83 results on '"Daniel C. Christoph"'
Search Results
2. A nomogram to predict the recurrence-free survival and analyze the utility of chemotherapy in stage IB non-small cell lung cancer
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Zhenyang, Zhang, Shuhan, Xie, Weijing, Cai, Zhi-Nuan, Hong, Chuangcai, Yang, Yukang, Lin, Jiafu, Zhu, Zhiwei, Lin, Daniel C, Christoph, Hanibal, Bohnenberger, Lucyna, Kepka, Wolfgang M, Brueckl, Paul, Van Houtte, Mingqiang, Kang, and Jiangbo, Lin
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Oncology ,Original Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Large part of patients of stage IB non-small cell lung cancer (IB NSCLC) may suffer recurrence after surgery. This study is to determine risk factors and establish a nomogram for postoperative recurrence and to provide a reference for adjuvant chemotherapy selection in patients with stage IB NSCLC. METHODS: A total of 394 patients with postoperative stage IB NSCLC who visited Fujian Medical University Union Hospital between January 2010 and June 2016 were selected. Patients were divided into training and validation cohorts based on the time of diagnosis. Independent risk factors were identified using a Cox proportional hazards regression model. A nomogram was created to predict recurrence-free survival (RFS) and was validated with an independent cohort. The predictive ability of the nomogram was evaluated using the concordance index (C-index) and calibration curve. RFS between the high- and low-risk groups was determined using Kaplan-Meier curves, and subgroup analysis of chemotherapy was performed. RESULTS: Visceral pleura invasion, micropapillary structures, tumor size, preoperative serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) level, preoperative serum cytokeratin-19 fragments (Cyfra21-1) level, and postoperative histology were identified as independent risk factors for stage IB NSCLC recurrence. Discrimination of the nomogram showed good prognostic accuracy and clinical applicability, with a C-index of 0.827 and 0.866 in the training and validation cohorts, respectively. The difference in RFS between the high- and low-risk groups in both cohorts was significant (P
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- 2022
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3. Treatment Characteristics and Real-World Progression-Free Survival in Patients With Unresectable Stage III NSCLC Who Received Durvalumab After Chemoradiotherapy: Findings From the PACIFIC-R Study
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Nicolas, Girard, Jair, Bar, Pilar, Garrido, Marina C, Garassino, Fiona, McDonald, Françoise, Mornex, Andrea R, Filippi, Hans J M, Smit, Solange, Peters, John K, Field, Daniel C, Christoph, Anne, Sibille, Rainer, Fietkau, Vilde D, Haakensen, Christos, Chouaid, Ben, Markman, T Jeroen N, Hiltermann, Alvaro, Taus, William, Sawyer, Allison, Allen, Pratibha, Chander, Muriel, Licour, Benjamin, Solomon, and Translational Immunology Groningen (TRIGR)
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Humans ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological/therapeutic use ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung/drug therapy ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Cohort Studies ,Ligands ,Lung Neoplasms/drug therapy ,Progression-Free Survival ,Retrospective Studies ,Consolidation therapy ,Immunotherapy ,Locally advanced NSCLC ,PD-L1 inhibition ,Real-world data ,Oncology - Abstract
Introduction: The phase 3 PACIFIC trial established consolidation therapy with durvalumab as standard of care for patients with unresectable, stage III NSCLC and no disease progression after definitive chemoradiotherapy (CRT). The observational PACIFIC-R study assesses the real-world effectiveness of durvalumab in patients from an early access program. Here, we report treatment characteristics and a preplanned analysis of real-world progression-free survival (rwPFS).Methods: PACIFIC-R (NCT03798535) is an ongoing, international, retrospective study of patients who started durvalumab (intravenously; 10 mg/kg every 2 wk) within an early access program between September 2017 and December 2018. The primary end points are investigator-assessed rwPFS and overall survival (analyzed by Kaplan–Meier method).Results: As of November 30, 2020, the full analysis set comprised 1399 patients from 11 countries (median follow-up duration, 23.5 mo). Patients received durvalumab for a median of 11.0 months. Median rwPFS was 21.7 months (95% confidence interval: 19.1–24.5). RwPFS was numerically longer among patients who received concurrent versus sequential CRT (median, 23.7 versus 19.3 mo) and among patients with programmed cell death-ligand 1 expression greater than or equal to 1% versus less than 1% (22.4 versus 15.6 mo). Overall, 16.5% of the patients had adverse events leading to treatment discontinuation; 9.5% of all patients discontinued because of pneumonitis or interstitial lung disease.Conclusions: Consolidation durvalumab after definitive CRT was well tolerated and effective in this large, real-world cohort study of patients with unresectable, stage III NSCLC. As expected, rwPFS was longer among patients who received concurrent versus sequential CRT and patients with higher programmed cell death-ligand 1 expression. Nevertheless, favorable rwPFS outcomes were observed regardless of these factors.
