(Press-News.org) A new UCLA investigator-initiated study sponsored by the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center has found that adding immunotherapy to standard chemotherapy before surgery is safe and shows promise for some patients with borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer, a disease that has historically been difficult to treat. The findings, published in Nature Communications, show that while the combination did not produce a clear survival advantage for most patients, a notable subset experienced unusually deep and durable responses. It also helped some patients live long enough to reach surgery, shrank tumors and produced encouraging survival outcomes. The study also revealed immune changes that may limit how well immunotherapy works in pancreatic cancer, offering important clues for how future treatment strategies could be refined to further improve patient outcomes.
Why it matters
Pancreatic cancer remains one of the deadliest cancers, with few effective treatment options and limited benefit from immunotherapy, which has transformed care for many other cancer types. In diseases such as lung and breast cancer, giving immunotherapy alongside chemotherapy before surgery has significantly improved outcomes, but this strategy has rarely been tested in pancreatic cancer. By focusing on patients with borderline-resectable disease, a group for whom surgery is possible but technically challenging, this study provides an opportunity to evaluate whether immunotherapy can improve surgical success and survival, while also revealing how the tumor’s immune environment responds. These insights could help guide the development of more effective, tailored treatment strategies for a cancer that urgently needs better options.
What the study did
Researchers conducted a single-arm Phase 1b/2 clinical trial in 28 patients with borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer. Patients received modified FOLFIRINOX chemotherapy combined with the immunotherapy drug nivolumab before surgery. This approach allowed investigators to directly analyze tumor tissue removed during surgery and compare it with pretreatment biopsies and historical samples from patients who received chemotherapy alone. The team used advanced techniques, including gene expression analysis, immunohistochemistry and spatial transcriptomics, to examine how the treatment altered the tumor’s immune landscape.
What they found
Most patients tolerated the combination treatment well and were able to proceed to surgery, with no serious immune-related side effects or treatment-related delays.
79% of patients went on to surgical resection
All patients who underwent surgery had their tumors successfully removed
86% had clean margins
50% had no cancer detected in their lymph nodes
While overall survival outcomes were similar to those typically achieved with chemotherapy alone, a subset of patients experienced unusually strong and durable responses:
9% had complete disappearance of detectable cancer at the time of surgery
Another 9% had near-complete responses
Immune analyses showed that immunotherapy increased immune activity within tumors, including higher levels of cancer-killing CD8 T cells. At the same time, treatment was associated with changes in the tumor immune environment marked by disorganized immune cell clusters and an accumulation of plasma cells and exhausted T cells, which are immune cells that are activated but less effective at attacking cancer. These findings may help explain why immunotherapy often triggers immune activation without translating into long-term tumor control in pancreatic cancer and point to strategies for improving future combination therapies.
The impact
While adding immunotherapy to standard chemotherapy did not produce a clear survival advantage for most patients with borderline-resectable pancreatic cancer, a subset of patients experienced unusually deep and durable responses, including complete tumor regression and long-term disease control, suggesting that immunotherapy may benefit select individuals. The study also provides important insight into why immune-based treatments have shown limited success in pancreatic cancer, revealing that while immunotherapy activates immune cells within tumors, it may also disrupt immune organization and promote immune exhaustion. Future research will focus on identifying patients most likely to benefit and developing strategies that better support effective, sustained anti-tumor immune responses.
“By testing this novel drug combination in the preoperative setting, we were able to directly compare pre-treatment biopsies with surgical resection specimens to better understand why the therapy works in some patients, and, just as importantly, why it does not in others, and what additional strategies might improve responses,” said senior author Dr. Timothy Donahue, chief of surgical oncology and professor of surgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. “Establishing this platform within the Agi Hirshberg Center for Pancreatic Diseases positions us to evaluate multiple new therapeutics in a systematic and translationally integrated way in the future.”
