The Scientific Observer Issue 34
                    Magazine  
                    
    
        
            
                
                                    
            
    
                
        Published: February 29, 2024 
            
    Credit: Technology Networks
    In this issue of The Scientific Observer, we’re focusing on the interplay between cancer and the immune system. We explore how the immune response to cancer can be enhanced and follow one researcher’s journey to the cutting edge of cancer immunotherapy.
We also highlight the latest PCOS research and find out more about the benefits and drawbacks of artificial sweeteners. 
This issue also features:
- Improving Cancer Care With Professor Mark Lawler
 - Pharma's Push to Resume In-Person Work Carries Consequences
 - Milestones in Cancer Immunology
 
    Pharma's Push To 
Resume In-Person Work 
Carries Consequences
Improving Cancer Patient 
Care With Professor 
Mark Lawler
ISSUE 34, FEBRUARY 2024
2
CONTENT
FROM THE NEWSROOM 04
ARTICLE
Helping Immune Cells 
Fight Cancer 06
Andy Tay, PhD
ARTICLE
Improving Cancer Patient Care 
With Professor Mark Lawler 09
Kate Harrison, PhD
FEATURE ARTICLE
Pioneering Immuno-Oncology 
Through a Love of Science 13
Joanna Owens, PhD
ARTICLE
Pharma's Push To Resume 
In-Person Work Carries 
Consequences 18
Michael S. Kinch, PhD
ARTICLE
Artificial Sweeteners: The Good 
and the Bad 21
Leo Bear-McGuinness
ARTICLE
What We Know – And Don’t 
Know – About PCOS 24
Molly Campbell
09 18
13
FEATURE
Pioneering 
Immuno-Oncology 
Through a Love 
of Science
Joanna Owens, PhD
iStock
3
Kate Harrison, PhD
Dr. Kate Harrison is a 
Senior Science Writer for 
Technology Networks. 
EDITORS’ NOTE CONTRIBUTORS
Have an idea for a story?
If you would like to contribute to 
The Scientific Observer, please 
feel free to email our friendly 
editorial team.
Andy Tay, PhD
Dr. Andy Tay is a Presidential 
Young Professor at the National 
University of Singapore, where 
his lab is dedicated to developing 
innovative approaches for cancer 
immunotherapy.
Joanna Owens, PhD
Dr. Joanna Owens is a Freelance Writer with more than 
20 years’ experience covering 
a broad range of topics in 
biosciences, pharmaceuticals 
and biotechnology.
Leo Bear-McGuinness
Leo Bear-McGuinness 
is a Science Writer for 
Technology Networks.
Michael S. Kinch, PhD
Professor Michael S. Kinch is 
Dean of Science, Vice President 
for Innovation and Director 
of the Centers for Research 
Innovation in Biotechnology 
and Drug Discovery at Long 
Island University.
Molly Campbell
Molly is a Senior 
Science Writer for 
Technology Networks.
Dear Readers,
Welcome to the latest issue of The Scientific Observer
magazine, and the first of 2024. 
At the core of this issue is a deep dive into the intricate 
world of cancer and the immune system.
Our feature article, Pioneering Immuno-Oncology 
Through a Love of Science, profiles Dr. Sangeeta Goswami, a physician-scientist who felt called to a hybrid 
career in research after encountering many diseases that 
lack a definitive cure. Now, she stands at the forefront of 
immunotherapy research and champions young doctors 
– especially women – eager to pursue similar paths. 
In Helping Immune Cells Fight Cancer, Dr. Andy Tay explores cutting-edge strategies and recent breakthroughs 
in cancer immunotherapy. How are researchers removing the physical and biochemical barriers that prevent 
immune cells from “performing their magic” in cancer? 
Beyond the realm of cancer and immunology, What We 
Know – And Don’t Know – About PCOS offers valuable 
insights into the research landscape for a prevalent, yet 
often misunderstood, health condition.
Also in this issue, Michael S. Kinch offers a thought-provoking opinion on the repercussions of big pharma 
companies urging their employees to return to in-person 
work. His opinion article explores the potential implications of this industry-wide shift and its impact on the 
future of work in the pharmaceutical sector.
This, and much more, in issue 34. We hope you 
enjoy reading.
The Technology Networks Editorial Team
4 FROM THE NEWSROOM
From the Newsroom
Want to learn more?
Check out the Technology Networks newsroom. 
iStock, National Cancer Institute/Unsplash
Ancient viral remnants buried in the genome contribute to a 
“smooth transition” in mouse embryonic development.
JOURNAL: Science Advances.
Virus Guides Embryo 
Development After Infecting 
Primitive Organisms Millions of 
Years Ago
MOLLY CAMPBELL
A traditional African psychedelic drug reduced symptoms of 
veterans’ brain injury in a small clinical study.
JOURNAL: Nature Medicine.
African Psychedelic Ibogaine 
Reduces Veterans’ Brain Injury 
Symptoms in Small Trial
RUAIRI J MACKENZIE
No cervical cancer cases have been observed in fully 
vaccinated women who received the human papillomavirus 
(HPV) vaccine at age 12 or 13 in Scotland since the program 
began in 2008.
JOURNAL: Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
No Cervical Cancer Cases 
Following HPV Vaccination 
in Scotland
SARAH WHELAN, PHD
5 FROM THE NEWSROOM 5
Want to learn more?
Check out theTechnology Networks newsroom.
Georgia Institute of Technology, Gil Ndjouwou /Unplash, Braydon Anderson/Unsplash
In a dramatic step away from traditional silicon-based electronics, researchers have successfully created the first functional 
graphene semiconductor.
JOURNAL: Nature. 
Researchers Create World’s First 
Functional Semiconductor Made 
From Graphene
ALEX BEADLE
By growing the vegetables in soilless nutrient solutions, chard, 
arugula, radishes and peas can all be infused with or sapped of 
essential elements, say researchers.
JOURNAL: Te Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture.
New Potassium-Poor Veg Could 
Benefit People With Kidney 
Disease, Say Researchers
LEO BEAR-MCGUINNESS
Researchers discovered that the development of color-sensing 
cells in human retinas is orchestrated by retinoic acid, an 
offshoot of vitamin A.
JOURNAL: PLOS Bio.
Vitamin A Metabolite Explains 
Why Humans See Colors 
Dogs Can’t
RHIANNA-LILY SMITH
6
REMOVE PHYSICAL AND 
BIOCHEMICAL BARRIERS TO 
HELP IMMUNE CELLS PERFORM 
THEIR MAGIC.
Our understanding of cancer, in particular, solid 
tumors, has improved 
tremendously. Since the 
synthesis of monoclonal antibodies 
in 1975, we have developed a plethora 
of immune checkpoint inhibitors 
using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) 
for cancer treatment. However, mAbs 
have poor biodistribution in the 
body and do not work when there is 
mutational escape by cancer cells, 
necessitating a more advanced form 
of cancer immunotherapy.
In 1988, Dr. Steven Rosenberg
used tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes 
(TILs) to treat melanoma. A year 
later, the first generation of Chimeric 
Antigen Receptor T (CAR T) cell 
was constructed. 
There are now six US Food and 
Drug Administration (FDA)-approved CAR T-cell products in the 
market for cancer treatment, and as of 
January 2024, more than 950 registered clinical trials on ClinicalTrials.
gov; the majority (93%) focusing on 
autologous CAR T-cell products.
Despite the promise of TIL and CAR 
T-cell therapy, major challenges exist 
in using them to treat solid tumors, 
due to poor infiltration of immune 
cells into solid tumors. Here, immune 
cells would refer to clinically beneficial immune cell types including 
CD4+ helper and CD8+ cytotoxic 
T cells. Even after immune cells are 
able to infiltrate into solid tumors, 
the harsh tumor microenvironment, 
including low glucose levels, hypoxia 
and low pH, suppresses the functions 
of therapeutic immune cells. Here, 
we will try to understand how these 
obstacles reduce the efficacy of cellbased cancer immunotherapy and 
strategies to overcome them.
