Multiscale Models for Understanding Tumor-Immune Dynamics and Optimizing Immune and Targeted Therapy Schedules

-
Type
Abstract
Increased understanding of molecular mechanisms that mediate the pathogenesis of cancers is leading to careful manipulation of these pathways and the development of new cell-specific approaches to cancer therapy.  At the same time, advances in cancer immunotherapy have led to the reemergence of their clinical use and effectiveness.  Using data-driven computational models is a powerful and practical way to optimize novel combinations of these two very different therapeutic options for clinical cancer treatment.  This talk will highlight a suite of multiscale mathematical models designed to optimize targeted drug treatment strategies, alone and in combination with immunotherapy.    Together with existing and newly generated experimental data, these mathematical models are poised to improve the ability to combine promising drugs for clinical trials and reduce the time and costs associated with transitioning novel therapeutic approaches from "equations to bench to bedside."
Description

Colloquium
Trachette Jackson
Thursday, Nov. 3
4:30pm
WXLR 021 (lower level)
If you cannot attend in person, join via Zoom:
https://asu.zoom.us/j/83047548598?pwd=S2dQSVhzNko1bE1WS0UzSEdPdU94UT09

Speaker

Trachette (Tracé) Jackson
Assistant Vice President for Research - DEI Initiatives

University Diversity and Social Transformation Professor
Professor of Mathematics 
University of Michigan

Location
WXLR 021 (lower level)