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The OrganaBio Blog

Sarah Alter

Sarah Alter
Sarah Alter, Ph.D., has 15 years of immunology experience which includes autoimmunity, cancer, and infectious disease. Before OrganaBio, Sarah was responsible for leading a team of scientists at Altor Bioscience. Sarah received her Doctorate from the University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine. She is also a registered Patent Agent. Her work was published in many peer-reviewed journals and presented at national and international meetings.

Recent Posts

A Brief Introduction to Immunology

Posted by Sarah Alter on September 21, 2020

Breakthroughs in immunotherapy, such as chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy  and checkpoint inhibition antibodies, have led to a rejuvenated interest in the human immune system. Insights from basic immunology research drive approaches and innovations in the exploding immunotherapy field (Figure 1). Studies of tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes helped shed light on the complex tumor microenvironment and the mechanisms of cancer immune evasion. Discoveries of neo-antigens, unique biomarkers, and optimization of combination immunotherapy (Figure 1) have led to improved efficacy and patient outcomes. However, we still don’t fully understand the complex relationship between immunity and disease, especially when it comes to cell activation, cytotoxicity, regulation, and memory.

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Topics: Immunotherapy, Immune Cells, B cells, Allogeneic Cell Therapy, T cells, Hematopoietic Stem Cells, NK cells, immunomodulation

Immune Cell-Based Therapies for COVID-19

Posted by Sarah Alter on August 20, 2020

Immune Cell-based Therapies for COVID-19: Current Clinical Trial Landscape Data

One element of COVID-19 is a hyper-response of the patient’s immune system, which in turn leads to lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome.1 At the same time, appropriate immune response is decreased due to immune evasion by the virus. 1,2 Treatment with immune cell-based adoptive therapies is being investigated to combat inflammation to fight SARS-CoV-2 (i.e., T regulatory and NK cells).2 Here, we review the current clinical trial landscape utilizing immune cell-based therapies.

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Topics: Immune Cells, Allogeneic Cell Therapy, covid-19

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