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1.
Cancers (Basel) ; 16(13)2024 Jul 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39001537

ABSTRACT

Phosphosidesterases (PDEs) are key regulators of cyclic nucleotide signaling, controlling many hallmarks of cancer and playing a role in resistance to chemotherapy in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). We evaluated the anti-tumor activity of the anti-folate agent pemetrexed (PMX), alone or combined with biochemical inhibitors of PDE5, 8, 9, or 10, against squamous and non-squamous NCSLC cells. Genomic alterations to PDE genes (PDEmut) or PDE biochemical inhibition (PDEi) can sensitize NSCLC to PMX in vitro (observed in 50% NSCLC evaluated). The synergistic activity of PDEi with PMX required microdosing of the anti-folate drug. As single agents, none of the PDEis evaluated have anti-tumor activity. PDE biochemical inhibitors, targeting either cAMP or cGMP signaling (or both), resulted in significant cross-modulation of downstream pathways. The use of PDEi may present a new strategy to overcome PMX resistance of PDEwt NSCLC tumors but comes with important caveats, including the use of subtherapeutic PMX doses.

3.
Cancer Med ; 12(6): 7029-7038, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36464833

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Patients with unresectable dedifferentiated liposarcoma (DDLPS) have poor overall outcomes. Few genomic alterations have been identified with limited therapeutic options. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Patients treated at Levine Cancer Institute with DDLPS were identified. Next generation sequencing (NGS), immunohistochemistry (IHC), and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) testing were performed on tumor tissue collected at diagnosis or recurrence/progression. Confirmation of genomic alterations was performed by orthologous methods and correlated with clinical outcomes. Univariate Cox regression was used to identify genomic alterations associated with clinical outcomes. RESULTS: Thirty-eight DDLPS patients with adequate tissue for genomic profiling and clinical data were identified. Patient characteristics included: median age at diagnosis (66 years), race (84.2% Caucasian), and median follow-up time for the entire cohort was 12.1 years with a range from approximately 3.5 months to 14.1 years. Genes involved in cell cycle regulation, including MDM2 (74%) CDK4 (65%), and CDKN2A (23%), were amplified along with WNT/Notch pathway markers: HMGA2, LGR5, MCL1, and CALR (19%-29%). While common gene mutations were identified, PDE4DIP and FOXO3 were also mutated in 47% and 34% of patients, respectively, neither of which have been previously reported. FOXO3 was associated with improved overall survival (OS) (HR 0.37; p = 0.043) along with MAML2 (HR 0.30; p = 0.040). Mutations that portended worse prognosis included RECQL4 (disease-specific survival HR 4.67; p = 0.007), MN1 (OS HR = 3.38; p = 0.013), NOTCH1 (OS HR 2.28, p = 0.086), and CNTRL (OS HR 2.42; p = 0.090). CONCLUSIONS: This is one of the largest retrospective reports analyzing genomic aberrations in relation to clinical outcomes for patients with DDLPS. Our results suggest therapies targeting abnormalities should be explored and confirmation of prognostic markers is needed. Dedifferentiated liposarcoma is one of the most common subtypes of soft tissue sarcoma yet little is known of its molecular aberrations and possible impact on outcomes. The work presented here is an evaluation of genetic abnormalities among a population of patients with dedifferentiated liposarcoma and how they corresponded with survival and risk of metastases. There were notable gene mutations and amplifications commonly found, some of which had interesting prognostic implications.


Subject(s)
Liposarcoma , Humans , In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence , Retrospective Studies , Prognosis , Liposarcoma/genetics , Liposarcoma/diagnosis , Liposarcoma/pathology , Genomics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2/genetics
4.
JCO Clin Cancer Inform ; 6: e2200011, 2022 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35839431

