Translational Immunotherapy Group
Prof. Dr. Niels Halama
Integrating broad aspects of immunological parameters
for the successful development and optimization
of therapeutic approaches in clinical translation
OUR RESEARCH
Why it matters
Cancer immunotherapy has revolutionized oncology. As a standard of care for some cancer entities, broad application in the treatment of patients with hematologic and solid tumors has become a reality. Identification of patients for a specific immunomodulatory approach, identification of successful combinatorial immunotherapy (or combination with chemotherapy, radiation or other intervention) are all important next steps to be developed. Utilizing new model systems and informative trial designs, the connection of basic research and translational efforts make this area highly diverse and challenging, but show the potential for a future of personalized therapy in oncology.
HALAMA LAB
Lab focus
Cancer immunology has moved from scientific insight into practice changing standards in oncology. Robust scientific evidence has provided the entry to successful clinical translation.
The division of translational immunotherapy is integrating broad aspects of immunological parameters (i.e. tissue-specific regulation, microbiome, metabolic regulation, genomic factors etc.) for the successful development and optimization of therapeutic approaches in clinical translation.
An important part is to better understand the regulation of immune responses within tissues of solid tumors. Dedicated biomarker research for the identification of relevant immune cell phenotypes is also a decisive factor like understanding the cytokine regulatory network in specific disease situations. Deeper insights into the situation in human patients are provided by our fully-human preclinical Explant Model System, which is able to recapitulate the microenvironment of individual patients.
In addition, new computational model systems, databases and machine learning (“artificial intelligence”) allow to further elaborate our understanding of the regulation of immune responses. Especially our explant model systems open new possibilities in development of new therapies. Newly developed therapies have been successfully translated into the clinic and combinatorial immunomodulation based on adaptive clinical trial protocols with biomarker driven selection programs are now being implemented.
Group Leader Translational Immunotherapy
Prof. Dr. Niels Halama
[since 2023] Head of Division, HI-TRON Mainz
[2019- 2023] Head of the Department of Translational Immunotherapy, DKFZ
[2015 – 2019] Group leader, University of Heidelberg, NCT
[2008- 2023] Scientist at NCT; TIGA; DKFZ
[2005 – 2006] Resident and Fellow, NCT
[1999 - 2005] Student at University of Heidelberg
[2012] Best Poster Award AACR (unter mehr als 10.000 Postern von den Gutachtern bestens bewertet)
[2012] Forschungspreis der Dr. Feldbausch Stiftung
[2009] Scientific Excellence Certificate & Best Poster Award, International Cancer Microenvironment Society (ICMS)
[2007] Young Investigator Award, Medizinische Fakultät der Universität Heidelberg
[1998] Stipendium der "Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes"
[2012 - present] Deutsche Gesellschaft für Immunologie (DGfI)
[2009-present] American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), USA (AACR-sponsored membership), member of the Cancer Immunology Working Group (CIMM)
[2011 - heute] International Society for Translational Medicine
[2009 - 2012] National Society for Histotechnology (NSH), USA
[2007 - heut] International Cancer Microenvironment Society (ICMS)
[2003 - 2006] Editor and Author, Section "Endocrinology” and “Neurology", for Medicle (www.medicle.org)
HI-TRON Mainz DKFZ
AG Halama
Obere Zahlbacherstr. 63
Building 911
55131 Mainz
Team
Marion Drechsel
Team Assistant
Dr. Silke Grauling-Halama
Scientist
Alicia Höflich
Technitian
Xu Holtkotte
Scientist
Alexandra Pöchmann
Doctorate
Ulrike Prüfer
Scientist
Dr. Meggy Suarez-Carmona
Scientist
Silke Will
Technitian
Jana Wolf
Technitian
Xin-Wen Zhang
Scientist
Selected publications
- Hamid R, Alaziz M, Mahal A S, Ashton A W, Halama N, ; Jaeger D, Jiao X, Pestell R G. The Role and Therapeutic Targeting of CCR5 in Breast Cancer. Cells. 2023; 12(18): 2237
- Page D B, Broeckx G, Jahangir C A, Halama N, et al. Spatial analyses of immune cell infiltration in cancer: current methods and future directions. A report of the International Immuno-Oncology Biomarker Working Group on Breast Cancer. The journal of pathology. 2023; 260(5): 514-532.
- Thagaard J, Broeckx G, Page D B, Halama N, et al. Pitfalls in machine learning-based assessment of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in breast cancer: a report of the international immuno-oncology biomarker working group.The journal of pathology. 2023; 260(5): 498-513 (2023).
- Ahmed A, Köhler S, Klotz R, Giese N, Hackert, T, Springfeld C, Jäger D, Halama N. Sex Differences in the Systemic and Local Immune Response of Pancreatic Cancer Patients.
Cancers. 2023; 15(6):1815. - Probst P, Merz D C, Joos M C, Ahmed A, Feisst M, Klotz R, Halama N, et al. The EVIglance randomized clinical trial: a new standard for answering a clinical question. The British journal of surgery 2323; 110(4): 515-517 (2023)
- Denkinger C M, Janssen M, Schäkel U, Halama N, et al. Anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibody-containing plasma improves outcome in patients with hematologic or solid cancer and severe COVID-19: a randomized clinical trial. Nature cancer 2023; 4(1): 96-107
Lab News
12/2023: Start of the new group at HI-TRON Mainz.