(Press-News.org) A multidisciplinary team of University of Cincinnati Cancer Center researchers has received a $40,000 Ride Cincinnati grant to study a delayed release preparation, or wafer, of an immunostimulatory molecule to stimulate the central nervous system (CNS) immune system after surgery to remove glioblastoma, a form of primary brain cancer.
Jonathan Forbes, MD, the project’s principal investigator, explained glioblastomas are the most common type of primary cancer of the brain. Only 5% to 7% of patients with a glioblastoma survive five years after diagnosis.
Effective treatments for these tumors have been hard to identify for decades due to two primary challenges:
- The blood brain barrier that usually protects the brain from harmful bacteria also prevents high-molecular weight agent medications from reaching tumor cells.
- The CNS is associated with a “cold” immune microenvironment, making it harder to stimulate an immune response to kill cancer cells that infiltrate the normal brain and are not able to be removed with surgery.
Currently, neurosurgeons can use wafers that release either radiation or general cell-killing agents, but Forbes said these treatments are nonspecific, expensive and not found to provide much benefit to improve patient outcomes.
“After surgery to remove the tumor, we have unencumbered access to a resection cavity that we know microscopically is invaded by tumor cells,” said Forbes, associate professor and residency program director in the Department of Neurosurgery in UC’s College of Medicine and a UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute neurosurgeon. “Why not use this access to enhance the central nervous system’s ability to clear residual tumor cells?”
Medical student Beatrice Zucca explained the first step of the project was to determine what immune-stimulating molecule was safe and powerful enough to activate the brain’s immune system. The team landed on a protein called Interleukin-15 (IL-15).
“IL-15 is exceptionally effective at activating immune populations that are critical for recognizing and killing cancer cells,” said Zucca, who worked as a neurooncology research fellow under Forbes’ mentorship last fall. “It improves their survival, expands their numbers and enhances their cell-killing function, making it an ideal candidate for driving a coordinated immune attack against a highly-resistant cancer like glioblastoma.”
The grant funding will allow the team to test how the immunostimulatory preparation actually stimulates the immune system using glioblastoma-on-a-chip technology developed in partnership with Ricardo Barrile, PhD.
“An organ-on-a-chip is a miniaturized model of a living organ engineered to incorporate the minimal biological elements needed to recreate specific disease conditions,” said Barrile, assistant professor of biomedical engineering in UC’s College of Engineering and Applied Science. “Instead of testing drugs on flat plastic dishes or relying solely on animal models — which often fail to predict human results due to genetic disparities — we use 3D bioprinting and microfluidics to build a living model of a human organ.”
Barrile’s lab was the first-ever to build a model that integrates human brain cells with glioblastoma cells via a combination of 3D printing and bioprinting. The glioblastoma-on-a-chip model also includes a bioprinted “blood vessel” channel to mimic how drugs move from the bloodstream to the brain and a channel to replicate the immune system.
“This provides a ‘human-relevant’ platform to test therapies safely and accurately before they reach a patient,” Barrile said. “Integrating the immune system was the missing piece and is the key to capture the natural composition of glioblastoma, which in a patient is typically made up to 30% of immune cells. These cells are typically lost during in vitro cell culture.”
While this phase of the project will focus on how the wafer affects the immune response to glioblastoma cells, it could also help move toward the validation of Barrile’s glioblastoma-on-a-chip as a personalized medicine tool.
“We are building a platform that could eventually predict a specific patient's response to immunotherapy. By using a patient’s own cells on our chip, we can identify the best therapeutic approach for that specific individual before treatment even begins,” Barrile said. “We are essentially moving from a one-size-fits-all approach to a tailored-to-you strategy.”
Forbes noted that in addition to this research, the UC Brain Tumor Center is also researching an approach to overcome the limitations of the blood-brain barrier through navigated focused ultrasound that is able to transiently open the barrier.
“It’s very exciting that we’re actually working on both fronts at the University of Cincinnati, trying to find better treatments for glioblastoma,” Forbes said.
Zucca said the multidisciplinary research has been deeply meaningful, both scientifically and personally.
“It brings together molecular immunology, biomedical engineering and clinical neurooncology in a way that has profoundly influenced my development as a researcher,” Zucca said. “Most importantly, it represents a tangible step toward therapies that leverage the patient’s own immune system to combat one of the most aggressive cancers known.”