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- 2023
4. Everolimus after failure of one prior VEGF-targeted therapy in metastatic renal cell carcinoma : Final results of the MARC-2 trial
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Iris Benz-Rüd, Frederik Roos, Marc-Oliver Grimm, Peter J. Goebell, Michael Stöckle, Norbert Marschner, Viktor Grünwald, Marinela Augustin, Michael Staehler, Dunja Klein, Daniel C. Christoph, Fabian Brüning, Karin Potthoff, Johanna Harde, and Arnulf Stenzl
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Male ,Cancer Research ,Medizin ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Gastroenterology ,Body Mass Index ,0302 clinical medicine ,6-month PFS rate ,Renal cell carcinoma ,Clinical endpoint ,Prospective Studies ,Fatigue ,Aged, 80 and over ,Hazard ratio ,Anemia ,Middle Aged ,Kidney Neoplasms ,Progression-Free Survival ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage ,phase IV ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,second-line ,medicine.medical_specialty ,renal cell carcinoma ,Antineoplastic Agents ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,ddc:610 ,Adverse effect ,Survival rate ,Carcinoma, Renal Cell ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Stomatitis ,Everolimus ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,everolimus ,Receptors, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor ,business - Abstract
MARC‐2, a prospective, multicenter phase IV trial, aimed to investigate clinical outcomes in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) treated with everolimus after failure of one initial vascular endothelial growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor (VEGFR‐TKI) therapy and to identify subgroups benefiting most, based on clinical characteristics and biomarkers. Patients with clear cell mRCC failing one initial VEGFR‐TKI received everolimus until progression or unacceptable toxicity. Primary endpoint was 6‐month progression‐free survival rate (6moPFS). Secondary endpoints were overall response rate (ORR), PFS, overall survival (OS), and safety. Between 2011 and 2015, 63 patients were enrolled. Median age was 65.4 years (range 43.3‐81.1). 6moPFS was 39.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 27.0‐51.3) overall, 54.4% (95% CI, 35.2‐70.1) vs 23.7% (95% CI, 10.5‐39.9) for patients aged ≥65 vs 25 vs ≤25 kg/m2. A Cox proportional hazards model confirmed a longer PFS for patients aged ≥65 years (hazard ratio [HR] 0.46; 95% CI, 0.26‐0.80) and a longer OS for patients with BMI >25 kg/m2 (HR 0.36; 95% CI, 0.18‐0.71). Median PFS and median OS were 3.8 months (95% CI, 3.2‐6.2) and 16.8 months (95% CI, 14.3‐24.3). ORR was 7.9% and disease control rate was 60.3%. No new safety signals emerged. Most common adverse events were stomatitis (31.7%), fatigue (31.7%), and anemia (30.2%). One patient died from treatment‐related upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Everolimus remains a safe and effective treatment option for mRCC patients after one prior VEGFR‐TKI therapy. Patients aged ≥65 years and patients with BMI >25 kg/m2 benefited most.
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- 2022
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5. Durvalumab after definitive chemoradiotherapy in locally advanced unresectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): Real-world data on survival and safety from the German expanded-access program (EAP)
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Felix Steger, Anke Schlenska-Lange, Marlitt Horn, M. Faehling, Jürgen Alt, Stephan Eisenmann, Wolfgang M. Brückl, Daniel C. Christoph, Petra Hoffknecht, Christian Schumann, Petros Christopoulos, and Philipp Schütt
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0301 basic medicine ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Durvalumab ,Population ,Locally advanced ,non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Adverse effect ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Definitive chemoradiotherapy ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Expanded access ,business - Abstract
Background Following the PACIFIC trial, durvalumab has been approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for consolidation of locally advanced PD-L1-positive NSCLC after chemoradiotherapy (CRT). Patients were treated with durvalumab in the EAP from 22.11.2017 to 15.10.2018 allowing analysis of its efficacy and safety. Methods Data from 56 centres were analysed for adverse events (AE), progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS). Results 126 patients actually received at least 1 cycle durvalumab. Compared to the PACIFIC trial, the EAP population had more advanced stage and included “oligometastatic” stage IV patients and patients with autoimmune disease. PFS (20.1 months) and OS (not reached) were similar in the EAP and the PACIFIC trial. 42.9 % completed 12 months of durvalumab without deaths during FU. Stage IV patients (n = 7) had encouraging OS (not reached at 27 months). Autoimmune disease did not affect survival. PFS and OS were similar in PD-L1-negative patients (n = 32) and PD-L1-positive patients (n = 79). Conclusions Survival in the EAP was comparable to the PACIFIC trial. Selected stage IV patients and patients with autoimmune disease may benefit from durvalumab consolidation and should be included in future immuno-oncological trials. PD-L1 did not predict survival challenging the exclusion of PD-L1-negative patients from durvalumab consolidation. In summary, durvalumab consolidation is safe and effective in a European real-world setting.
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- 2020
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6. Real-world efficacy of docetaxel plus nintedanib after chemo-immunotherapy failure in advanced pulmonary adenocarcinoma
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Filippo Rizzo, Diana Schaufler, Jens Panse, Matthias Scheffler, Kato Kambartel, Martin Metzenmacher, Judith Atz, Amin T. Turki, Christopher M. Hoffmann, Hannes Buchner, Mathias Hoiczyk, Daniel C. Christoph, and Ivo Azeh
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Indoles ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Pulmonary adenocarcinoma ,Medizin ,non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) ,Adenocarcinoma of Lung ,Docetaxel ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Treatment Failure ,Adverse effect ,neoplasms ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,Chemo immunotherapy ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Immune checkpoint ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Nintedanib ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Future oncology 17(30), 3965-3976 (2021). doi:10.2217/fon-2021-0424, Published by Future Medicine Ltd, London
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- 2021
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7. Bortezomib sensitivity is tissue dependent and high expression of the 20S proteasome precludes good response in malignant pleural mesothelioma
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Sandra Christoph, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Thomas Mairinger, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Kurt Werner Schmid, Wilfried Eberhardt, Erika Berg, Jens Kollmeier, Saskia Roxanne Sydow, and Daniel C. Christoph