OVERCOMING THE 
EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX
The immune landscape in solid 
tumors can be broadly classified 
into inflamed, immune excluded and 
immune desert, based on spatial 
distribution of CD8+ T cells in the 
tumor microenvironment. 
An example of an immune desert or 
immune excluded cancer is pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). 
Helping Immune Cells 
Fight Cancer
ANDY TAY, PhD
iStock
7
Immune desert refers to a state 
where CD8+ T cells are absent 
from the tumor and its periphery, 
whereas immune excluded refers 
to a state where there are CD8+ T 
cells accumulating but insufficient 
infiltration into tumors. One of the 
major factors causing this is the thick 
extracellular matrix surrounding solid tumors. The matrix is composed of 
proteins such as collagen secreted by 
cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). 
McAndrews at el. found that there is 
significant heterogeneity of CAFs in 
PDAC. Fibroblast activation protein 
(FAP)+ CAFs were found to be tumor promoting, and their depletion 
enhanced survival in mouse PDAC 
model. On the other hand, alpha 
smooth muscle actin (αSMA)+ CAFs 
were found to be tumor restraining. 
This recent finding suggests that 
inhibition of FAP+ CAFs is a useful 
therapeutic target to reduce collagen 
secretion and extracellular matrix 
barrier to enhance CD8+ T cell infiltration into solid tumors.
ALTERING METABOLIC 
STATES OF THE TUMOR 
MICROENVIRONMENT
Even when CD8+ T cells are able 
to infiltrate into solid tumors, their 
biological activities can be suppressed 
due to poor availability of nutrients, 
low pH and oxygen levels. 
Immunometabolism cancer therapy 
is emerging as a promising paradigm 
to regulate immune cell fates and 
potentiate their anti-tumor immunity. 
It disrupts cancer metabolic signaling 
pathways such as glycolysis, tricarboxylic acid cycle and amino acid metabolism to reverse the immunosuppressive 
tumor microenvironment.
Adenosine metabolism, in particular, 
has been found to play an important 
role in facilitating tumor immune 
surveillance escape, and promoting 
cancer progression and metastasis via 
restraining immune effector cell infiltration and cytotoxicity. It is known
that tumors coopt the CD73/adenosine 
system as a mechanism for promoting 
tumor growth and progression, angiogenesis and immune escape.
Some strategies to manipulate adenosine metabolism include encapsulating 
pharmacological inhibitors, monoclonal antibodies, siRNA and even 
CRISPR/cas9 to inhibit or shut down 
the activities of CD73. 
Importantly, as adenosine metabolism 
can also occur via CD73-independent 
pathways, it will be more beneficial to 
therapeutically combine CD73 inhibition with other adenosine-associated 
metabolic pathways to comprehensively disrupt the adenosinergic axis in 
cancer metabolism.
THE ROAD AHEAD
A recent announcement by the FDA, 
mandating CAR T-cell manufacturers to add a general boxed warning 
of potential T-cell malignancies, has 
caused a temporary shock to the 
CAR T field. In an earlier statement 
published in November 2023, the 
FDA said that “although the overall 
benefits of these products continue 
to outweigh their potential risks 
for their approved uses, FDA is 
investigating the identified risk 
of T-cell malignancy with serious 
outcomes, including hospitalization 
and death, and is evaluating the need 
for regulatory action.” A comment 
piece, published in Nature Medicine
by Levine et al., stated that existing 
data suggests that CAR T-cell therapy has a low risk of secondary malignancies compared to other cancer 
treatments. 
The use of immune cells for cancer 
therapy is showing no signs of slowing down. Besides CD4+ and CD8+ 
T cells, other immune cell types 
including macrophages and natural 
killer cells are being engineered 
with CAR constructs for cancer 
treatment. Each of these cell types 
have their distinct advantages and 
may be arguably suited for different 
cancer types. For instance, the use of 
CAR macrophages, which are highly 
prevalent in tumors, to treat cancers 
that are classified as immune desert. 
Taking a step back, besides T 
cell infiltration and metabolism, 
innovations are also necessary to 
manufacture T cells that proliferate 
fast while maintaining their critical 
biological attributes to reduce costs 
and delays, and to deliver immune 
cell therapies to cancer patients who 
need them the most. ⚫
iStock
8
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iStock
Mark Lawler, professor of 
digital health, is a leader 
in cancer research with
a focus on using the latest molecular advances and precision 
medicine approaches to improve 
patient care and address cancer 
inequalities on a global scale.
Lawler was invited to answer your 
questions about precision medicine 
and cancer research in  Technology 
Networks’ Ask Me Anything session. 
Kate Harrison (KH): What do 
you see as the future of tumor 
genomic profiling?
Mark Lawler (ML): It's a really exciting area of research. This technology allows us to do things that we 
wouldn't have even thought of being 
able to do a decade ago. Not only in 
terms of looking at the overall constitution of the tumor from the genomics point of view, but also being 
able to look at single cells.
Tumor genomic profiling has increased our understanding of different forms of cancer. But how do we 
practically translate this into companion diagnostic biomarker testing? One of the things we've been 
pushing for at a European level is to 
embed that genomic testing into the 
clinical setting. We propose that everybody is tested for their genomic 
profiles, so we can then decide the 
best treatment for each individual 
patient. The critical thing is knowing how to implement this precision 
oncology approach. We're great at 
doing the discovery part, but maybe 
not so good at the follow-through.
KH: How do you think the potential of precision oncology can 
be realized more fully?
ML: We've had the likes of Gleevec 
(imatinib mesylate) in chronic 
myeloid leukemia and Herceptin 
in HER 2-positive breast cancer. 
They're good examples of precision 
oncology working, but we probably 
haven't seen as many successes as 
we would have expected. It is important that we don't base all our 
hopes on precision medicine and 
precision oncology. Surgery and 
radiotherapy still cure more cancer 
patients than precision medicine at 
the moment.
Improving Cancer Patient Care 
With Professor Mark Lawler
KATE HARRISON, PhD
10
Technology Networks, adapted from Spatial Transcriptomics in Cancer.
What we want to see is that precision 
medicine goes into radiotherapy and 
surgery, so that we have precision 
radiotherapy and precision surgery. 
I certainly don't think that precision 
oncology is going to replace either 
surgery or radiotherapy, but we need 
to be clever in terms of how we combine them. We've seen, for example, 
that immunotherapy and radiotherapy are a very good combination in 
certain tumor types.
I'm very optimistic about precision 
oncology, but I think we need to be 
very realistic as well – this is not going to be the panacea that will cure 
all ills.
It's about looking at how we use it 
most effectively, how we combine it 
with approaches that we have shown 
work well.
For example, advances in precision 
radiotherapy allow for a more precise approach that targets the tumor 
and doesn’t damage the surrounding 
tissue. We also need to use companion diagnostics in the R&D process 
so that we can identify the patients 
who will benefit from treatments
KH: Do you think that it will be 
possible to design an anti-cancer drug with 100% specificity 
for cancer cells only?
ML: One of the challenges is moving 
from an approach where we understand and treat cancers individually.
Immunotherapy  has changed that 
paradigm, moving towards immunotherapy clinics, rather than colorectal 
cancer clinics or breast cancer clinics.
Spatial transcriptomics is going to 
build up an atlas of what's happening in the individual cancer cell, its 
interactions with other cancer cells 
and also with the  microenvironment around it.
Providing an approach that is off-theshelf for everybody would be a superb 
vision and reality. Then, we would 
start to look at having cancer as a 
chronic disease that we can manage.
Quality of life is becoming much 
more important as there are more 
people living with and beyond cancer.
So, we need to be thinking not simply 
about cure or no cure, but more about 
how we manage cancer and reintegrate people into society.
KH: Have there been any significant insights on the relationship 
between COVID-19 and cancer?