Other collaborators on the project include Kevin Haworth and David Plas.
END
University of Cincinnati Cancer Center tests treatment using ‘glioblastoma-on-a-chip’ and wafer technology
Ride Cincinnati grant funds preclinical research
2026-02-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
IPO pay gap hiding in plain sight: Study reveals hidden cost of ‘cheap stock’
2026-02-03
Before the opening bell ever rings on a company’s initial public offerings, some of the executives may already be sitting on a quiet windfall.
An IPO can act as a source of “cheap money” because of how stock options are valued before a company goes public. In private firms, options are supposed to be issued “at the money,” with exercise prices reflecting the fair value of the shares at the time of the grant. But without a public market price, those valuations rely on models and judgment, giving companies wide discretion.
When the ...
It has been clarified that a fungus living in our body can make melanoma more aggressive
2026-02-03
Cancer is one of the causes responsible for the most deaths worldwide; in 2020, for example, it resulted in ten million deaths. It has been estimated that micro-organism infections caused between 13-18% of these cases. Until now, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has classified thirteen micro-organisms as carcinogenic, which include viruses, bacteria and parasites. However, recent studies have shown that there are other micro-organism types linked to cancer; some of them are fungi.
The Candida albicans fungus is one of them: “This fungus is part of ...
Paid sick leave as disease prevention
2026-02-03
Home service workers—those who provide care, inspections, or repairs inside private homes—can often lack paid sick leave, making illness a direct financial risk. New research from George Mason University College of Public Health suggests paid sick leave should be understood not only as an employee benefit, but as a preventive health intervention.
In the study led by assistant nursing professor Suyoung Kwon, paid sick leave was linked to lower perceived infection risk, reduced job stress, and higher job satisfaction. During the early months of COVID-19, the research team surveyed more than 1,600 home service workers in South Korea, including home nurses, childcare ...
Did we just see a black hole explode? Physicists at UMass Amherst think so—and it could explain (almost) everything
2026-02-03
AMHERST, Mass. — In 2023, a subatomic particle called a neutrino crashed into Earth with such a high amount of energy that it should have been impossible. In fact, there are no known sources anywhere in the universe capable of producing such energy—100,000 times more than the highest-energy particle ever produced by the Large Hadron Collider, the world’s most powerful particle accelerator. However, a team of physicists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst recently hypothesized that something like this could happen when a special kind of black hole, called a “quasi-extremal primordial black hole,” explodes.
In new research published by Physical Review ...
Study highlights stressed faults in potential shale gas region in South Africa
2026-02-03
A swarm of small earthquakes within the Karoo Basin in South Africa has revealed a critically stressed fault that could be perturbed by potential shale gas exploration in the area, according to a new report in Seismological Research Letters.
The analysis by Benjamin Whitehead of the University of Cape Town and colleagues concludes that the Karoo microseismicity occurred along a buried fault that may extend through sedimentary layers to the crystalline bedrock, which would increase its vulnerability to stresses produced ...
Human vaginal microbiome is shaped by competition for resources
2026-02-03
The vaginal microbiota is shaped by bacterial access to specific nutritional resources, influencing health outcomes. This study uses a resource-based model supported by clinical data to identify key ecological mechanisms underlying microbiota composition and potential bacterial vaginosis interventions.
In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Biology: https://plos.io/4qaZ2kt
Article title: Resource landscape shapes the composition and stability of the human vaginal microbiota
Author countries: France, United States
Funding: Research reported in this publication was supported by the Fondation pour ...
Test strip breakthrough for accessible diagnosis
2026-02-03
A research team led by La Trobe University has developed a single-use test strip which could ultimately change how diseases like cancer are diagnosed.
The research, published in the journal Small, used enzymes to boost an electrical signal to detect disease-indicative molecules, also known as microRNAs.
The biosensor works in a similar way to glucose test strips but senior researcher Dr Saimon Moraes Silva said it was much more sensitive, detecting microRNAs in blood plasma at ultra-low concentrations ...