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0301 basic medicine ,Cisplatin ,PSMB2 ,PSMB1 ,Bortezomib ,business.industry ,PSMB4 ,PSMA5 ,PSMB5 ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Proteasome inhibitor ,medicine ,Cancer research ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Bortezomib is an approved proteasome inhibitor for the treatment of certain lymphoma subtypes. Two clinical trials investigated bortezomib in patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) and failed to improve outcome. We present a potential explanation for this event. Methods 171 patients with MPM were analyzed for their mRNA expression of proteasomal subunits PSMA1, PSMA5, PSMB1, PSMB2, PSMB4 and PSMB5 via qPCR (n=84) or sequencing (n=87 TCGA/cBioPortal data set "Mesothelioma"). Outcome and subunit expression were correlated. Four mesothelial and one fibroblast cell line were treated with bortezomib and cisplatin. Cellular response was measured after 0, 6, 12, 24, 48 and 72 hrs. Enzyme activity of proteasomal subunits was assessed via functional enzyme activity assays. Results Patients with MPM presented with elevated expression of proteasomal subunits compared to benign controls (p
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- 2019
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8. Thrombospondin-2 and LDH Are Putative Predictive Biomarkers for Treatment with Everolimus in Second-Line Metastatic Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma (MARC-2 Study)
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Viktor Grünwald, Barbara Seliger, Iris Benz-Rüd, Arnulf Stenzl, Frederik C. Roos, Sebastian Hölters, Peter J. Goebell, Johanna Harde, Marinela Augustin, Philip Zeuschner, Anja Mueller, Kerstin Junker, Michael Staehler, Daniel C. Christoph, Fabian Brüning, Hagen S. Bachmann, Michael Stöckle, and Marc-Oliver Grimm
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,second-line ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Medizin ,urologic and male genital diseases ,metastatic renal cell carcinoma ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Renal cell carcinoma ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Lactate dehydrogenase ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,ddc:610 ,RC254-282 ,Predictive biomarker ,Everolimus ,business.industry ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,everolimus ,Clear cell renal cell carcinoma ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,biomarker ,phase IV ,Biomarker (medicine) ,business ,Clear cell ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Simple Summary: Treatment of metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) remains a challenge due to the lack of biomarkers indicating the optimal drug for each patient. This study analyzed blood samples of patients with predominant clear cell mRCC who were treated with the mTOR inhibitor everolimus after failure of one prior tumor therapy. In an exploratory approach, predictive blood biomarkers were searched. We found lower levels of the protein thrombospondin-2 (TSP-2) at the start of the therapy and higher lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels in serum two weeks after therapy initiation to be associated with therapy response. Of note, these blood biomarkers had a higher predictive value than baseline patient parameters or risk classifications. Polymorphisms in the mTOR gene appeared to be associated with therapy response, but were not significant. To conclude, it seems feasible to identify patients showing longtime responses to everolimus and possible to increase tumor therapy response rates based on biomarkers for individual therapy selection. Abstract: There is an unmet need for predictive biomarkers in metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC) therapy. The phase IV MARC-2 trial searched for predictive blood biomarkers in patients with predominant clear cell mRCC who benefit from second-line treatment with everolimus. In an exploratory approach, potential biomarkers were assessed employing proteomics, ELISA, and polymorphism analyses. Lower levels of angiogenesis-related protein thrombospondin-2 (TSP-2) at baseline (≤665 parts per billion, ppb) identified therapy responders with longer median progression-free survival (PFS; ≤665 ppb at baseline: 6.9 months vs. 1.8, p = 0.005). Responders had higher lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) levels in serum two weeks after therapy initiation (>27.14 nmol/L), associated with a longer median PFS (3.8 months vs. 2.2, p = 0.013) and improved overall survival (OS; 31.0 months vs. 14.0 months, p < 0.001). Baseline TSP-2 levels had a stronger relation to PFS (HR 0.36, p = 0.008) than baseline patient parameters, including IMDC score. Increased serum LDH levels two weeks after therapy initiation were the best predictor for OS (HR 0.21, p < 0.001). mTOR polymorphisms appeared to be associated with therapy response but were not significant. Hence, we identified TSP-2 and LDH as promising predictive biomarkers for therapy response on everolimus after failure of one VEGF-targeted therapy in patients with clear cell mRCC.
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- 2021
9. Mitogen signal-associated pathways, energy metabolism regulation, and mediation of tumor immunogenicity play essential roles in the cellular response of malignant pleural mesotheliomas to platinum-based treatment : A retrospective study
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Luka Brcic, Sabrina Borchert, Thomas Mairinger, Julia Steinborn, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Michael Wessolly, Hendrik Beckert, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Elena Mairinger, Thomas Hager, Daniel C. Christoph, Kurt Werner Schmid, Alexander Mathilakathu, and Jens Kollmeier
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MAPK/ERK pathway ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Medizin ,medicine.disease ,Oncology ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Original Article ,Signal transduction ,Lung cancer ,business ,PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare malignant tumor associated with asbestos exposure, with infaust prognosis and overall survival below 20 months in treated patients. Platinum is still the backbone of the chemotherapy protocols, and the reasons for the rather poor efficacy of platinum compounds in MPM remain largely unknown. Therefore, we aimed to analyze differences in key signaling pathways and biological mechanisms in therapy-naïve samples and samples after chemotherapy in order to evaluate the effect of platinum-based chemotherapy. METHODS: The study cohort comprised 24 MPM tumor specimens, 12 from therapy-naïve and 12 from patients after platinum-based therapy. Tumor samples were screened using the NanoString nCounter platform for digital gene expression analysis with an appurtenant custom-designed panel comprising a total of 366 mRNAs covering the most important tumor signaling pathways. Significant pathway associations were identified by gene set enrichment analysis using the WEB-based GEne SeT AnaLysis Toolkit (WebGestalt) RESULTS: We have found reduced activity of TNF (normalized enrichment score: 2.03), IL-17 (normalized enrichment score: 1.93), MAPK (normalized enrichment score: 1.51), and relaxin signaling pathways (normalized enrichment score: 1.42) in the samples obtained after platinum-based therapy. In contrast, AMPK (normalized enrichment score: –1.58), mTOR (normalized enrichment score: –1.50), Wnt (normalized enrichment score: –1.38), and longevity regulating pathway (normalized enrichment score: –1.31) showed significantly elevated expression in the same samples. CONCLUSIONS: We could identify deregulated signaling pathways due to a directed cellular response to platinum-induced cell stress. Our results are paving the ground for a better understanding of cellular responses and escape mechanisms, carrying a high potential for improved clinical management of patients with MPM.
