Events
Dissertation: Sini Luoma
Opponent: Professor emeritus Kari Remes, University of Turku
iCAN science seminar on Charting the intact breast tumour microenvironment
If you wish to meet with Dr.
Ali during his visit, please contact the host, Prof. Anniina Färkkilä (anniina.farkkila@helsinki.fi)
For students: if you are interested in joining a student lunch prior to the
seminar, please contact Iga Niemiec (iga.niemiec@helsinki.fi)
for more information.
Abstract: The diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer continues to
rely on decades-old techniques in traditional histopathology. Immunotherapy has
proved effective among some patients but not others, and this variation is poorly explained by
traditional assays. Using imaging mass cytometry – a technique that couples
antibodies conjugated to rare earth metal reporters and time-of-flight mass
spectrometry to infer epitope abundance at subcellular resolution – Dr. Ali’s group has shown that the
complexity of the TME can be reliably enumerated in situ and used to predict
response in a large, randomised trial of neoadjuvant immunotherapy in
triple-negative breast cancer. Moreover, the group’s research show how
immunotherapy remodels the
TME, and how resistant cancer cells endure treatment by analysing serial
samples collected over the treatment course. In his talk Dr. Ali will share
their results and offer some insights on the wider implications for spatial
cancer biology.
Minibio of the speaker
Dr. Ali is Leader of the Systems Cancer Pathology group, based at CRUK
Cambridge Institute, University of Cambridge, Associate Director for Clinical
Academic Training , and an Honorary Consultant Pathologist at Addenbrookes
hospital. He read medicine in Cardiff and began his training as a pathologist
there before moving to Cambridge to undertake a PhD in the quantitative
pathology and genomics of breast cancer, under the supervision of Prof Carlos
Caldas. He completed his specialist clinical training in Cambridge as an NIHR Clinical Lecturer before
moving to University of Zurich. In Zurich, he worked under the supervision of
Prof Bernd Bodenmiller, inventor of imaging mass cytometry. There, he conducted
research using highly multiplexed epitope-based tissue imaging to understand the principles of spatial
organisation that characterise breast tumour ecosystems. His group uses imaging
mass cytometry to understand the spatial dynamics of breast cancer through
disease progression and treatment, in order to identify adaptations and biomarkers associated with relapse and
response.
The seminar is open to all interested in the topic. Come early for a cup of coffee, pulla, and great discussions in excellent company!