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Elizabeth R. Hughes, PhD

Elizabeth R. Hughes, PhD

Project title
"Mechanisms of microbial modulation of cancer immunotherapy"

Immune checkpoint inhibitors, a type of cancer treatment that helps immune cells identify and kill tumor cells, have been a major breakthrough in the treatment of many cancer types. Unfortunately, not all patients respond to this immunotherapy. Dr. Hughes [Robert Black Fellow] is studying how gut microbes improve response to immune checkpoint inhibitors. The bacterium Akkermansia muciniphila lives in the gastrointestinal tract and has been shown to improve response to immune checkpoint inhibitors via poorly understood mechanisms. Dr. Hughes aims to discover how A. muciniphila improves response to cancer immunotherapies and to design microbe-based therapeutic strategies that will further enhance cancer immunotherapy responses. Dr Hughes received her PhD from UT Southwestern Medical Center and her BS from Baylor University.

Institution
Duke University School of Medicine
Sponsor(s) / Mentor(s)
Raphael H. Valdivia, PhD
Cancer type
All Cancers
Research area
Microbiology
Award Program
Fellow
Named Award
Robert Black Fellow