George Coukos appointed director of new Ludwig Laboratory for Cell Therapy
2026-02-03
FEBRUARY 2, 2026, NEW YORK – It is with great pleasure that we announce that the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research has established the Ludwig Laboratory for Cell Therapy at Weill Cornell Medicine’s Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center. The laboratory is directed by former Ludwig Lausanne Director George Coukos, a physician-scientist and global authority on tumor immunology and cellular immunotherapy.
Coukos returns to the U.S. following an extraordinarily productive tenure over the past decade as the founding director of the current Lausanne Branch and of the Department of ...
SCAI expert opinion explores ‘wire-free’ angiography-derived physiology for coronary assessment
2026-02-03
WASHINGTON—A new expert opinion from the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography & Interventions (SCAI) examines the evolving role of angiography-derived physiology (ADP), a wire-free method for coronary physiologic assessment that applies computational modeling or artificial intelligence (AI) to standard coronary angiographic images for the assessment and management of coronary artery disease.
Published in JSCAI, “Angiography-Derived Physiology for Coronary Artery Disease Assessment: Expert Opinion from ...
‘Masculinity crisis’: Influencers on social media promote low testosterone to young men, study finds
2026-02-03
Young men are being encouraged to undergo testosterone testing and start hormone therapy through Instagram and TikTok content that promotes unproven health claims while downplaying medical risks, a new international study has found.
The study was done at the University of Sydney’s Faculty of Medicine and Health, and led by Emma Grundtvig Gram, a visiting PhD student from the University of Copenhagen. It found that influencer marketing on social media is normalising unnecessary testosterone testing ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
How rice plants tell head from toe during early growth
Scientists design solar-responsive biochar that accelerates environmental cleanup
Construction of a localized immune niche via supramolecular hydrogel vaccine to elicit durable and enhanced immunity against infectious diseases
Deep learning-based discovery of tetrahydrocarbazoles as broad-spectrum antitumor agents and click-activated strategy for targeted cancer therapy
DHL-11, a novel prieurianin-type limonoid isolated from Munronia henryi, targeting IMPDH2 to inhibit triple-negative breast cancer
Discovery of SARS-CoV-2 PLpro inhibitors and RIPK1 inhibitors with synergistic antiviral efficacy in a mouse COVID-19 model
Neg-entropy is the true drug target for chronic diseases
Oxygen-boosted dual-section microneedle patch for enhanced drug penetration and improved photodynamic and anti-inflammatory therapy in psoriasis
Early TB treatment reduced deaths from sepsis among people with HIV
Palmitoylation of Tfr1 enhances platelet ferroptosis and liver injury in heat stroke
Structure-guided design of picomolar-level macrocyclic TRPC5 channel inhibitors with antidepressant activity
Therapeutic drug monitoring of biologics in inflammatory bowel disease: An evidence-based multidisciplinary guidelines
New global review reveals integrating finance, technology, and governance is key to equitable climate action
New study reveals cyanobacteria may help spread antibiotic resistance in estuarine ecosystems
Around the world, children’s cooperative behaviors and norms converge toward community-specific norms in middle childhood, Boston College researchers report
How cultural norms shape childhood development
University of Phoenix research finds AI-integrated coursework strengthens student learning and career skills
Next generation genetics technology developed to counter the rise of antibiotic resistance
Ochsner Health hospitals named Best-in-State 2026
A new window into hemodialysis: How optical sensors could make treatment safer
High-dose therapy had lasting benefits for infants with stroke before or soon after birth
‘Energy efficiency’ key to mountain birds adapting to changing environmental conditions
Scientists now know why ovarian cancer spreads so rapidly in the abdomen
USF Health launches nation’s first fully integrated institute for voice, hearing and swallowing care and research
Why rethinking wellness could help students and teachers thrive
Seabirds ingest large quantities of pollutants, some of which have been banned for decades
When Earth’s magnetic field took its time flipping
Americans prefer to screen for cervical cancer in-clinic vs. at home
Rice lab to help develop bioprinted kidneys as part of ARPA-H PRINT program award
Researchers discover ABCA1 protein’s role in releasing molecular brakes on solid tumor immunotherapy
[Press-News.org] University of Cincinnati Cancer Center tests treatment using ‘glioblastoma-on-a-chip’ and wafer technologyRide Cincinnati grant funds preclinical research