ML: I’m the scientific director of
DATA-CAN, which is the UK’s 
health data research hub for 
cancer. We had only just set up 
when the COVID-19 pandemic happened, so we rapidly repurposed our 
Figure 1: Several components interact with a tumor to form the tumor microenvironment.
Tumor genomic profiling has increased our understanding of 
different forms of cancer. But 
how do we practically translate 
this into companion diagnostic 
biomarker testing?
11
data science work to see what the 
impact was.
We decided to look at two things: the 
diagnostic pathway and the treatment pathway. For diagnostics, we 
looked at what's called “two-week 
waits” in England or “red f lag referrals” in Northern Ireland. We 
found that 7 out of 10 people who 
had a suspicion of cancer were not 
being referred to a specialist service. Similarly, with the treatment 
pathway, we looked at chemotherapy 
appointment attendance and found 
that 4 in 10 cancer patients were 
not attending.
That data scared us so much that 
we immediately shared it and set 
up  a specialist European network. 
We developed a 7-point plan concerning the impact of COVID-19 
on cancer patients and cancer services, and we also decided to do a 
Pan-European study.
We found that 100 million screening 
tests were missed during the pandemic and 1 million cancer diagnoses 
may have been missed.
As a result, we've seen a tremendous 
impact on cancer patients presenting 
later with more aggressive disease 
because they were missed at that earlier stage during the pandemic.
In addition to the effect of services 
being shut down or compromised 
in some way, there's also the impact 
of having to deal with COVID-19 
when you're immunocompromised. 
So, cancer patients and services 
have suffered significantly from 
the pandemic. In cases such as 
colorectal cancer, five-year survival had improved over the last 
10–20 years, but now we may have 
set back that progress by almost a 
decade, unfortunately.
KH: How can diagnostic labs in 
low-income countries approach 
cancer genomics?
ML: We did a  Lancet series in relation to pathology and laboratory 
medicine in low- and middle-income 
countries and how to make sure that 
we can deliver diagnostics that are 
practical, that are pragmatic, and 
that allow delivery at a regional or 
national level.
What we don't want to do is have 
that divide where low- to middle-income countries don't get access to 
these approaches. There are costs 
associated with it, so we can look at 
ways in which we do cost sharing, 
for example.
I think it's the responsibility of Europe and America, for example, to 
support cancer research and cancer care in low- and middle-income 
countries, so I think we should be 
looking at better ways to do that.
We shouldn't forget our global responsibility.
Throughout the US and Europe, we 
are powerhouses in cancer research 
and its translation to cancer care. 
But we shouldn't be just thinking 
inwardly, we should be thinking 
outwardly and how we can support 
low- and middle-income countries 
in diagnostic approaches, therapeutic approaches, and deliver for 
the patients.
If you're in Canada, and you're a kid 
with childhood leukemia, you have 
a 9 out of 10 chance of being alive 
in 5 years. If you live in Zimbabwe, 
that drops to a 1 in 10 chance. We 
are talking about treatments that 
are off patents, mostly chemotherapy approaches. These are curable 
diseases, and yet we have that disparity between the higher-income 
countries and low- and middle-income countries. By 2040, over 60% 
of deaths from cancer will happen in 
low- and middle-income countries, 
so we have a global responsibility to 
address that. ⚫
Mark Lawler was speaking to Kate 
Harrison, Senior Science Writer for 
Technology Networks. Edited by Lucy 
Lawrence and Kate Harrison.
Watch this Ask 
Me Anything 
session with 
Professor Mark 
Lawler, where 
he answers 
your questions 
about precision 
medicine and 
cancer research.
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iStock edited
14
S
angeeta Goswami is one of 
a relatively rare breed – a 
physician-scientist, a medically qualified researcher 
who balances her role as a physician 
treating patients with a research 
career in the laboratory. Physician-scientists are uniquely placed 
to identify and then address some 
of the most pressing priorities 
in biomedical research, but it’s a 
journey that requires sacrifices and 
resilience to make it for the long haul. 
Goswami’s own journey began in 
Assam, India. Her initial fascination 
with science was inspired by her 
grandfather who was a biochemist 
working in academia. This ingrained 
a love for science at a very early age 
and, coupled with an inherent curiosity about the world, made studying 
medicine a natural choice. “India is a 
very densely populated country and, 
training in a tertiary medical center, 
I saw a large volume of patients,” she 
explains. “It was a privilege taking 
care of them, and something I knew 
I wanted to do for the rest of my life. 
But increasingly, I was struck by the 
lack of definitive curative medicines 
for most of the diseases we treat, and 
that’s where my interest in research 
began, when I first thought about 
doing a PhD.”
BECOMING A 
CLINICIAN-SCIENTIST
Goswami was the only one in a class 
of 160 students who decided to 
pursue a PhD. As there was no integrated MD-PhD program in India, 
she began by working on a year-long 
collaborative project between a 
Council of Scientific & Industrial 
Research (CSIR) laboratory and 
the All India Institute of Medical 
Sciences in Delhi. The experience 
confirmed her gut feeling – she 
wanted to delve into research in the 
next stage of her career. Goswami 
applied for PhD studentships in the 
United States and was accepted at 
Baylor College of Medicine in the 
Department of Immunology. 
Combining medical training with research is not an easy decision. “It’s a 
long road and it takes a lot from your 
life,” Goswami says.
Not only is the medical training itself 
lengthy, but you are also adding on a 
separate degree or separate training 
to hone your research skills. As a 
junior investigator, it's a significant 
time commitment. “Sometimes, you 
feel you're in no man's land between 
two different communities – with 
your physician and basic science 
researcher counterparts having particular expectations of you,” Goswami describes. The clinical training 
comes first, she emphasizes. Patient 
care is paramount, so there can 
never be any compromise on your 
clinical skillset. 
At Baylor College of Medicine, she 
was mentored by physician-scientists Dr. Farrah K heradmand and 
Dr. David B. Corry, which not only 
opened her eyes into the field of clinical medicine and discovery science, 
but also marked the beginning of a 
passion for immunology. 
“The immune system is always 
fascinating. It’s such a finely tuned 
system, it’s like the porridge in 
Goldilocks – it can be neither too 
hot nor too cold. If it gets too hot, 
you get autoimmune disease. It's too 
cold, you get infections and cancer,” 
says Goswami. “The nuances of the 
immune system and how it balances 
all that different pathophysiology 
has always been fascinating to me.” 
Modulating the immune system has 
been an important goal in many complex diseases for decades, but the development of immune checkpoint inhibitors (drugs that take the brakes 
off the immune system) and advances in single-cell RNA sequencing
has led to an explosion in our underHow a love of science, and 
frustration with a lack of 
curative treatments for cancer, 
led one researcher to the leading 
edge of cancer immunotherapy
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
JOANNA OWENS, PhD
15
standing of the interplay between 
tumor-associated immune cells and 
cancer treatment and progression. T 
cells have been seen as key players 
because of the varied roles of cytotoxic T cells, T helper (TH) cells, 
and regulatory T cells (Tregs) in the 
immune responses within the tumor 
environment, but focus is now expanding to other cell types – from B 
cells involved in immune memory, to 
additional cell-killing power offered 
by natural killer cells, and the diverse roles myeloid cells play in the 
tumor-microenvironment. 
At the early stage of her career, 
Goswami could not yet know that 
her appreciation of the beauty of 
the immune system, and fundamental training in T cell biology, 
would lead her to work in a field 
that has transformed the cancer 
treatment landscape.
THE IMPORTANCE
OF TIMING
Goswami completed her PhD before 
beginning her internal medicine residency at University of Pittsburgh 
Medical Center. “This is where my 
love for oncology began because I 
was undertaking training rotations 
through oncology wards and I felt 
a connection with patients going 
through such a difficult journey,” 
she recalls.