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- 2021
10. Volumetric PET Response Assessment Outperforms Conventional Criteria in Patients Receiving High-Dose Pembrolizumab for Malignant Mesothelioma
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Thomas Hager, Justin Ferdinandus, Michal Chodyla, Martin Metzenmacher, Ken Herrmann, F. Barbato, Frederik Krefting, Kelsey L. Pomykala, Lale Umutlu, Wolfgang P. Fendler, Daniel C. Christoph, and Lukas Kessler
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Pembrolizumab ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Internal medicine ,Natriuretic Peptide, Brain ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In patient ,Mesothelioma ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Response rate (survey) ,Chemotherapy ,PET-CT ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Mesothelioma, Malignant ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Peptide Fragments ,Response assessment ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,business - Abstract
Fixed-dose pembrolizumab (200 mg absolute, day 1, every 3 wk) for the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma did not result in survival benefit in the phase 3 PROMISE-meso trial compared with second-line chemotherapy. Because of lack of validated imaging response criteria, responder subgroups with potential survival benefit have not yet been identified. Here, we administered high-dose pembrolizumab (10 mg/kg, day 1, every 2 wk) considering the KEYNOTE-028 trial and assessed the prognostic value of PET metabolic response in patients with chemotherapy-resistant malignant mesothelioma of the pleura or peritoneum. Methods: Data from 27 patients with baseline and follow-up 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging were retrospectively analyzed. RECIST, version 1.1; modified RECIST; and PERCIST using both tumor lesion metabolic activity in a 1 cm3 spheric region of interest of up to 5 target lesions (PERCISTSULpeak) and metabolic tumor volume PERCIST (PERCISTMTV) were applied separately to categorize responders in CT and PET imaging studies. Progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) were compared between responders and nonresponders using Kaplan-Meier and log-rank analyses. Programmed cell death protein 1 ligand expression status was assessed, and its association with outcome was investigated. Results: Twenty-seven patients had 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging at baseline and after at least 4 cycles pembrolizumab. Median PFS and OS were 3.4 and 15.1 mo, respectively. Response rates were 7%, 7%, 30%, and 30% based on RECIST, modified RECIST, PERCISTSULpeak, and PERCISTMTV response criteria, respectively. Response according to PERCISTMTV predicted prolonged OS or PFS (P < 0.01), whereas all other imaging criteria and programmed cell death protein 1 ligand expression did not. Conclusion:18F-FDG PET metabolic volume response predicts survival in patients with malignant mesothelioma receiving high-dose pembrolizumab. These results should prompt inclusion of PET response assessment in future phase 3 clinical trials.
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- 2021
11. 1162P Clinical research platform into molecular testing, treatment and outcome of non-small cell lung carcinoma patients (CRISP): First real-world evidence of NSCLC stage II and III in Germany - AIO-TRK-0315
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C. Bernhardt, M-O. Zahn, Bernward Passlick, A. Fleitz, M. Chiabudini, A. Groth, Martin Sebastian, Michael Thomas, Daniel C. Christoph, W. Eberhardt, Andreas Gröschel, M. Reiser, Christian Grah, Martin Reck, A. Hipper, Petros Christopoulos, Martina Jänicke, Martin Stuschke, Frank Griesinger, and L. Spring
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Stage ii ,medicine.disease ,Real world evidence ,Outcome (game theory) ,Clinical research ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Trk receptor ,Carcinoma ,Medicine ,Non small cell ,business - Published
- 2021
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12. 1171MO PACIFIC-R real-world study: Treatment duration and interim analysis of progression-free survival in unresectable stage III NSCLC patients treated with durvalumab after chemoradiotherapy
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Muriel Licour, Steven Kao, Nicolas Girard, W. Sawyer, F. Mornex, Andrea Riccardo Filippi, Fiona McDonald, Christos Chouaid, H.J.M. Smit, John K. Field, Daniel C. Christoph, V. Bray, Pilar Garrido, A. Allen, Solange Peters, M.C. Garassino, V.D. Haakensen, Jair Bar, R. Fietkau, and A. Sibille
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Durvalumab ,business.industry ,Treatment duration ,Stage III NSCLC ,Hematology ,Interim analysis ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Progression-free survival ,business ,Chemoradiotherapy - Published
- 2021
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13. Durvalumab after definitive chemoradiotherapy in locally advanced NSCLC: Data of the German EAP
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Wolfgang M. Brückl, Felix Steger, Jürgen Alt, M. Faehling, Philipp Schütt, Petra Hoffknecht, Anke Schlenska-Lange, Marlitt Horn, Daniel C. Christoph, Christian Schumann, Petros Christopoulos, and Stephan Eisenmann
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Oncology ,PD-L1 ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Durvalumab ,Survival ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Population ,Locally advanced ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,NSCLC ,03 medical and health sciences ,Oligometastatic ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Checkpoint inhibitor ,medicine ,Stage (cooking) ,lcsh:Science (General) ,Lung cancer ,education ,Adverse effect ,030304 developmental biology ,Data Article ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Chemotherapy ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Real world ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Chemoradiotherapy ,lcsh:Q1-390 ,Autoimmune - Abstract
Following the PACIFIC trial, durvalumab has been approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for consolidation of locally advanced PD-L1-positive NSCLC after chemoradiotherapy (CRT). Patients were treated with durvalumab in the EAP from 22.11.2017 to 15.10.2018 allowing analysis of its efficacy and safety. 211 patients were registered by 90 German centres. Data were collected retrospectively by questionnaire and queries. 56 centres reported data on 126 patients who actually received at least one cycle of durvalumab. In contrast to the PACIFIC-trial population, some patients with oligometastatic disease and a history of autoimmune disease are included in the EAP population. Information on PD-L1 status was obtained for 111 patients. Baseline data include age, gender, ECOG, stage (IASLC 8th ed.), and smoking history. Treatment data include mode of chemoradiotherapy, used chemotherapy agent, and duration of durvalumab therapy. Adverse evants were documented according to CTAEC 5.0. Data were analysed for progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival (OS), and adverse events (AE). The results were published in Lung Cancer [1].
