from archival tissue less relevant. This is particularly pertinent with the use of immune
checkpoint inhibitors in clinical trials and in standard of care treatment, where assessment of programmed death receptor-1 ligand
to determine treatment This may in part explain why clinical studies have produced varying results regarding utility of PD-L1 as
a predictive biomarker for selection of patients in which archival tissue was often used for PD-L1 determination. Another rapidly
emerging area of investigation that must be considered in the context of anti-tumor immune responses is the microbiome. The
microbiome refers to the entire community of bacteria (and their genomes) within an organism, and the number of bacteria within a
human outnumbers the number of human cells by at least 10:1. There is a growing role of the microbiome in health and disease, and
evidence that the gut microbiome may shape anti-tumor immune responses as well as responses to immune checkpoint blockade and
other immunotherapies. Tumor-microenvironment interactions require longitudinal assessment throughout the course of therapy.
Optimize concordance between tissue-based and blood-based techniques to assess immune responses will offer better assessment
and monitoring.
Biography
Ibrahim Khalifeh, after earning his MD from Damascus University’s Medical School in 1999, completed a Surgery Internship (2000–2001) and Pathology Residency
(2001–2002) at the American University of Beirut Medical Center. In 2002, he left for the USA where he did four years of training in Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at
Wayne State University in Detroit (2002–2006), Oncologic Pathology and Cytopathology Fellowships at MDAnderson Cancer Center (2006–2008), and then he joined the
University of Alabama where he completed one year of Fellowship in Dermatopathology (2008–2009). He is a diplomat of the American Board of Anatomic and Clinical
Pathology, Cytopathology and Dermatopathology. He joined the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at AUBMC in 2009 as an Assistant Professor. He has
been involved in multiple projects related to cutaneous Leishmania, melanoma, dysplastic nevi and BRAF.
ik08@aub.edu.lbIbrahim Khalifeh
American University of Beirut Medical Center, Lebanon