The timing was such that, while she 
was in her residency, the first-inclass checkpoint inhibitor, ipilimumab, was approved for metastatic 
melanoma. “Suddenly, tumor immunology, which had been somewhat in 
the periphery of cancer research for 
decades, actually came to the forefront,” says Goswami. “I saw it as a 
sign: my love for immunology and my 
love for oncology coming together 
as tumor immunology. I knew this is 
what I wanted to do.”
Goswami applied for a medical 
oncology fellowship and secured a 
position at The University of Texas 
MD Anderson Cancer Center, where 
she had the “pleasure and privilege” 
to work under the mentorship of 
Dr. Padmanee (Pam) Sharma. 
Sharma had been instrumental in the 
clinical research behind many of today’s immune checkpoint agents. “It 
was like a dream come true for me to 
learn from the best,” recalls Goswami. “From the start, Dr. Sharma gave 
me full scientific independence to 
pursue my research interests, while 
always being there as a mentor to 
guide me through and help me understand the big picture.” 
The opportunity also arose to work 
closely with Dr. James P. Allison, 
whose fundamental immunology 
research into checkpoint inhibition won the 2018 Nobel Prize in 
Physiology or Medicine (together 
with Dr. Tasuku Honjo).
AUTONOMY 
TO ADDRESS 
KEY QUESTIONS
Since 2018, Goswami has been a 
faculty member at MD Anderson in 
the Department of Genitourinary 
Medical Oncology, where she sees 
"I was struck 
by the lack 
of definitive 
curative 
medicines for 
most of the 
diseases we 
treat, and 
that’s where 
my interest 
in research 
began."
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
16
patients with kidney and bladder 
cancer and leads a lab conducting 
research. “We are trying to understand pathways of response and 
resistance to immune-based therapies across different tumor types,” 
she explained. 
Resistance to immunotherapy can 
be categorized as primary (tumor 
does not respond to immunotherapy), adaptive (where the tumor is 
recognized by the immune system, 
but it adapts to evade destruction) 
and acquired (where a tumor initially responded to immunotherapy 
but stopped). There are multiple, 
complex mechanisms behind these 
types of resistance – from low tumor mutational burden causing the 
tumor to be immunologically “cold” 
in the first place, to changes in the 
functions of the T cells that were 
once effective. 
Goswami was intrigued by how immune cells within tumors changed 
their state as cancer progresses. 
“We know that it’s not genetics that’s 
changing, so I wondered: are cues 
from the environment regulating 
genes that are in turn controlling the 
immune cells’ state?” she explains. 
“I had two questions: how does this 
change when we first give immune 
checkpoint therapy, and how does the 
altered immune cell state eventually 
dictate the response or resistance 
to immunotherapy?”
To address these questions, Goswami had to study the epigenetic regulation of the immune cells – that is, 
how the gene activity within T cells 
was being altered by environmental 
cues around them. There are four 
main epigenetic mechanisms that 
control gene activity: the structure 
of chromatin, non-coding regions 
of the genome and chemical modification of DNA and histones (the 
proteins that provide structural 
support to DNA).
As an immunologist, not an epigeneticist, this was a foray into a 
new field, and it taught her perseverance. “I definitely had my share 
of heartaches,” she recalls. “There 
were tears in the initial years when 
I was wondering, ‘am I asking the 
right question or not?’ and ‘Is it 
worthwhile?’, when everyone was 
publishing and I was at the stage 
where my first experiment was 
not working.” 
But Goswami did persevere, and 
it paid off. She discovered that patients receiving immune checkpoint 
therapy, especially anti-CTLA4, 
had increased levels of an epigenetic enzyme called EZH2 in T cells. 
When Goswami’s lab explored this 
further, they found EZH2 maintains 
a suppressive chromatin structure 
in regulatory T cells – suppressing 
the immune response. Moreover, 
adding an EZH2 inhibitor alongside 
checkpoint inhibitors in preclinical 
models, improved tumor response 
and survival.
“This is where mentorship from Dr. 
Sharma became so critical. Not only 
did she give me full independence 
to pursue what I wanted to do in 
science, but when I got to this stage, 
she helped me to bring the preclinical concept to the clinic,” Goswami 
says. “She connected me to the 
right people.” 
In collaboration with another faculty 
member at MD Anderson – Dr. Ana 
Aparicio – Goswami initiated a 
clinical trial combining anti-CTLA4 
with an EZH1/EZH2 inhibitor in 
patients who are either primaryresistant or have developed acquired 
resistance to immune checkpoint 
therapy. That trial is ongoing, and 
Goswami is applying a similar 
reverse translational approach to 
other questions she identified as a 
junior investigator.
This includes trying to find biomarkers to enrich patient selection for 
“I saw it as a sign: my love for 
immunology and my love for 
oncology coming together as 
tumor immunology. I knew this is 
what I wanted to do.”
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17
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immunotherapy – an area where 
researchers are already heavily in
-
vesting time and resources but might 
not be looking in the right place. 
“To date, studies have looked either 
at tumor-specific factors like tumor 
mutation or burden, or were only 
looking from the immune perspec
-
tive, such as PD-L1 expression or in
-
terferon gamma signature,” she says. 
“We found we need to integrate these 
perspectives because the immune 
microenvironment doesn't work in 
silos. And when we did, we started 
to find markers.” 
One such project is combining two 
biomarkers – mutational status of a 
chromatin modifying complex and 
levels of the chemokine CXCL13 – 
to identify patients who are likely 
to respond to immune checkpoint 
treatment. These markers are cur
-
rently being validated in patients 
taking part in immunotherapy trials, 
with a view to using them to stratify 
patients for treatment in future stud
-
ies. Goswami’s lab is also expanding 
their work to the most intractable 
cancers, making progress in immune 
profiling glioblastoma brain tumors
to find novel immune targets and 
demonstrating that through blocking 
an epigenetic regulator in myeloid 
immune cells it becomes possible 
to sensitize “immunologically cold” 
glioblastoma cells to checkpoint 
inhibitors. 
THE NEXT CHAPTER
What does Goswami want to 
achieve in the next chapter of her 
career? First, to feel she has made a 
difference in a patient's life through 
her clinical expertise and scientific 
research – to improve their survival 
or help their cancer shift from pal
-
liative to curative, “I want to learn 
from every patient. I really hope we 
soon get to the stage where we can 
do biomarker analysis upfront to 
initiate treatment and then have lon
-
gitudinal sampling, so it’s no longer 
a guessing game for the clinician to 
know which treatment will work 
best at different stages.” 
Her second aspiration is to train the 
next generation of physician-scien
-
tists in oncology, especially providing 
female and immigrant scientists the 
opportunities and mentorship she 
feels have benefited her own career. 
“In every generation, you will find a 
handful of people who feel driven 
to take this career path, and we 
need to identify them early so you 
can nurture them and protect them,” 
she says. Protected time away from 
clinical duties to allow her to carry 
out her research was critical, she 
says, and something she wishes was 
rolled out to more countries, “It’s 
simply not productive for someone 
to spend the first 20 years seeing pa
-
tients and suddenly switch 100% to 
become a researcher. We need better 
integration of MD—PhD programs 
into mainstream medical education 
worldwide, if we want to propel clin
-
ical research or even fundamental 
research forwards." 
Goswami wants people – especially 
students aspiring to be physi
-
cian-scientists – to understand that 
it’s a long journey involving sacrific
-
es, commitment, and perseverance. 
“Especially as a female, immigrant 
scientist. It is not an easy decision 
to leave your parents behind to come 
to a different country for the love of 
science,” she says. “That’s why I'm 
very much motivated to train the 
physician-scientists of the future, 
especially women scientists. I have 
a lab of seven women at this point 
of time, because I feel my career has 
been so heavily driven and inf lu
-
enced by women, from my mom to my 
mentors, who have been instrumen
-
tal in shaping my career. I feel that 
now the onus is on me to train the 
next generation, to train those seven 
brilliant women and more." 
⚫
Dr. Goswami is one of the inaugural 
members of the James P. Allison Institute 
at The University of Texas MD Anderson 
Cancer Center where she plans to carry 
on her research projects to improve out
-
comes with immune checkpoint therapy.
18
THE FOLLOWING ARTICLE IS AN 
OPINION PIECE WRITTEN BY 
PROFESSOR MICHAEL S. KINCH. 
THE VIEWS AND OPINIONS 
EXPRESSED IN THIS ARTICLE ARE 
THOSE OF THE AUTHOR AND 
DO NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT 
THE OFFICIAL POSITION OF 
TECHNOLOGY NETWORKS.
T
he tech industry in general, 
and biotech in particular, is 
amidst a troubling personnel 
trend that could have longterm implications, both for society 
and its own ability to innovate. The 
participating organizations are likely 
to be culling their prospects through a 
campaign of unintended, but nonetheless blatant, marginalization of their 
female employees.
Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, a 
new remote working world was betatested and rapidly normalized, all 
within the span of a few short weeks. 
Even before SARS-CoV-2 compelled 
the need for social distancing, many 
media organizations had been espousing the benefits of remote work. 
A February 2020 article summarized 
studies from Gallup, Harvard and 
Stanford, amongst others, which 
emphasized positive impacts upon 
worker productivity (which improved 
35-40%), performance (40% fewer 
quality defects), retention (a 12% reduction in worker loss), profitability 
(21% higher earnings) and improved 
employee engagement (as evidenced 
by a 41% lower rate of absenteeism). 
As the Spring of 2020 unfolded, 
remote working rapidly evolved 
from exotic to nearly commonplace. 
The flexibility conveyed by remote 
working not only proved lifesaving 
for companies, which could not otherwise safely house their workers, but 
imparted an upside of the increased 
efficiencies as had been previously expressed by the media. These efficiencies abrogated exhausting commutes, 
created savings from unnecessary 
business trips and increased overall 
employee morale, even in a troubling 
time of societal distress. 
CALLS TO END REMOTE 
WORKING
Nearly three years later, the evidence 
for worker productivity remained. 
Yet, bosses were already souring on 
remote and even hybrid work. A study
of internal managers at Microsoft 
concluded that 49% of hybrid worker 
managers “struggle to trust their 
employees to do their best work.” A 
Citrix study further bolstered evidence of management unease with 
Pharma's Push To Resume In-Person 
Work Carries Consequences
MICHAEL S. KINCH, PhD
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19
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remote working, citing evidence that 
“half of all business leaders believe 
that when employees are working ‘out 
of sight,’ they don’t work as hard.”
The problem, it seems, is not with 
the remote workers, but with the 
perceptions of these workers by their 
managers. Worse still, the corrective 
actions being taken for a problem 
that may (but more likely does not) 
exist are likely to disproportionately 
damage these same companies and 
their managers.
The call to end remote working 
has been amplified by many of the 
same technology companies that 
enabled these cost efficiencies, 
including names such as Meta, 
Dell and ironically, Zoom itself. 
The pharmaceutical industry soon 
followed, with retrograde actions 
from Roche, Novartis and Pfizer. Focusing upon this latter group, let us 
compare the actions of two different 
biopharmaceutical companies.
In November 2023, Novartis announced an effort to entice workers 
back to the office. With the opening 
of new office space in Montreal, the 
company revealed facilities with many 
new discussion spaces, wellness zones 
as well activity spaces for employees. 
These facilities were touted by Novartis as amongst a variety of worker conveniences, which includes cafeterias, 
take-home meals, medical services, 
lactation rooms, federal credit union, 
ATMs and even dry cleaning services. 
This benign approach contrasts sharply with one of its major competitors.
That same week as Novartis’ announcement, Albert Bourla, CEO of 
Pfizer, abruptly announced that Pfizer’s US employees will be required to 
return to the workplace for an average 
of 2.5 days per week, an effort that 
would be tightly policed from January 
2024. This action was applied retrospectively to (almost – more on that 
momentarily) all employees, including 
those who had historically worked 
remotely before the pandemic.
This abrupt change might not have 
seemed particularly newsworthy 
except that Pfizer then announced the 
closure of multiple sites across the 
United States. This announcement 
built upon the fact that, as part of 
cost-cutting measures, the company 
had already largely curbed the ability 
of many employees to return to work 
when it shuttered or razed major 
office centers in Connecticut, New 
Jersey and Michigan. Given that the 
company intended to pink slip those 
employees failing to meet their 50% 
on-site requirement, the company was 
effectively dismissing large swathes 
of its workforce, which conveniently 
aligned with the fact that the company also announced a reduction 
in force of roughly one-quarter of 
their employees.
Putting aside the business strategy 
captured by this series of executive 
decisions, let us consider the impact. 
According to the Washington Post, 
women are more likely to work remotely and a YouGov poll confirmed 
that women place greater importance 
on flexibility than their male counterparts, a fact that was confirmed 
by a McKinsey study of women in 
the workplace. 
Aside from the bias caused by 
such decisions, one might question 
the business sense of decisions 
to curtail remote working. It has 
been well established that greater 
diversity improves overall corporate performance. Evidence comes 
from feedback received from both 
hiring managers and large scale 
studies, which reveal that “differences in age, ethnicity, gender and 
other dimensions foster high performance.” Diverse teams outperform 
individuals by nearly 90% in terms 
of decision-making, and genderdiversity is particularly impactful.
By potentially culling the diversity 
and morale of an organization by 
half, the long-term ramifications of 
innovation-dependent organizations 
that are eliminating remote work 
raises serious questions about 
the future. A remoteness in commonsensical thinking seems to be 
dominating the boardrooms of many 
technology companies. ⚫
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CAN SWEETNESS EVER COME 
WITHOUT HEALTH RISKS?
S
ugar makes life that little bit 
sweeter, but its taste can come 
at a calorific cost. That dusting 
on your cereal, that white cube 
in your tea – these little dashes of the 
sweet stuff can add up to more than 
just weight gain; if consumed in large 
enough amounts over years, sugar 
can contribute to serious conditions 
like  diabetes  and  heart disease. It’s 
little wonder, then, that many consumers in recent years have ditched sugar 
in favor of artificial sweeteners, some 
of which boast zero calories.
But are these fabricated flavorings 
really any better for us? Well, they 
have their good and bad qualities, 
according to the latest research.
THE GOOD
Many people opt for artificial sweeteners to help them lose weight, 
and there is some research to show 
that the sweeteners can help shift 
the pounds.
One study  found that young adults 
who replaced their regular soft drink 
with a sugar-free version lowered 
their body mass indexes (BMIs) by 
1.3–1.7 points, on average.
A meta-analysis  of 15 randomized 
controlled clinical trials also concluded that low-calorie sweeteners are 
associated with modest decreases in 
body weight and fat mass.
Other sweetener-obesity studies, 
however, have come to different 
conclusions, but we’ll come to that 
research later…
As for other benefits,  one 2018 
study  found that the sweetener 
saccharin has a strong affinity for a 
protein associated with aggressive 
cancers. At the time, the researchers 
said that the flavoring could one day 
form the basis of a more selective 
cancer therapy.
A  more recent study  found that, in 
test tube experiments, a novel artificial sweetener increased the levels of 
beneficial human gut microbes such 
as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus.
And when it comes to sustainability, 
some artificial sweeteners may just 
have the advantage. A study published 
last year found that stevia sweeteners 
Artificial Sweeteners: The Good and 
the Bad
LEO BEAR-MCGUINNESS
22
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produce around 10% of the greenhouse gas emissions of sugar. 
THE BAD
While most health authorities consider sweeteners, on the whole, safe 
to consume, recent research has 
highlighted some of the flavorings’ 
unsavory effects. 
Many studies have linked the sweeteners to a higher risk of cancer, for 
instance.  One recent paper  found 
that survey participants who consumed larger amounts of aspartame 
and acesulfame-K had an increased 
overall risk of cancer compared to 
non-consumers.