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- 2020
14. Lorlatinib in pretreated ALK- or ROS1-positive lung cancer and impact of TP53 co-mutations: results from the German early access program
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Nikolaj Frost, Petros Christopoulos, Diego Kauffmann-Guerrero, Jan Stratmann, Richard Riedel, Monica Schaefer, Jürgen Alt, Sylvia Gütz, Daniel C. Christoph, Eckart Laack, Martin Faehling, Richard Fischer, Klaus Fenchel, Sebastian Haen, Lukas Heukamp, Christian Schulz, and Frank Griesinger
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ALK ,lorlatinib ,brain metastases ,early access program ,Advances in Treatment of Lung Cancer Patients with Targetable Mutations ,TP53 ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,NSCLC ,ROS1 ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften::610 Medizin und Gesundheit::610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,Original Research - Abstract
Introduction: We report on the results of the German early access program (EAP) with the third-generation ALK- and ROS1-inhibitor lorlatinib. Patients and Methods: Patients with documented treatment failure of all approved ALK/ROS1-specific therapies or with resistance mutations not covered by approved inhibitors or leptomeningeal carcinomatosis were enrolled and analyzed. Results: In total, 52 patients were included [median age 57 years (range 32–81), 54% female, 62% never smokers, 98% adenocarcinoma]; 71% and 29% were ALK- and ROS1-positive, respectively. G1202R and G2032R resistance mutations prior to treatment with lorlatinib were observed in 10 of 26 evaluable patients (39%), 11 of 39 patients showed TP53 mutations (28%). Thirty-six patients (69%) had active brain metastases (BM) and nine (17%) leptomeningeal carcinomatosis when entering the EAP. Median number of prior specific TKIs was 3 (range 1–4). Median duration of treatment, progression-free survival (PFS), response rate and time to treatment failure were 10.4 months, 8.0 months, 54% and 13.0 months. Calculated 12-, 18- and 24-months survival rates were 65, 54 and 47%, overall survival since primary diagnosis (OS2) reached 79.6 months. TP53 mutations were associated with a substantially reduced PFS (3.7 versus 10.8 month, HR 3.3, p = 0.003) and were also identified as a strong prognostic biomarker (HR for OS2 3.0 p = 0.02). Neither prior treatments with second-generation TKIs nor BM had a significant influence on PFS and OS. Conclusions: Our data from real-life practice demonstrate the efficacy of lorlatinib in mostly heavily pretreated patients, providing a clinically meaningful option for patients with resistance mutations not covered by other targeted therapies and those with BM or leptomeningeal carcinomatosis.
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- 2020
15. First-line treatment selection with organoids of an EGFRm + TP53m stage IA1 patient with early metastatic recurrence after radical surgery and follow-up
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Zhongxing Bing, Huang Min, Antonio Passaro, Yadong Wang, Tomoyuki Hishida, Yang Song, Ziqi Jia, Yanyu Wang, Han Han-Zhang, Naixin Liang, Yan Yu, Lei Cao, Peng Liu, Daniel C. Christoph, Shuyang Zhang, Chen Zexin, Zhili Cao, Xiaoying Yang, Cesare Gridelli, Jinlei Song, and Shanqing Li
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,First line treatment ,iMDT Corner ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,MEDLINE ,Medicine ,Radical surgery ,Stage (cooking) ,business ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,Surgery - Published
- 2020
16. Efficacy and safety analysis of the German expanded access program of osimertinib in patients with advanced, T790M-positive non-small cell lung cancer
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Sofia Hornetz, Daniel C. Christoph, Helge Bischoff, Sebastian Michels, M Kimmich, Jürgen Alt, Monica Schäfer, Werner Spengler, Frank Griesinger, Martin Sebastian, Annette Müller, Jan Stratmann, Eckart Laack, and S. Sackmann
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Adult ,Male ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Piperazines ,03 medical and health sciences ,T790M ,0302 clinical medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Germany ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Osimertinib ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Kinase activity ,Lung cancer ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors ,Case report form ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Aged, 80 and over ,Acrylamides ,Aniline Compounds ,Performance status ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,ErbB Receptors ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Expanded access ,Mutation ,Disease Progression ,Female ,business - Abstract
Osimertinib, a third-generation irreversible mutant-selective inhibitor of EGFR kinase activity was clinically evaluated in the AURA trials, where it showed high clinical efficacy and a favorable toxicity profile in patients with acquired exon 20-EGFR pT790M mutation. We provide the clinical data of the German expanded access program that further characterizes the efficacy and safety of osimertinib in a heterogeneous patient population outside clinical trials. We performed a retrospective data analysis on patients who were included into the German osimertinib EAP. Of 81 patients enrolled, 51 patients (62.9%) with sufficient case report form data were available for efficacy and safety analysis. Unconfirmed overall response rate was 80.0% with 2 patients (3.9%) achieving a complete remission and 37 patients (72.5%) having a partial remission. Disease control rate was 95.9% and only two patients showed refractory disease. Disease control rate did not correlate with clinical characteristics and was independent of number as well as type of the previous therapy line(s). Estimated progression-free survival was 10.1 months (95% CI 9.2–11.0 months). Osimertinib showed a favorable toxicity profile with no dose reductions in our observation period, even in patients with low performance status. Median survival from first diagnosis to data cut-off was 47.3 months (95% CI 43.3–51.9 months). Repeated tissue/liquid biopsy of three patients in our cohort who showed disease progression revealed an amplification of MET. We confirm safety and efficacy of osimertinib with high response rates among all subgroups, including patients with poor performance status and multiple prior therapy lines. Amplification of MET might mediate acquired resistance to osimertinib.
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- 2018
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17. 79MO PACIFIC-R: Real-world characteristics of unresectable stage III NSCLC patients treated with durvalumab after chemoradiotherapy
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M.C. Garassino, Eric Pichon, V.D. Haakensen, Ben Solomon, M. van den Heuvel, Lore Decoster, Shankar Siva, M. Licour, Fiona McDonald, W. Sawyer, Andrea Riccardo Filippi, L. Steinbusch, A. Allen, Nicolas Girard, F. Mornex, P. Vercauter, I. Peretz, Christos Chouaid, A. Agbarya, and Daniel C. Christoph
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Durvalumab ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Stage III NSCLC ,medicine ,business ,Chemoradiotherapy - Published
- 2021
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18. Erratum zu Onkologisches [18-F] FDG-PET/CT im vertragsärztlichen Bereich
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Rupert Pfandzelter, Dirk Winterkamp, Daniel C. Christoph, and Detlef Moka
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- 2021
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19. Folic acid phenotype (FAP) is a superior biomarker predicting response to pemetrexed-based chemotherapy in malignant pleural mesothelioma
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Fabian Dominik Mairinger, K.W. Schmid, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Elena Flom, Claudia Vollbrecht, Daniel C. Christoph, Helmut Popper, Jens Kollmeier, and Thomas Mairinger
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Male ,Mesothelioma ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Pediatrics ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Reduced Folate Carrier Protein ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Peptide Synthases ,Aged, 80 and over ,Molecular pathology ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,thymidylate synthethase ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Phenotype ,Treatment Outcome ,Pemetrexed ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Research Paper ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pleural Neoplasms ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folic Acid ,Internal medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Pleural Neoplasm ,Aged ,personalized therapy ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Mesothelioma, Malignant ,Folylpolyglutamate synthase ,Cancer ,Thymidylate Synthase ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,pleural mesothelioma ,business ,folylpolyglutamate synthase - Abstract
// Fabian Dominik Mairinger 1 , Claudia Vollbrecht 2, 3, 4 , Elena Flom 1 , Daniel Christian Christoph 5 , Kurt-Werner Schmid 1 , Jens Kollmeier 6 , Helmut Hans Popper 7 , Thomas Mairinger 8 and Robert Fred Henry Walter 1, 9 1 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 2 Institute of Pathology, Division of Molecular Pathology, Charite, Berlin, Germany 3 German Cancer Consortium (DKTK), Germany 4 German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg, Germany 5 Department of Medical Oncology, West German Cancer Centre, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 6 Department of Pneumology, Helios Klinikum Emil von Behring, Berlin, Germany 7 Department of Pathology, Division of Molecular Lung- and Pleurapathology, Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria 8 Department of Pathology, Helios Klinikum Emil von Behring, Berlin, Germany 9 Ruhrlandklinik, West German Lung Centre, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany Correspondence to: Fabian Dominik Mairinger, email: fabian.mairinger@uk-essen.de Keywords: pleural mesothelioma, pemetrexed, thymidylate synthethase, folylpolyglutamate synthase, personalized therapy Received: October 12, 2016 Accepted: March 01, 2017 Published: March 21, 2017 ABSTRACT Background: Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare tumor linked to a dismal prognosis. Even the most effective chemotherapeutical regime of pemetrexed combined with cisplatin leads to a remission-rate of only about 40%. The reasons for the rather poor efficacy remain largely unknown. Results: Phenotypes were significantly associated with progression (p=0.0279) and remission (p=0.0262). Cox-regression revealed significant associations between SLC19A1 / TYMS -ratio (p=0.0076) as well as FPGS / TYMS -ratio (p=0.0026) and OS. For differentiation by risk-groups, COXPH identified a strong correlation (p=0.0008). Methods: 56 MPM specimens from patients treated with pemetrexed were used for qPCR analysis. Phenotypes and risk groups were defined by their expression levels of members of the folic acid metabolism and correlated to survival and objective response. Conclusion: Our results indicate that the balance between folic acid uptake, activation and metabolism plays a crucial role in response to pemetrexed-based chemotherapy and the prognosis of MPM patients. Implementing this marker profile in MPM stratification may help to individualize MPM-therapy more efficiently.
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- 2017
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20. High Prevalence of Concomitant Oncogene Mutations in Prospectively Identified Patients with ROS1-Positive Metastatic Lung Cancer
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Henning Reis, Marcel Wiesweg, Martin Schuler, Nikoleta Savvidou, Kurt Werner Schmid, Johannes Meiler, Thomas Hager, Charlotte Skiba, Filiz Oezkan, Martin Stuschke, Karl Worm, Clemens Aigner, Wilfried Eberhardt, Saskia Ting, Stefan Kasper, Hilmar Kühl, Jörg Hense, Kaid Darwiche, Dirk Theegarten, Thomas Herold, Daniel C. Christoph, and Stefan Welter
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,medicine.disease_cause ,Targeted therapy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Anaplastic lymphoma kinase ,Prospective Studies ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Aged, 80 and over ,Gene Rearrangement ,Middle Aged ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Prognosis ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Survival Rate ,Pemetrexed ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Adenocarcinoma ,Female ,KRAS ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Internal medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,ROS1 ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,business.industry ,Oncogenes ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Concomitant ,Mutation ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
OA embargo Objectives Chromosomal rearrangements involving ROS1 define a rare entity of lung adenocarcinomas with exquisite sensitivity to molecularly targeted therapy. We report clinical outcomes and genomic findings of patients with ROS1-positive lung cancer who were prospectively identified within a multiplex biomarker profiling program at the West German Cancer Center. Methods Standardized immunohistochemical (IHC) analysis, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and hotspot mutation analyses were performed in 1345 patients with advanced cancer, including 805 patients with metastatic lung adenocarcinoma. Clinical and epidemiological data were retrieved from the institutional database. Results ROS1 positivity by IHC analysis was detected in 25 patients with lung cancer (4.8% of lung adenocarcinomas), including 13 patients (2.5%) with ROS1 FISH positivity with a cutoff of at least 15% of events. Of the ROS1 IHC analysis–positive cases, 36% presented with concomitant oncogenic driver mutations involving EGFR (six cases, five of which were clinically validated by response to EGFR-targeting agents), KRAS (two cases), phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha gene (PIK3CA), and BRAF. Three cases initially classified as ROS1 FISH–negative passed the threshold of 15% positive events when repeat biopsies were analyzed at progression. The median overall survival of the ROS1-positive patients (104 months) was significantly superior to that of the 261 patients with EGFR/anaplastic lymphoma kinase/ROS1–negative lung adenocarcinoma (24.4 months, p = 0.044). Interestingly, the overall survival of the 13 ROS1-positive patients with lung cancer from initiation of pemetrexed-based chemotherapy was significantly prolonged when compared with that of 169 pemetrexed-treated patients with EGFR/anaplastic lymphoma kinase/ROS1–negative adenocarcinoma (p = 0.01). Conclusions ROS1-positive metastatic lung adenocarcinomas frequently harbor concomitant oncogenic driver mutations. Levels of ROS1 FISH–positive events are variable over time. This heterogeneity provides additional therapeutic options if discovered by multiplex biomarker testing and repeat biopsies. © 2016 International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer
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- 2017
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21. 1242P Characteristics of the first 615 patients enrolled in Pacific R: A study of the first real-world data on unresectable stage III NSCLC patients treated with durvalumab after chemoradiotherapy
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Ben Markman, H. Bouchaab, John K. Field, A. Sibille, Alyssa B Klein, I. Diaz Perez, Nicolas Girard, Muriel Licour, W. Sawyer, Daniel C. Christoph, Christian Schumann, M. Moskovitz, H.J.M. Smit, Marina Chiara Garassino, R. Fietkau, Vanesa Gregorc, Solange Peters, Maurice Pérol, Patrick Merle, and Pilar Garrido
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Durvalumab ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Stage III NSCLC ,Hematology ,business ,Real world data ,Chemoradiotherapy - Published
- 2020
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22. 1244P Durvalumab after definitive radiochemotherapy (RCT) in locally advanced unresectable NSCLC: Real-world data on survival and safety from the German expanded access program (EAP)
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P. Schuett, F. Steger, M. Faehling, S. Eisenmann, M. Horn, S. Sackmann, Petra Hoffknecht, A. Schlenska-Lange, Petros Christopoulos, Daniel C. Christoph, S.P. Aries, Christian Schumann, and Jürgen Alt
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Durvalumab ,business.industry ,Locally advanced ,Hematology ,language.human_language ,law.invention ,German ,Oncology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Expanded access ,language ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,business ,Real world data - Published
- 2020
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23. 1896MO Volumetric PET response assessment outperforms conventional criteria in patients receiving high-dose pembrolizumab for malignant mesothelioma
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Thomas Hager, K.L. Pomykala, Martin Metzenmacher, Wolfgang P. Fendler, Daniel C. Christoph, F. Krefting, Ken Herrmann, Francesco Barbato, Lukas Kessler, Justin Ferdinandus, and M-K. Chodyla
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Response assessment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,medicine ,In patient ,Hematology ,Pembrolizumab ,Radiology ,Mesothelioma ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2020
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24. Processing Escapes: an Alternative Explanation for Immune Therapy Resistance
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Robert Walter, Kurt Werner Schmid, Thomas Hager, Jan Schmeller, Daniel C. Christoph, Thomas Mairinger, Elena Mairinger, J. Wohlschläger, Jens Kollmeier, Till Plönes, Agnes Bankfalvi, Michael Wessolly, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Wilfried Eberhardt, and Sabrina Borchert
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Resistance (ecology) ,business.industry ,Immunology ,Medizin ,Medicine ,business ,Immune therapy - Published
- 2019
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25. Gene expression profiling of homologous recombination repair pathway indicates susceptibility for olaparib treatment in malignant pleural mesothelioma in vitro
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Thomas Mairinger, Thomas Herold, Thomas Hager, Elena Mairinger, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Wilfried Eberhardt, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Michael Wessolly, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Jens Kollmeier, Daniel C. Christoph, Clemens Aigner, Sabrina Borchert, Till Plönes, Kurt Werner Schmid, and Jan Schmeller
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Mesothelioma ,0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Apoptosis ,PARP1 ,BRCAness - BAP1 ,Piperazines ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Olaparib ,0302 clinical medicine ,Homologous Recombination ,Aurora Kinase A ,BAP1 ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Acid Anhydride Hydrolases ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Pemetrexed ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Research Article ,medicine.drug ,DNA repair ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,Cisplatin ,business.industry ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Mesothelioma, Malignant ,Malignant pleural mesothelioma - overall survival ,Recombinational DNA Repair ,Gene expression profiling ,DNA Repair Enzymes ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Rad50 ,Cancer research ,Phthalazines ,business - Abstract
Background Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a tumour arising from pleural cavities with poor prognosis. Multimodality treatment with pemetrexed combined with cisplatin shows unsatisfying response-rates of 40%. The reasons for the rather poor efficacy of chemotherapeutic treatment are largely unknown. However, it is conceivable that DNA repair mechanisms lead to an impaired therapy response. We hypothesize a major role of homologous recombination (HR) for genome stability and survival of this tumour. Therefore, we analysed genes compiled under the term “BRCAness”. An inhibition of this pathway with olaparib might abrogate this effect and induce apoptosis. Methods We investigated the response of three MPM cell lines and lung fibroblasts serving as a control to treatment with pemetrexed, cisplatin and olaparib. Furthermore, we aimed to find possible correlations between response and gene expression patterns associated with BRCAness phenotype. Therefore, 91 clinical MPM samples were digitally screened for gene expression patterns of HR members. Results A BRCAness-dependent increase of apoptosis and senescence during olaparib-based treatment of BRCA-associated-protein 1 (BAP1)-mutated cell lines was observed. The gene expression pattern identified could be found in approx. 10% of patient samples. Against this background, patients could be grouped according to their defects in the HR system. Gene expression levels of Aurora Kinase A (AURKA), RAD50 as well as DNA damage-binding protein 2 (DDB2) could be identified as prognostic markers in MPM. Conclusions Defects in HR compiled under the term BRCAness are a common event in MPM. The present data can lead to a better understanding of the underlaying cellular mechanisms and leave the door wide open for new therapeutic approaches for this severe disease with infaust prognosis. Response to Poly (ADP-ribose)-Polymerase (PARP)-Inhibition could be demonstrated in the BAP1-mutated NCI-H2452 cells, especially when combined with cisplatin. Thus, this combination therapy might be effective for up to 2/3 of patients, promising to enhance patients’ clinical management and outcome. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12885-019-5314-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2019