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Clinical trials of novel and targeted agents increasingly require biomarkers for eligibility. Precision oncology continues to evolve, but challenges hamper broad use of molecular profiling (MP) that could increase the number of patients benefiting from targeted therapy. We implemented an integrated clinical genomics program (CGP), including a virtual Molecular Tumor Board (MTB), and examined its impact on MP use and impact on clinical trial accrual in a multisite regional-based cancer system with an emphasis on effects for isolated clinicians. METHODS: We assessed MP and MTB use from 2010 to 2020 by practice location, physician experience, and patient characteristics. Use of MTB-recommended treatments was assessed. Clinical trial enrollment was evaluated for patients with MP versus MP and MTB review. RESULTS: After CGP implementation, the number of physicians using MP and the number of MP tests increased ≥ 10-fold. The proportion of Hispanic patients with MP was the same as that in the system (both 2%) with marginal differences observed in the proportion of African Americans tested compared with the system population (16% v 19%). Physicians followed MTB treatment recommendations in 74% of cases. Rapid clinical decline was the most common reason why physicians did not follow MTB recommendations. Clinical trial accrual was 15% (669 of 4,459) for patients with MP alone and 28% (94 of 334) with both MP and MTB review. Clinical trial availability and patient out-of-pocket costs affected MP use. CONCLUSION: Integrating CGP into clinical workflow with decision support tools, trial matching, and management of patient costs led to increased use of MP by physicians with all levels of experience, enhanced clinical trial accrual, and has the potential to reduce disparities in MP.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms , Clinical Trials as Topic , Genomics , Humans , Medical Oncology , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Neoplasms/therapy , Precision Medicine , Vulnerable Populations
5.
Transl Lung Cancer Res ; 11(12): 2464-2476, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36636422

ABSTRACT

Background: Metabolomics studies to date have described widespread metabolic reprogramming events during the development of non-squamous non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Extending far beyond the Warburg effect, not only is carbohydrate metabolism affected, but also metabolism of amino acids, cofactors, lipids, and nucleotides. Methods: We evaluated the clinical impact of metabolic reprogramming. We performed comparative analysis of publicly available data on non-squamous NSCLC, to identify concensus altered metabolic pathways. We investigated whether alterations of metabolic genes controlling those consensus metabolic pathways impacted clinical outcome. Using the clinically annotated lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) cohort from The Cancer Genome Atlas, we surveyed the distribution and frequency of function-altering mutations in metabolic genes and their impact on overall survival (OS). Results: We identified 42 metabolic genes of clinical significance, the majority of which (37 of 42) clustered across three metabolic superpathways (carbohydrates, amino acids, and nucleotides) and most functions (40 of 42) were associated with shorter OS. Multivariate analyses showed that dysfunction of carbohydrate metabolism had the most profound impact on OS [hazard ratio (HR) =5.208; 95% confidence interval (CI): 3.272 to 8.291], false discovery rate (FDR)-P≤0.0001, followed by amino acid metabolism (HR =3.346; 95% CI: 2.129 to 5.258), FDR-P≤0.0001 and nucleotide metabolism (HR =2.578; 95% CI: 1.598 to 4.159), FDR-P=0.0001. The deleterious effect of metabolic reprogramming on non-squamous NSCLC was observed independently of disease stage and across treatments groups. Conclusions: By providing a detailed landscape of metabolic alterations in non-squamous NSCLC, our findings offer new insights in the biology of the disease and metabolic adaptation mechanisms of clinical significance.