These kind of findings led the World 
Health Organization (WHO) to  infamously list  aspartame as a “possible 
carcinogen” last July.
Other studies have observed a link between the sweeteners and an increased 
risk of cardiovascular diseases.
One paper, published last year in Nature Medicine, observed that patients 
who had experienced heart attacks 
and strokes were more likely to have 
elevated levels of the sweetener 
erythritol in their blood. After experimenting with the flavoring in the 
lab, the researchers seemingly proved 
that the sweetener did make human 
platelets easier to activate and clot, 
fostering “enhanced thrombosis.”
When it comes to behavioral effects, 
several studies have linked sweeteners to nervousness. One experimental 
study published last year found that 
aspartame produced anxiety-like behavior in mice.
“We believe that aspartame produces 
a shift in the excitation-inhibition balance, in favor of excitation,”  Pradeep 
Bhide, Chair of Developmental Neuroscience at Florida State University 
College of Medicine, told  Technology 
Networks at the time.
And as for obesity, while several trials 
have linked use of the sweeteners to 
modest decreases in body weight and 
fat mass, other studies have found the 
opposite effect. One paper  published 
in 2016 found that that artificial 
sweeteners mimic a starvation state in 
the brains of fruit flies, causing them 
to seek energy by eating more food.
This kind of contrary research led the 
WHO to take a fairly neutral stance on 
the sweeteners’ dietary benefits last 
year. After accepting recommendations of a recent systematic review of 
the research, the health organization 
said that use of the sweeteners “does 
not confer any long-term benefit in reducing body fat in adults or children.”
“People need to consider other ways 
to reduce free sugars intake, such as 
consuming food with naturally occurring sugars, like fruit, or unsweetened 
food and beverages,”  Francesco 
Branca, WHO Director for Nutrition 
and Food Safety,  said in a statement last May.
“NSS [non-sugar sweeteners] are not 
essential dietary factors and have 
no nutritional value. People should 
reduce the sweetness of the diet altogether, starting early in life, to improve 
their health.”
CONCLUSION
So, are artificial sweeteners good or 
bad for us? Well, if successfully used 
to wean a person off high-calorie, 
sugary treats, the flavorings could 
incur some health benefits (albeit with 
possible nervousness side effects). 
But health authorities like the WHO 
aren’t convinced these benefits occur 
in practice.
Ultimately, consumers may be best off 
taking the organization’s advice and 
limiting the sweetness in their diets altogether, as difficult as that may be. ⚫
1863
An inflammatory link?
Rudolf Virchow observed the connection 
between cancers and inflammation. 
He noted that some tumors are often 
associated with immune cells, and 
that chronic inflammation predisposes 
cancer development.
What is cancer immunology?
The cancer immunology timeline
1902
Cell therapy attempted
Physicians Ferdinand Blumenthal 
and Ernst von Leyden attempt the 
first form of cell therapy for cancer. 
They endeavor to vaccinate patients 
against their cancer using their own 
tumor cells. Two patients experience 
subjective improvements, but there 
were no significant reductions in 
tumor size.
1981
First preventative vaccine
The hepatitis B vaccine becomes the 
first FDA-approved vaccine for cancer 
prevention. The vaccine prevents liver 
cancer caused by chronic infection from 
the hepatitis B virus.
2015
Oncolytic viruses
The first oncolytic virus, talimogene 
laherparepvec (T-VEC), is approved by 
the FDA for the treatment of inoperable 
metastatic melanoma. T-VEC is a 
genetically modified herpes virus 
that infects and kills cancer cells 
after injection into the tumor. It also 
produces the cytokine granulotyctemacrophage colony-stimulating 
factor (GM-CSF) that promotes the 
development of immune cells.
2018
Nobel Prize awarded
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or 
Medicine is jointly awarded to James P. 
Allison and Tasuku Honjo in recognition 
of their discovery of cancer therapy 
by inhibition of negative immune 
regulation. The identification of 
immune checkpoint proteins CTLA-4 
and programmed cell death protein 
1 (PD-1) are a “landmark in our fight 
against cancer” and have enabled the 
successful development of ICIs used 
in the clinic today.
1909
Immunosurveillance
Paul Erlich proposes the 
“immunosurveillance” hypothesis, 
suggesting the host’s immune system 
usually suppresses cancer formation 
from growths of abnormal (neoplastic) 
cells. He stated: “in the enormously 
complicated course of fetal and 
post-fetal development, aberrant 
cells become unusually common. 
Fortunately, in the majority of people, 
they remain completely latent thanks to 
the organism’s positive mechanisms.”
1891
Coley’s toxins
William Coley, the “Father of 
Immunotherapy”, creates what is 
thought to be the first immune-based 
cancer treatment. He observed 
cancer patients achieving remission 
after contracting a streptococcal 
skin infection, which inspired him 
to test injecting mixtures of live and 
inactivated bacteria into tumors, known 
as “Coley’s toxins”.
1904
Viruses and cancer
George Dock describes a leukemia 
patient achieving remission after 
contracting a severe influenza infection. 
However, the connection between 
viruses and cancer would not be 
explored in more detail until later in the 
20th century.
1987
Immune checkpoints
The first immune checkpoint molecule, 
cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen number 
4 (CTLA-4), is discovered. CTLA-4 binds 
to T cells and acts as a “brake”, keeping 
them in an inactive state. Yet, its exact 
function remained unclear until 1995 
when James Allison and colleagues 
discovered its inhibitory effect on T 
cells and its potential as a future target 
for anti-cancer therapy.
1992
PD-1 immune checkpoints
Tasuku Honjo and colleagues publish
their discovery of immune checkpoint 
protein programmed death-1 (PD-1). PD-1 
is a receptor expressed on the surface 
of activated T cells that bind to ligands 
PD-L1 and PD-L2 to downregulate 
their activity and inhibit the immune 
response. 
2022
Further cell therapies
The first T-cell receptor-based 
anticancer therapeutic (Tebentafusptebn) is approved by the FDA for treating 
metastatic uveal melanoma (cancer 
of the pigment-producing cells of the 
eye). This is a first-in-class immunemobilizing monoclonal T-cell receptor 
against cancer (ImmTAC), which binds to 
cancer cells expressing the antigen of 
interest and recruits T cells to kill them.
In this infographic, we will explore how the cancer immunology 
field has advanced over time, highlighting key developments in 
research and therapeutics.
The field of cancer immunology concerns the study of the interaction between the immune 
system cancer cells. These abnormal cells grow uncontrollably, forming tumors and spreading 
around the body.
Today, therapies that help the immune system to fight cancer – immunotherapies – are 
considered one of the key pillars of cancer treatment alongside surgery, chemotherapy
and radiotherapy.
Research and modern technology have allowed us to learn more about the role of the immune 
system in cancer, from how it can either prevent or promote cancer development, and how we 
can use its anti-cancer abilities to create effective immunotherapies. 
What are some of the major milestones in our knowledge of the immune system and cancer?
1957
Immunosurveillance revisited
The theory of cancer 
immunosurveillance is revisited by 
Lewis Thomas and Macfarlane Burnet, 
suggesting that cancers produce 
tumor-specific antigens that trigger 
an immune response to destroy most 
precursors of cancer.
1967–
1975
Viral origins revealed
 In 1967, Jacques Miller discovers
the existence of T cells as well as 
their functions in immunity. Ralph M. 
Steinman discovers dendritic cells
in 1973, as well as their role in the 
adaptive immune response. The 
activity of natural killer (NK) cells is 
also first described in a 1975 paper.
1915
Immune cell stimulation
From experiments with mice, Rockefeller 
Institute physicians James B. Murphy
and John J. Morton formulate their 
hypothesis that nonspecific stimulation 
of immune cells such as lymphocytes 
may represent a treatment for cancer.
1964
Viral origins revealed
The Epstein–Barr virus (EBV) is first 
linked to cancer development after its 
discovery in Burkitt lymphoma cancer 
cells. EBV would later be linked to other 
cancers such as nasopharyngeal 
cancers, Hodgkin lymphoma and some 
gastric cancers.
1977
Immunotherapies as 
standard?
Lloyd J. Old, pioneer of immunooncology, predicts that cancer 
immunotherapy will one day become 
standard practice alongside chemoand radiotherapy.
1990
First immunotherapy approval
The live tuberculosis (TB) vaccine, 
Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG), 
becomes the first approved anticancer immunotherapy. It is still used 
today to prevent recurrence of nonmuscle invasive bladder cancer. 
1997
First monoclonal antibody 
therapy
Rituximab becomes the first 
monoclonal antibody approved by 
the FDA for the treatment of cancer, 
specifically non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. 
Rituximab targets and binds to the cell 
surface protein CD20 found on mature 
B cells, activating the immune system 
and inducing B cell death.
2011
First immune checkpoint 
inhibitor
Ipilimumab becomes the first 
immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) to 
be approved by the FDA. This is an 
antibody drug that targets and inhibits 
CTLA-4, releasing the “brake” on T 
cells and allowing activate and attack 
cancer cells.
2010
First therapeutic vaccine
The first (and to this date the only) 
therapeutic cancer vaccine – 
sipuleucel-T – is approved by the FDA 
to treat castration-resistant prostate 
cancer. It is an autologous dendritic 
cell-based vaccine, meaning it uses 
the patient’s own cells to generate an 
immune response against prostate acid 
phosphatase, an antigen expressed by 
prostate cancer cells.
2014
More ICIs approved
Another ICI, and the first PD-1 inhibitor, 
pembrolizumab, is approved by the 
FDA as a second-line treatment for 
advanced melanoma.
2017
CAR T-cell therapy
The first chimeric antigen receptor 
(CAR) T-cell therapy, tisagenlecleucel, 
is approved by the FDA. In this therapy, 
T cells are extracted from the patient 
and genetically engineered to produce 
receptors against their cancerous B 
cells. They are re-infused back into the 
patient where they target and kill the 
leukemia cells. It is approved for treating 
children and young people with a form 
of relapsed lymphoblastic leukemia.
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P
olycystic ovary syndrome 
(PCOS) is the most common 
hormonal disorder in women 
of reproductive age. Despite 
affecting 8–13% of women, its diagnosis can prove challenging and 
typically requires a visit to 1 or more 
physicians over the course of at 
least 1 year. As a result, up to 70% of 
women remain undiagnosed worldwide  according  to the World Health 
Organization (WHO).
PCOS can cause unpleasant symptoms and is associated with morbidities such as fertility issues, metabolic 
syndromes and impaired glucose 
tolerance. Here, we explore what 
researchers know – and don’t know – 
about PCOS and fertility.
WHAT IS PCOS AND HOW IS 
IT DIAGNOSED?
PCOS is a condition that can be characterized by elevated levels of male sex 
hormones, called androgens, and/or 
the formation of small fluid-filled sacs 
(cysts) on one or both ovaries, which 
is where the name of the disorder originates from. Understanding the cause 
of PCOS and diagnosing it is complex; 
some women develop cysts (morphological symptoms), while others present 
with symptoms that are biochemical 
in origin.
The hormone imbalances present in 
women with PCOS affect ovulation, 
the process where the ovaries release 
an egg into the uterus. Infrequent or 
absent ovulation can manifest as irregular menstrual cycles or a complete 
lack of menstruation for some women. 
Individuals with PCOS are also at an increased risk of developing other health 
conditions, including  but not limited to 
What We Know – And Don’t 
Know – About PCOS
MOLLY CAMPBELL
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type 2 diabetes mellitus, high cholesterol, 
endometrial cancer and heart disease.
The process of diagnosing PCOS is one 
of exclusion, where all other potential 
causes for the following symptoms must 
be ruled out:
• Symptoms of high androgen 
levels – including the growth of 
unwanted facial or bodily hair, 
acne or elevated blood testosterone levels
• Menstrual periods that are irregular or absent
• Polycystic ovaries detected on an 
ultrasound scan
Current guidelines require that a diagnosis of PCOS must be based on the presence of at least two of the above criteria.
IS THERE A KNOWN CAUSE 
OF PCOS?
PCOS is an example of a multifactorial 
disease, which means it can be caused 
by a variety of factors that may or may 
not influence each other. Research 
has demonstrated that genetic and 
environmental factors can contribute 
to a person developing PCOS, but an 
exact cause for the condition is not 
yet known.
INSULIN RESISTANCE AND PCOS
Insulin resistance affects 50%–70% of 
women with PCOS, which has led to 
a body of research exploring whether 
insulin resistance might even be the 
root cause of the condition.
Insulin is produced when blood glucose 
levels rise and helps our cells take 
in glucose so that it can be stored for 
energy. Insulin resistance occurs when 
the body does not respond to insulin 
efficiently. Over time, this means that 
a greater amount of insulin is required 
for our cells to take up the same amount 
of glucose. Excess insulin levels – or 
hyperinsulinemia – can drive excessive 
androgen production. Increased insulin 
levels can also contribute to other metabolic complications that are associated 
with PCOS. The issue is that not every 
woman with PCOS also has insulin 
resistance, so while there might be a 
connection, a causal relationship has 
not been established. 
GENETIC AND EPIGENETIC 
INFLUENCES IN PCOS
PCOS can run in families and has 
an estimated heritability of 70%, 
but how  PCOS might be inherited is 
not well understood.  Twin-, familyand population-based studies have 
identified genetic variants – some of 
which are implicated in the pathways 
of androgen biosynthesis – as being 
associated with the disorder. However, functional genomics studies 
that can explain the significance of 
identified genetic variants are currently lacking.
Genetic research has also indicated 
that there might be several subtypes 
of PCOS, adding further complexity 
to the disorder’s pathophysiology. 
Dapas et al. analyzed the genes of 
~900 women suffering from irregular 
menstrual periods.  The women were 
categorized based on their body mass 
index (BMI), levels of glucose, insulin 
and reproductive hormones. The genetic analyses revealed two apparent 
subtypes of PCOS: a “reproductive 
group” and a “metabolic group”, with 
each subtype being associated with a 
specific group of gene variants.
In the reproductive group, ~23% of 
women had higher levels of luteinizing hormone (LH) and sex hormone 
binding globulin (SHBG), in addition 
to a lower BMI and insulin levels. 
Approximately 37% of the metabolic 
group had lower levels of SHBG and 
LH, a higher BMI and higher glucose 
and insulin levels. “Our study provides 
support for the hypothesis that PCOS 
is in fact a heterogeneous disorder 
with different underlying biological 
mechanisms,” the authors  said. “As a 
consequence, grouping women with 
PCOS under a single diagnosis may 
be counterproductive because distinct 
disease subtypes will likely benefit 
from different interventions.”
Attention has also turned to the potential contribution of epigenetics, which 
regulates gene activity without causing changes to the underlying DNA 
sequence, in PCOS pathophysiology. 
In mice, excess prenatal exposure to 
anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) leads 
to PCOS symptoms in the mother’s 
offspring. A 2021 study by Mimouni 
et al. suggests that such epigenetic 
mechanisms might ensure certain 
traits in affected mice are transmitted 
to future generations.  Whether this 
transgenerational inheritance could 
occur in humans is not yet known.
PCOS AND FERTILITY – 
WHAT’S THE LATEST?
Research to date suggests that the complexity and heterogenic nature of PCOS 
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rule out a likely single cause. A cure 
for the condition therefore does not 
exist, though pharmacological interventions – such as the contraceptive 
pill – and lifestyle changes can help 
to regulate the menstrual cycle and 
address other symptoms.
A major concern for couples affected 
by PCOS is fertility; an estimated
~90–95% of anovulatory women seeking infertility treatment have the condition.  “One of the main symptoms of 
PCOS is anovulation, which means 
that women will ovulate irregularly or 
not at all. That can make it challenging 
to fall pregnant naturally,” Dr. Katrina 
Moss, a research fellow in the School 
of Public Health at the University of 
Queensland, explained.