About the research team
The study’s first authors are Dr. Zev Wainberg, co-director of the UCLA Health GI Oncology Program, and Dr. Jason Link, associate professor of surgery at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. The senior author is Dr. Donahue, who is also the director of the UCLA Agi Hirshberg Center for Pancreatic Diseases. All are members of the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center. Other authors, all from UCLA, are Alykhan Premji, Serena Zheng, Michael Srienc, McKensie Hammons, Shineui Kim, Luyi Li, Zeyu Liu, Olga Tsvetkova, Evan Abt, Lee Rosen, Stephen Kim, Jonathan King, O. Joe Hines, Mark Girgis, Saeed Sadeghi, Olga Olevsky, Deborah Wong, Lisa Yonemoto, Ann Marie Siney, Kim Kelly, Christine Kivork, Chi-Hong Tseng, Caius Radu and David Dawson.
END
Immunotherapy plus chemotherapy before surgery shows promise for pancreatic cancer
UCLA study finds treatment is safe, helps more patients reach surgery and reveals new insights into the tumor’s immune response
2026-02-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
A “smart fluid” you can reconfigure with temperature
2026-02-17
Imagine a “smart fluid” whose internal structure can be rearranged just by changing temperature.
In a new study in Matter, researchers report a way to overcome a long-standing limitation in a class of “smart fluids” called nematic liquid crystal microcolloids, allowing for reconfigurable self-assembly of micrometer-sized particles dispersed in a nematic liquid crystal host.
The persistent challenge has been that conventional microparticles can induce strong distortions and topological defects in the liquid crystal, which in turn can drive irreversible sticking and clumping, making ...
New research suggests myopia is driven by how we use our eyes indoors
2026-02-17
New York, NY — For years, rising rates of myopia — or nearsightedness — have been widely attributed to increased screen time, especially among children and young adults. But new research from scientists at the SUNY College of Optometry suggests the story may be more complicated — and more human. In a new study to be published in Cell Reports, researchers propose that myopia may be driven less by screens themselves and more by a common indoor visual habit: prolonged close-up focus in low-light environments, which limits how much light reaches ...
Scientists develop first-of-its-kind antibody to block Epstein Barr virus
2026-02-17
SEATTLE – February 17, 2026 – Fred Hutch Cancer Center scientists reached a crucial milestone in blocking Epstein Barr virus (EBV), a pathogen estimated to infect 95% of the global population that is linked to multiple types of cancer, neurodegenerative diseases and other chronic health conditions.
Using mice with human antibody genes, the research team developed new genetically human monoclonal antibodies that prevent two key antigens on the surface of the virus from binding to and entering human immune cells. Published in Cell Reports Medicine, the ...
With the right prompts, AI chatbots analyze big data accurately
2026-02-17
In an early test of how AI can be used to decipher large amounts of health data, researchers at UC San Francisco and Wayne State University found that generative AI tools could perform orders of magnitude faster — and in some cases better than computer science teams that had spent months poring over the data.
Teams of scientists and scientists paired with AI were given the same task: predict preterm birth based on data from more than 1,000 pregnant women.
Even a junior research duo composed of a master’s student at UCSF, Reuben Sarwal, and a high school ...
Leisure-time physical activity and cancer mortality among cancer survivors
2026-02-17
About The Study: In this analysis of 6 pooled cohorts, higher levels of moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA) after a cancer diagnosis were associated with lower risk of cancer mortality among people previously diagnosed with 1 of 7 cancers not commonly studied for their association with MVPA. These findings suggest that it is important for health care professionals to promote physical activity for longevity and overall health among people living with and beyond cancer.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Erika Rees-Punia, PhD, email erika.rees-punia@cancer.org.
To ...
Chronic kidney disease severity and risk of cognitive impairment
2026-02-17
About The Study: This cohort study of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) suggests that a more advanced CKD stage was associated with increased incidence of cognitive impairment. These findings underscore CKD severity as a risk factor for cognitive decline across the CKD spectrum.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Tanika N. Kelly, PhD, MPH, email tkelly5@uic.edu,
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.59834)
Editor’s ...
Research highlights from the first Multidisciplinary Radiopharmaceutical Therapy Symposium
2026-02-17
PALM DESERT, Ca., February 17, 2026 — New research highlighting the growing potential of radiopharmaceutical therapies (RPT) to improve outcomes for people with cancer will be presented at the inaugural Multidisciplinary Radiopharmaceutical Therapy Symposium, taking place in Palm Desert, California, and online starting today. Studies at the meeting, sponsored by the American Society for Radiation Oncology (ASTRO), span established uses of RPT and early signals for new indications, while also addressing what clinics need in place to safely offer these treatments as they move into ...
