Andrew Pardoll

Andrew Pardoll

Johns Hopkins University

H-index: 168

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

Johns Hopkins University

Position

school of medicine

Citations(all)

179513

Citations(since 2020)

78652

Cited By

135032

hIndex(all)

168

hIndex(since 2020)

111

i10Index(all)

462

i10Index(since 2020)

330

Email

University Profile Page

Johns Hopkins University

Research & Interests List

immunology

cancer

immunotheapy

Top articles of Andrew Pardoll

Comparing anti-tumor and anti-self immunity in a patient with melanoma receiving immune checkpoint blockade

BackgroundTumor regression following immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) is often associated with immune-related adverse events (irAEs), marked by inflammation in non-cancerous tissues. This study was undertaken to investigate the functional relationship between anti-tumor and anti-self immunity, to facilitate irAE management while promoting anti-tumor immunity.MethodsMultiple biopsies from tumor and inflamed tissues were collected from a patient with melanoma experiencing both tumor regression and irAEs on ICB, who underwent rapid autopsy. Immune cells infiltrating melanoma lesions and inflamed normal tissues were subjected to gene expression profiling with multiplex qRT-PCR for 122 candidate genes. Subsequently, immunohistochemistry was conducted to assess the expression of 14 candidate markers of immune cell subsets and checkpoints. TCR-beta sequencing was used to explore T cell …

Authors

Shuming Chen,Tracee L McMiller,Abha Soni,Farah Succaria,John-William Sidhom,Laura C Cappelli,Livia A Casciola-Rosen,Isaac R Morales,Preethi Sankaran,Alan E Berger,Julie Stein Deutsch,Qingfeng C Zhu,Robert A Anders,Jody E Hooper,Drew M Pardoll,Evan J Lipson,Janis M Taube,Suzanne L Topalian

Journal

Journal of translational medicine

Published Date

2024/3/5

CCR2 and CCR5 co-inhibition modulates immunosuppressive myeloid milieu in glioma and synergizes with anti-PD-1 therapy

Immunotherapy has revolutionized the treatment of cancers. Reinvigorating lymphocytes with checkpoint blockade has become a cornerstone of immunotherapy for multiple tumor types, but the treatment of glioblastoma has not yet shown clinical efficacy. A major hurdle to treat GBM with checkpoint blockade is the high degree of myeloid-mediated immunosuppression in brain tumors that limits CD8 T-cell activity. A potential strategy to improve anti-tumor efficacy against glioma is to use myeloid-modulating agents to target immunosuppressive cells, such as myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in the tumor microenvironment. We found that the co-inhibition of the chemokine receptors CCR2 and CCR5 in murine model of glioma improves the survival and synergizes robustly with anti-PD-1 therapy. Moreover, the treatment specifically reduced the infiltration of monocytic-MDSCs (M-MDSCs) into brain tumors and …

Authors

Ayush Pant,Brandon Hwa-Lin Bergsneider,Siddhartha Srivastava,Timothy Kim,Aanchal Jain,Sadhana Bom,Pavan Shah,Nivedha Kannapadi,Kisha Patel,John Choi,Kwang Bog Cho,Rohit Verma,Caren Yu-Ju Wu,Henry Brem,Betty Tyler,Drew M Pardoll,Christina Jackson,Michael Lim

Journal

OncoImmunology

Published Date

2024/12/31

Allergy History and Immunotherapy Response in Patients With Recurrent/Metastatic Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Objective This study examines the association between patient‐reported allergy history and immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) response in patients with recurrent or metastatic head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (RMHNSCC). Study Design Retrospective cohort study. Setting Academic tertiary care hospital. Methods Data were collected from the electronic medical records on baseline age, sex, allergy history, human papillomavirus status, T‐stage, N‐stage, smoking status, and survival for patients with and without an allergy history. The primary outcome was ICI response defined as complete or partial response by the RECIST criteria. Chi‐square and logistic regression analyses were conducted to compare rates and odds of ICI response. Kaplan‐Meier analyses were used to compare survival between groups. Results Our study included 52 patients with an allergy history and 36 patients without an …