Challenging, but not impossible; 
many people with PCOS do conceive 
naturally. For those who do not, there 
are several fertility treatment options 
available, which are typically prescribed in a stepped manner.
Though care guidelines differ across 
the world, oral drugs that are ovulation-inducing (OIs) are often the firstline treatment for anovulatory fertility 
in women that do not have other infertility factors.  “Patients doing OI 
will take medication to encourage 
egg development and their specialist 
will monitor how many follicles are 
developing. Once the biggest follicle 
reaches the desired size, patients will 
have a trigger injection to mature the 
egg and release it from the follicle. The 
patient will have timed intercourse or 
insemination to complete the process,” 
Moss said.
Injectable gonadotropins, which also 
stimulate ovulation, have been used 
as a traditional next line of treatment. 
Women might then choose to explore 
options including intrauterine insemination (IUI) and/or  in vitro  fertilization (IVF).
Moss recently explored the birth 
rates and outcomes of women with 
and without PCOS using data from 
the Australian Longitudinal Study 
on Women’s Health.  “The Australian 
Longitudinal Study on Women’s 
Health has been collecting data from 
a dedicated sample of women since 
1996, so it gives us a unique opportunity to understand the whole story 
when it comes to fertility treatment,” 
she explained.
The study analyzed the outcomes 
of women with PCOS using fertility 
treatments according to the clinical 
practice guidelines adopted in Australia. These guidelines recommend a 
treatment plan of OI, followed by IUI 
and IVF. “We studied 1109 women 
who were using fertility treatments 
and found no difference in births 
between the women with and without 
PCOS or between those on different 
treatment paths,” Moss said. The 
study also found that non-invasive 
treatments such as OI are effective 
for women with PCOS; fewer women with PCOS progressed to IVF 
after OI compared to those without 
the condition.
PCOS can run in families and 
has an estimated heritability of 
70%, but how PCOS might be 
inherited is not well understood.
27
iStock
“OI is less invasive than IVF because 
everything happens in the patient’s 
body. It’s also more affordable because 
there is less medical intervention required. For people with PCOS where 
their only barrier to falling pregnant is 
that they are not ovulating, OI may be 
all they need,” said Moss. It’s important to note that age might be a key 
factor for success, as the study found 
more women with PCOS were likely 
to start fertility treatments earlier 
(age 31) than those without (age 34).
“However, if the partner also has fertility challenges, IUI or intracytoplasmic sperm injection might be needed. 
And patients with conditions such as 
endometriosis may be better off going 
straight to IVF as that treatment is 
more suited to their condition. The 
priority should be to get patients into 
the most suitable treatment for them 
as quickly as possible,” Moss added.
The study carries limitations in that it 
is retrospective and that the findings 
might not translate to other parts of 
the world beyond Australia. However, 
Moss hopes that the team’s findings 
are a source of comfort: “We think that 
women with PCOS can stress a bit less 
about fertility treatment. Most won’t 
have fertility problems and if they do 
it is highly treatable. Many women 
with PCOS start thinking about their 
fertility early, which is key factor in 
their high birth rates,” she said.
THE LANDSCAPE OF PCOS 
RESEARCH AND FUNDING
There are many unknowns surrounding PCOS, which presents 
challenges for patients, clinicians and 
researchers alike. Adequate funding 
for research is a critical factor in 
getting answers.
Brakta et al. estimated the National 
Institutes of Health (NIH) funding 
allocations for PCOS over a 10-year 
period (2006-2015).  The study 
compared PCOS research funding to 
grants awarded for three disorders 
with similar degrees of morbidity 
and prevalence: rheumatoid arthritis 
(RA), tuberculosis (TB) and systemic 
lupus erythematosus (SLE). “PCOS, 
compared with RA, TB, and SLE, was 
relatively less funded (total mean 10-
year funding was $215.12 million vs 
$454.39 million, $773.77 million and 
$609.52 million, respectively),” the 
authors concluded.
When discussing why PCOS research 
might be underfunded, Brakta et 
al. highlight the fact that generally, 
diseases of women are underfunded – though efforts are being made 
to address this. Additionally, the fact 
that PCOS is a metabolic disorder, 
which also carries reproductive consequences, might complicate the distribution of funding resources from 
different institutes; to which research 
area should funding be appropriately 
allocated?
A recent analysis of global trends 
in PCOS research suggests that the 
condition’s pathogenesis has become 
a “long-term forefront of research”. 
In more recent years, additional 
attention has been paid to health 
management in PCOS prevention and 
the potential long-term complications 
of the condition.
With growing evidence highlighting 
the condition’s impact on quality of 
life and wellbeing, PCOS research 
and drug development is clearly an 
area of unmet need. While existing 
treatments can provide symptom 
management and address fertility 
issues, mechanism-based treatments 
are sorely needed. ⚫
ISSUE 04, JULY 2021
Scientific 
Storytelling: It’s All 
About Context 
Leftover 
Lockdown Ways
COVID-19 Vaccine 
Safety in Pregnancy
Privacy in
the Brain:
The Ethics of 
Neurotechnology
ISSUE 06, SEPTEMBER 2021
Molecules, 
Mountains and 
Making the World 
a Better Place
Regulating Heavy 
Metals in Baby Food 
#PostItNotePhD
The Alpha and Omega 
of COVID-19: Yes, 
the Pandemic Will 
End (but Not Soon)
ISSUE 08, NOVEMBER 2021
Sustainable 
Science 
and the 
Road to 
Net Zero
Uncovering Key 
Interactions 
Between CancerDriving Proteins
Addressing 
Disparities in 
Healthcare and 
Clinical Research
Closing the 
Vaccine Gap
ISSUE 03, JUNE 2021
Scientist, Mother 
and School Teacher 
The Fear of Being 
Found Out
Why mRNA 
Vaccines Could Be 
a Game Changer
Life as a 
Long-Hauler
What Do We Know 
About Long COVID?
ISSUE 01, APRIL 2021
How Subliminal 
Images Impact Your 
Brain and Behavior
Starting My PhD 
Journey in a Pandemic
Inner Speech, 
Internal Monologues 
and “Hearing Voices”
The Physicality 
of Consciousness 
and Self
ISSUE 07, OCTOBER 2021
Return From 
Extinction
The Neuroscience 
of Creativity 
Hidden Secrets of the 
Human Microbiome
COVID-19: Vaccine 
Stockpiling
ISSUE 10, JANUARY 2022
What the World’s 
First Pig to Human 
Heart Transplant 
Could Mean for the 
Future of Transplants
Unpicking the 
Complexities of the 
Cancer Microbiome
A New Approach to 
Treating Superbugs 
Influenza and 
the Holy Grail 
Vaccine
ISSUE 09, DECEMBER 2021
Lost Women 
of Science
Why the Meat 
Paradox Causes 
Cognitive Dissonance 
for Millions of People
The Omicron Variant 
Highlights the Need 
for Smarter, FutureProof Vaccine Design 
The Pursuit 
ofGlobal, 
Sustainable and 
Cooperative 
Open Science
ISSUE 02, MAY 2021
Biodegradation of 
Synthetic Plastic in 
the Marine Habitat 
A Step Closer to 
Orally-Delivered 
Insulin for Diabetes
Three Psychology 
Experiments That 
Pushed the Limit 
of Ethics
History, Mystery 
and DNA Analysis
ISSUE 05, AUGUST 2021
Mental Health and 
Mental Illness in 
Higher Education 
Tapping the Ancient 
Power of Microalgae
Turning On the 
Vaccine Tap
All 
Cancers, 
Great and 
Small
Pio cae publicae, ad rem deffre, cre 
meripie ntimus se nossoltum inclutum 
esulabe mnihil te nos vatudes, unter
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