New guidelines from NCCN detail fundamental differences in cancer in children compared to adults
2026-02-17
PLYMOUTH MEETING, PA [February 17, 2026] — The National Comprehensive Cancer Network® (NCCN®) today published new NCCN Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology (NCCN Guidelines®) for Pediatric Soft Tissue Sarcomas. This is the 7th NCCN Guidelines® for a pediatric cancer, expanding the overall library to cover 91 topics in cancer care. The guidelines present the latest evidence-based, expert consensus-driven recommendations for nearly every type of cancer plus prevention, screening, survivorship, and supportive care. NCCN Guidelines are updated at least once a year and help cancer care providers worldwide ...
Four NYU faculty win Sloan Foundation research fellowships
2026-02-17
Four New York University faculty have been awarded fellowships from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation: Danique Jeurissen, an assistant professor of neural science, and Marvin Parasram, an assistant professor of chemistry, as well as Florian Schäfer and Joseph Tassarotti, assistant professors in NYU’s Courant Institute School of Mathematics, Computing, and Data Science.
“The Sloan Research Fellows are among the most promising early-career researchers in the US and Canada, already driving meaningful progress in their respective disciplines,” says Stacie Bloom, president and chief executive officer of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. “We look forward to seeing ...
Personal perception of body movement changes when using robotic prosthetics
2026-02-17
The way we understand the movement of our own bodies plays an important role when learning physical skills, from sports to dancing. But a new study finds this phenomenon works very differently for people learning to use robotic prosthetic devices.
“When people first start walking with a prosthetic leg, they think their bodies are moving more awkwardly than they really are,” says Helen Huang, corresponding author of a paper on the work. “With practice, as their performance improves, people still do a poor job of assessing how their bodies move, but they are inaccurate in a very ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Study finds early imaging after pediatric UTIs may do more harm than good
UC San Diego Health joins national research for maternal-fetal care
New biomarker predicts chemotherapy response in triple-negative breast cancer
Treatment algorithms featured in Brain Trauma Foundation’s update of guidelines for care of patients with penetrating traumatic brain injury
Over 40% of musicians experience tinnitus; hearing loss and hyperacusis also significantly elevated
Artificial intelligence predicts colorectal cancer risk in ulcerative colitis patients
Mayo Clinic installs first magnetic nanoparticle hyperthermia system for cancer research in the US
Calibr-Skaggs and Kainomyx launch collaboration to pioneer novel malaria treatments
JAX-NYSCF Collaborative and GSK announce collaboration to advance translational models for neurodegenerative disease research
Classifying pediatric brain tumors by liquid biopsy using artificial intelligence
Insilico Medicine initiates AI driven collaboration with leading global cancer center to identify novel targets for gastroesophageal cancers
Immunotherapy plus chemotherapy before surgery shows promise for pancreatic cancer
A “smart fluid” you can reconfigure with temperature
New research suggests myopia is driven by how we use our eyes indoors
Scientists develop first-of-its-kind antibody to block Epstein Barr virus
With the right prompts, AI chatbots analyze big data accurately
Leisure-time physical activity and cancer mortality among cancer survivors
Chronic kidney disease severity and risk of cognitive impairment
Research highlights from the first Multidisciplinary Radiopharmaceutical Therapy Symposium
New guidelines from NCCN detail fundamental differences in cancer in children compared to adults
Four NYU faculty win Sloan Foundation research fellowships
Personal perception of body movement changes when using robotic prosthetics
Study shows brain responses to wildlife images can forecast online engagement — and could help conservation messaging
Extreme heat and drought at flowering could put future wheat harvests at risk
Harlequin ichthyosis: a comprehensive review of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and management
Smithsonian planetary scientists discover recent tectonic activity on the Moon
Government censorship of Chinese chatbots
Incorporating a robotic leg into one’s body image
Brain imaging reveals how wildlife photos open donor wallets
Wiley to expand Advanced Portfolio
[Press-News.org] Immunotherapy plus chemotherapy before surgery shows promise for pancreatic cancerUCLA study finds treatment is safe, helps more patients reach surgery and reveals new insights into the tumor’s immune response