Authors

Hosam H Alkhatib,Christopher A Maroun,Meytal Guller,Dylan J Cooper,Evan S Wu,David W Eisele,Carole Fakhry,Drew Pardoll,Tanguy Y Seiwert,Gangcai Zhu,Rajarsi Mandal

Journal

Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery

Published Date

2024/3

Targeting the activin receptor 1C on CD4+ T cells for cancer immunotherapy

Activins, members of the TGF-beta superfamily, have been isolated and identified in the endocrine system, but have not been substantially investigated in the context of the immune system and endocrine-unrelated cancers. Here, we demonstrated that tumor-bearing mice had elevated systemic activin levels, which correlated directly with tumor burden. Likewise, cancer patients have elevated plasma activin levels compared to healthy controls. We observed that both tumor and immune cells could be sources of activins. Importantly, our in vitro studies suggest that activins promote differentiation of naïve CD4+ cells into Foxp3-expressing induced regulatory T cells (Tregs), particularly when TGF-beta was limited in the culture medium. Database and qRT-PCR analysis of sorted major immune cell subsets in mice revealed that activin receptor 1c (ActRIC) was uniquely expressed on Tregs and that both ActRIC and …

Authors

Ying Zheng,Andriana Lebid,Liam Chung,Juan Fu,Xiaoxu Wang,Andrea Otrocol,Jelani C Zarif,Hong Yu,Nicolas J Llosa,Drew M Pardoll

Journal

Oncoimmunology

Published Date

2024/12/31

Circulating cancer-specific CD8 T cell frequency is associated with response to PD-1 blockade in Merkel cell carcinoma

Understanding cancer immunobiology has been hampered by difficulty identifying cancer-specific T cells. Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) causes most Merkel cell carcinomas (MCCs). All patients with virus-driven MCC express MCPyV oncoproteins, facilitating identification of virus (cancer)-specific T cells. We studied MCPyV-specific T cells from 27 patients with MCC using MCPyV peptide-HLA-I multimers, 26-color flow cytometry, single-cell transcriptomics, and T cell receptor (TCR) sequencing. In a prospective clinical trial, higher circulating MCPyV-specific CD8 T cell frequency before anti-PD-1 treatment was strongly associated with 2-year recurrence-free survival (75% if detectable, 0% if undetectable, p = 0.0018; ClinicalTrial.gov: NCT02488759). Intratumorally, such T cells were typically present, but their frequency did not significantly associate with response. Circulating MCPyV-specific CD8 T cells had …

Authors

Thomas Pulliam,Saumya Jani,Lichen Jing,Heeju Ryu,Ana Jojic,Carolyn Shasha,Jiajia Zhang,Rima Kulikauskas,Candice Church,Charlie Garnett-Benson,Ted Gooley,Aude Chapuis,Kelly Paulson,Kellie N Smith,Drew M Pardoll,Evan W Newell,David M Koelle,Suzanne L Topalian,Paul Nghiem

Journal

Cell Reports Medicine

Published Date

2024/2/20

TRBC1-targeting antibody–drug conjugates for the treatment of T cell cancers

Antibody and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell-mediated targeted therapies have improved survival in patients with solid and haematologic malignancies 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. Adults with T cell leukaemias and lymphomas, collectively called T cell cancers, have short survival 10, 11 and lack such targeted therapies. Thus, T cell cancers particularly warrant the development of CAR T cells and antibodies to improve patient outcomes. Preclinical studies showed that targeting T cell receptor β-chain constant region 1 (TRBC1) can kill cancerous T cells while preserving sufficient healthy T cells to maintain immunity 12, making TRBC1 an attractive target to treat T cell cancers. However, the first-in-human clinical trial of anti-TRBC1 CAR T cells reported a low response rate and unexplained loss of anti-TRBC1 CAR T cells 13, 14. Here we demonstrate that CAR T cells are lost due to killing by the patient’s normal T …

Authors

Tushar D Nichakawade,Jiaxin Ge,Brian J Mog,Bum Seok Lee,Alexander H Pearlman,Michael S Hwang,Sarah R DiNapoli,Nicolas Wyhs,Nikita Marcou,Stephanie Glavaris,Maximilian F Konig,Sandra B Gabelli,Evangeline Watson,Cole Sterling,Nina Wagner-Johnston,Sima Rozati,Lode Swinnen,Ephraim Fuchs,Drew M Pardoll,Kathy Gabrielson,Nickolas Papadopoulos,Chetan Bettegowda,Kenneth W Kinzler,Shibin Zhou,Surojit Sur,Bert Vogelstein,Suman Paul

Journal

Nature

Published Date

2024/4

Neurotrophic factor Neuritin modulates T cell electrical and metabolic state for the balance of tolerance and immunity

The adaptive T cell response is accompanied by continuous rewiring of the T cell's electric and metabolic state. Ion channels and nutrient transporters integrate bioelectric and biochemical signals from the environment, setting cellular electric and metabolic states. Divergent electric and metabolic states contribute to T cell immunity or tolerance. Here, we report that neuritin (Nrn1) contributes to tolerance development by modulating regulatory and effector T cell function. Nrn1 expression in regulatory T cells promotes its expansion and suppression function, while expression in the T effector cell dampens its inflammatory response. Nrn1 deficiency causes dysregulation of ion channel and nutrient transporter expression in Treg and effector T cells, resulting in divergent metabolic outcomes and impacting autoimmune disease progression and recovery. These findings identify a novel immune function of the neurotrophic factor Nrn1 in regulating the T cell metabolic state in a cell context-dependent manner and modulating the outcome of an immune response.

Authors

Hong Yu,Hiroshi Nishio,Joseph Barbi,Marisa Mitchell-Flack,Paolo DA Vignali,Ying Zheng,Andriana Lebid,Kwang-Yu Chang,Juan Fu,Makenzie Higgins,Ching-Tai Huang,Xuehong Zhang,Zhiguang Li,Lee Blosser,Ada Tam,Charles G Drake,Drew M Pardoll

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2024

Modulation of MAITs by the tumor microbiome in anti-PD1 treated cancers

Mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cells are innate like T-cells that recognize non-peptide metabolite antigens presented on monomorphic MHC related-1 (MR1) making them an attractive off the shelf tool for cancer immunotherapy. In this study, we investigate the function of MAITs in the tumor microenvironment of neoadjuvant anti-PD1 treated lung cancer patients (NCT02259621)). Paired single cell RNA/TCR sequencing analysis revealed an oligoclonal expansion of MAITs comprising of canonical TRAV1-2+ and non-canonical MAITs TRAV1-2-. TCR capture from canonical MAIT clonotypes confirmed their in vitro recognition of 5-OP-RU, bacteria derived riboflavin derivative as well as MR1 dependent recognition of live bacteria present in the tumor. However, the nature of antigens recognized by non-canonical MAITs remains poorly understood. On mining transcriptional profiles of MAITs, we observed that …

Authors

Pakhi Birla,Lansaol Yang,Cynthia Sears,Fyza Shaikh,Drew Pardoll,Franck Housseau

Journal

Cancer Research

Published Date

2024/3/22

Professor FAQs

What is Andrew Pardoll's h-index at Johns Hopkins University?

The h-index of Andrew Pardoll has been 111 since 2020 and 168 in total.

What are Andrew Pardoll's research interests?

The research interests of Andrew Pardoll are: immunology, cancer, immunotheapy

What is Andrew Pardoll's total number of citations?

Andrew Pardoll has 179,513 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Andrew Pardoll?

The co-authors of Andrew Pardoll are Bert Vogelstein, Lieping Chen, Richard Schulick, William G. Nelson, Henry Brem, Robert A. Anders.

Co-Authors

H-index: 289
Bert Vogelstein

Bert Vogelstein

Johns Hopkins University

H-index: 142
Lieping Chen

Lieping Chen

Yale University

H-index: 120
Richard Schulick

Richard Schulick

University of Colorado Denver

H-index: 107
William G. Nelson

William G. Nelson

Johns Hopkins University

H-index: 101
Henry Brem

Henry Brem

Johns Hopkins University

H-index: 95
Robert A. Anders

Robert A. Anders

Johns Hopkins University

academic-engine

Useful Links