6.
Clin Cancer Res ; 27(23): 6424-6431, 2021 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34475102

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Doxorubicin is standard therapy for advanced soft-tissue sarcoma (STS) with minimal improvement in efficacy and increased toxicity with addition of other cytotoxic agents. Pembrolizumab monotherapy has demonstrated modest activity and tolerability in previous advanced STS studies. This study combined pembrolizumab with doxorubicin to assess safety and efficacy in frontline and relapsed settings of advanced STS. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This single-center, single-arm, phase II trial enrolled patients with unresectable or metastatic STS with no prior anthracycline therapy. Patients received pembrolizumab 200 mg i.v. and doxorubicin (60 mg/m2 cycle 1 with subsequent escalation to 75 mg/m2 as tolerated). The primary endpoint was safety. Secondary endpoints included overall survival (OS), objective response rate (ORR), and progression-free survival (PFS) based on RECIST v1.1 guidelines. RESULTS: Thirty patients were enrolled (53.3% female; median age 61.5 years; 87% previously untreated) with 4 (13.3%) patients continuing treatment. The study met its primary safety endpoint by prespecified Bayesian stopping rules. The majority of grade 3+ treatment-emergent adverse events were hematologic (36.7% 3+ neutropenia). ORR was 36.7% [95% confidence interval (CI), 19.9-56.1%], with documented disease control in 80.0% (95% CI, 61.4-92.3%) of patients. Ten (33.3%) patients achieved partial response, 1 (3.3%) patient achieved complete response, and 13 (43.3%) patients had stable disease. Median PFS and OS were 5.7 months (6-month PFS rate: 44%) and 17 months (12-month OS rate: 62%), respectively. Programmed cell death ligand-1 (PD-L1) expression was associated with improved ORR, but not OS or PFS. CONCLUSIONS: Combination pembrolizumab and doxorubicin has manageable toxicity and preliminary promising activity in treatment of patients with anthracycline-naive advanced STS.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized , Sarcoma , Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized/adverse effects , Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols/adverse effects , Bayes Theorem , Doxorubicin/adverse effects , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sarcoma/pathology
8.
Oncotarget ; 8(26): 41806-41814, 2017 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28415679

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Molecular profiling performed in the research setting usually does not benefit the patients that donate their tissues. Through a prospective protocol, we sought to determine the feasibility and utility of performing broad genomic testing in the research laboratory for discovery, and the utility of giving treating physicians access to research data, with the option of validating actionable alterations in the CLIA environment. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: 1200 patients with advanced cancer underwent characterization of their tumors with high depth hybrid capture sequencing of 201 genes in the research setting. Tumors were also tested in the CLIA laboratory, with a standardized hotspot mutation analysis on an 11, 46 or 50 gene platform. RESULTS: 527 patients (44%) had at least one likely somatic mutation detected in an actionable gene using hotspot testing. With the 201 gene panel, 945 patients (79%) had at least one alteration in a potentially actionable gene that was undetected with the more limited CLIA panel testing. Sixty-four genomic alterations identified on the research panel were subsequently tested using an orthogonal CLIA assay. Of 16 mutations tested in the CLIA environment, 12 (75%) were confirmed. Twenty-five (52%) of 48 copy number alterations were confirmed. Nine (26.5%) of 34 patients with confirmed results received genotype-matched therapy. Seven of these patients were enrolled onto genotype-matched targeted therapy trials. CONCLUSION: Expanded cancer gene sequencing identifies more actionable genomic alterations. The option of CLIA validating research results can provide alternative targets for personalized cancer therapy.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Genome, Human , Genomics , Laboratories , Research , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Algorithms , Child , Child, Preschool , DNA Mutational Analysis , Feasibility Studies , Female , Genetic Testing/methods , Genetic Testing/standards , Genomics/methods , Genomics/standards , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mutation , Neoplasms/diagnosis , Neoplasms/genetics , Precision Medicine/methods , Precision Medicine/standards , Reproducibility of Results , Research Design , Workflow , Young Adult
9.
Clin Chem ; 61(3): 544-53, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25626406

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Further advances of targeted cancer therapy require comprehensive in-depth profiling of somatic mutations that are present in subpopulations of tumor cells in a clinical tumor sample. However, it is unclear to what extent such intratumor heterogeneity is present and whether it may affect clinical decision-making. To study this question, we established a deep targeted sequencing platform to identify potentially actionable DNA alterations in tumor samples. METHODS: We assayed 515 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumor samples and matched germline DNA (475 patients) from 11 disease sites by capturing and sequencing all the exons in 201 cancer-related genes. Mutations, indels, and copy number data were reported. RESULTS: We obtained a 1000-fold mean sequencing depth and identified 4794 nonsynonymous mutations in the samples analyzed, of which 15.2% were present at <10% allele frequency. Most of these low level mutations occurred at known oncogenic hotspots and are likely functional. Identifying low level mutations improved identification of mutations in actionable genes in 118 (24.84%) patients, among which 47 (9.8%) otherwise would have been unactionable. In addition, acquiring ultrahigh depth also ensured a low false discovery rate (<2.2%) from FFPE samples. CONCLUSIONS: Our results were as accurate as a commercially available CLIA-compliant hotspot panel but allowed the detection of a higher number of mutations in actionable genes. Our study reveals the critical importance of acquiring and utilizing high sequencing depth in profiling clinical tumor samples and presents a very useful platform for implementing routine sequencing in a cancer care institution.