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26. Complete metabolic response in advanced non-small cell lung cancer patients with prolonged response to immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy
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Peter Kessler, Wilfried Eberhardt, Wolfgang P. Fendler, Lale Umutlu, Karl-Otto Kambartel, M. Faehling, Justin Ferdinandus, Clemens Aigner, Daniel C. Christoph, Viktor Grünwald, Martin Metzenmacher, and Ken Herrmann
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Cancer Research ,Complete Metabolic Response ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Immune checkpoint inhibitors ,Medizin ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Oncology ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Non small cell ,Lung cancer ,business - Abstract
9050 Background: Recently reported, extended follow-up data from KEYNOTE-024 or -010 indicates that non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients can experience long-term benefit from immunotherapy irrespective of discontinuation (per protocol: 35 cycles ∼24 months) or type of response in computed tomography (CT). Similar results were observed in the pooled analysis of 5-year follow-up data from CheckMate-017 and -057. This raises the question, whether patients may safely discontinue immunotherapy after achieving durable response. However, recently published results from CheckMate-153 demonstrated inferior survival rates in patients ceasing immunotherapy after one year, therefore optimal treatment duration of immunotherapy in advanced NSCLC remains unknown. Protocols from published Phase-III trials implemented treatment for a period of approximately 24 months or until evidence of disease progression or unbearable toxicity. Therefore, the ideal duration of immunotherapy remains unclear, and finding markers of beneficial outcome is of great importance. Here, we determine the proportion of complete metabolic responses (CMR) in patients that have not progressed after 24 months of immunotherapy. Methods: This is a retrospective analysis of forty-five patients with positron emission tomography using 2-[18F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG-PET) imaging for assessment of residual metabolic activity after at least 24 months of immunotherapy. Lesion-uptake in FDG PET on or below background level (using mediastinum as reference) was considered as CMR. Time until best objective morphological response including disease stabilization was measured from start of immunotherapy until first stable CT-scan (i.e. no progression or further response compared to previous scan) using RECIST 1.1. Results: Out of 45 patients, 29 patients had a CMR (64%). CMR was observed more frequently in non-first line patients. Patients with CMR were younger (median 65.7 vs. 75.5, P = 0.03). Fourteen patients with CMR have discontinued therapy and have not progressed until time of analysis; however median follow-up was only 5.6 (range 0.8-17.0) months. Conclusions: After a minimum of 24 months of palliative immunotherapy for NSCLC, CMR occurred in almost two thirds of patients. Potentially, achievement of CMR might identify patients, for whom palliative immunotherapy may be safely discontinued.
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- 2021
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27. Digital Gene Expression Analysis of Epithelioid and Sarcomatoid Mesothelioma Reveals Differences in Immunogenicity
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Alexander Mathilakathu, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Daniel Kreidt, Daniel C. Christoph, Thomas Hager, Kurt Werner Schmid, Luka Brcic, Jens Kollmeier, Michael Wessolly, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Sabrina Borchert, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Hendrik Beckert, Elena Mairinger, Thomas Mairinger, and Julia Steinborn
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,immunogenicity ,Malignancy ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Medicine ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Mesothelioma ,epithelioid ,sarcomatoid ,business.industry ,Immunogenicity ,Retrospective cohort study ,Immunotherapy ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,Sarcomatoid Mesothelioma ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,gene expression ,Cancer research ,pleural mesothelioma ,business - Abstract
Simple Summary Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare, biologically extremely aggressive tumor with an infaust prognosis. In this retrospective study, we aimed to assess the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells and their activity in the respective histologic subtypes. We confirmed a substantial difference between epithelioid and sarcomatoid mesothelioma regarding the host’s anti-cancer immune reaction. Whereas antigen processing and presentation to resident cytotoxic T cells as well as phagocytosis is highly affected in sarcomatoid mesothelioma, cell–cell interaction via cytokines seems to be of greater importance in epithelioid cases. Our work reveals the specific role of the immune system within the different histologic subtypes of MPM, providing a more detailed background of their immunogenic potential. This is of great interest regarding therapeutic strategies addressing immunotherapy in mesothelioma. Abstract Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is an aggressive malignancy associated with asbestos exposure. Median survival ranges from 14 to 20 months after initial diagnosis. As of November 2020, the FDA approved a combination of immune checkpoint inhibitors after promising intermediate results. Nonetheless, responses remain unsatisfying. Adequate patient stratification to improve response rates is still lacking. This retrospective study analyzed formalin fixed paraffin embedded specimens from a cohort of 22 MPM. Twelve of those samples showed sarcomatoid, ten epithelioid differentiation. Complete follow-up, including radiological assessment of response by modRECIST and time to death, was available with reported deaths of all patients. RNA of all samples was isolated and subjected to digital gene expression pattern analysis. Our study revealed a notable difference between epithelioid and sarcomatoid mesothelioma, showing differential gene expression for 304/698 expressed genes. Whereas antigen processing and presentation to resident cytotoxic T cells as well as phagocytosis is highly affected in sarcomatoid mesothelioma, cell–cell interaction via cytokines seems to be of greater importance in epithelioid cases. Our work reveals the specific role of the immune system within the different histologic subtypes of MPM, providing a more detailed background of their immunogenic potential. This is of great interest regarding therapeutic strategies including immunotherapy in mesothelioma.
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- 2021
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28. Screening of Pleural Mesotheliomas for DNA-damage Repair Players by Digital Gene Expression Analysis Can Enhance Clinical Management of Patients Receiving Platin-Based Chemotherapy
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Georgia Trakada, Vasilis Adamidis, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Paul Zarogoulidis, Kurt Werner Schmid, Claudia Vollbrecht, Thomas Mairinger, