Hisham Abdel-Azim, MD, MS, will serve as head of LLU Cancer Center's new Division of Transplant and Cellular Therapy.

Hisham Abdel-Azim, MD, MS, will serve as head of LLU Cancer Center's new Division of Transplant and Cellular Therapy.

Loma Linda University Cancer Center has formed a new Division of Transplant and Cellular Therapy (TCT) to enhance blood and marrow transplantation and offer novel treatment possibilities, making these options now accessible to patients in the region.

The TCT division will unite pediatric and adult services, providing patients from all walks of life with precise, individualized transplant and therapeutic options, including immune effector, cell and gene therapies, and graft engineering.

“This is a tremendous opportunity to enable a continuum of care for pediatric and adult patients and extend the latest, state-of-the-art transplant, immune effector cell and gene therapy to patients in the Inland Empire and beyond,” says Hisham Abdel-Azim, MD, MS, division head of Transplant and Cell Therapy and professor of Pediatrics, Medicine and Basic Sciences.

Bone marrow transplants, including engineered grafts, along with cell and gene therapy options, will primarily help people diagnosed with cancer, Abdel-Azim says. Additionally, he says people diagnosed with non-malignant genetic conditions will also be able to benefit from the TCT division’s services.

“The division will combine clinical services with translational research to continue providing excellent service to patients and lead development of new cell-based therapies treatments like gene therapy and immune effector cell therapies, including CAR-T cell therapy, for advanced malignancies,” Abdel-Azim says.

Continuum of care

Abdel-Azim says these transplant and cellular therapy services tend to require shared expertise to address similar aspects of their care, including side effect profiles, product processing, and treatment administration. So, housing the services under a single division allows experts from various specialties to coordinate efforts and exchange information seamlessly.

“As a major academic medical center teaming with multi-disciplinary expertise in various specialties, Loma Linda University Health has the depth and breadth of knowledge to ensure safe delivery of the specialized services offered by the TCT division,” Abdel-Azim says.

The consolidation of adult and pediatric services will enable TCT to provide care across different age groups as well as provide an optimal environment to translate bench research into clinical trials. Adolescent and Young Adult (AYA) and long-term survivorship patients will particularly benefit from the continuity of expertise across age categories.

“Depending on a patient's circumstances, some things can be managed better from an adult approach and other times from a pediatric approach. So it's not one size fits all,” and the Cancer Center modeled its TCT division after this philosophy, Abdel-Azim says.

Accessibility

Before the TCT division, Abdel-Azim says Inland Empire residents would need to travel long distances east or west to obtain this caliber and combination of services. The Cancer Center’s TCT division is the only care center from Las Vegas, Nevada to Los Angeles, California to provide such comprehensive TCT patient care.

Moreover, Abdel-Azim says many patients from the Inland Empire's diverse minority population experience great difficulty in obtaining a donor match for blood and marrow transplant based on the national bone donor program registry.

Our capabilities in stem cell processing at Loma Linda University Health opens the door to a population that would traditionally experience difficulty accessing these services.Dr. Hisham Abdel-Azim

Yet the TCT division can engineer stem cell grafts to heighten such patients’ chances of finding a donor match, thereby expanding the availability of possible donors. For example, with the proper stem cell processing designed to prevent graft vs. host disease, Abdel-Azim says a person who is a half-match or relative can become a stem cell without the need for immune suppressive medications after transplant.

“Our capabilities in stem cell processing at Loma Linda University Health opens the door to a population that would traditionally experience difficulty accessing these services,” he says.

Experts in the TCT division will also use the latest technology to engineer and generate unique types of personalized cell therapy medications for patients with specific tumors or mitigate post-transplant complications.

A transplant and cell therapy and GMP (Good Manufacturing Practice) laboratory currently under construction will house experts’ efforts to produce and research cellular therapies for a wide variety of applications in the clinical setting, providing a new opportunity for these life-saving novel therapies in this region.

“We are seeing these technologies and capabilities crop up more and more at major health centers," Abdel-Azim says. "So it is only natural to have them at Loma Linda University Health, too."


To learn more about all of the resources offered to cancer patients at the center, visit lluh.org/cancer-center.