Subject(s)
DNA, Neoplasm/genetics , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Neoplasms/genetics , Humans , Mutation , Sensitivity and Specificity
11.
Cancer Prev Res (Phila) ; 4(7): 962-72, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21733820

ABSTRACT

Agents can enter clinical development for cancer prevention either initially or after previous development for a different indication, such as arthritis, with both approaches consuming many years of development before an agent is fully evaluated for cancer prevention. We propose the following, third approach: reverse migration, that is, importing agents, targets, and study designs to personalize interventions and concepts developed in advanced cancer to the setting of cancer prevention. Importing these "ready-made" features from therapy will allow reverse migration to streamline preventive agent development. We recently reported the Biomarker-integrated Approaches of Targeted Therapy for Lung Cancer Elimination (BATTLE) trial of personalized lung cancer therapy and now propose the reverse migration development of personalized lung cancer prevention based on the BATTLE model.


Subject(s)
Anticarcinogenic Agents/therapeutic use , Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Lung Neoplasms/prevention & control , Clinical Trials as Topic , Humans , Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Precision Medicine
12.
Invest Radiol ; 46(7): 441-9, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21512397

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the efficiency of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agents employing vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF121)/rGel conjugated MnFe2O4 nanocrystals for imaging of neovasculature using a bladder tumor model. MATERIALS AND METHODS: VEGF121/rGel was conjugated to MnFe2O4 nanoparticles (MNPs). The targeting efficiency and detection capability of the VEGF121/rGel-MNPs were investigated in both KDR-deficient (253JB-V) and KDR-overexpressing (PAE/KDR) cells using MRI. The internalization of VEGF121/rGel-MNPs into cells was confirmed by electron microscopy. Their phosphorylation ability and cytotoxicity were compared with unconjugated VEGF121/rGel. The orthotopic tumor mice were established by implanting low KDR-expressing 253JB-V cells into the bladder dome. After tail-vein injection of VEGF121/rGel-MNPs, the MR signal enhancement of intratumoral vessels by VEGF121/rGel-MNPs was observed and inhibition test using VEGF121 was also conducted. Ex vivo MR imaging of tumor tissue, and a fluorescence immunostaining study was also performed. RESULTS: The water-soluble VEGF121/rGel-MNPs (44.5 ± 1.2 nm) were stably suspended in the biologic media and exhibited a high relaxivity coefficient (423 mMs). They demonstrated sufficient targeting capability against KDR-overexpressing PAE/KDR cells, as confirmed by dose-dependent MR images and VEGF121 inhibition tests. The phosphorylation activity of KDR and cytotoxicity of VEGF121/rGel-MNPs were evaluated. VEGF121/rGel-MNPs successfully targeted the tumor and provided accurate anatomic details through (i) acquisition of clear neoangiogenic vascular distributions and (ii) obvious enhancement of the MR signal in T2*-weighted images. Immunostaining and blocking studies demonstrated the specific targeting ability of VEGF121/rGel-MNPs toward intratumoral angiogenesis. CONCLUSIONS: Synthesized VEGF121/rGel-MNPs as targeted MR imaging contrast agents can be specifically delivered to tumors and bind to KDR-expressing angiogenic tumor vessels.


Subject(s)
Contrast Media , Ferric Compounds , Manganese Compounds , Nanoconjugates , Ribosome Inactivating Proteins, Type 1 , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/blood supply , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/diagnosis , Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Neovascularization, Pathologic , Sensitivity and Specificity
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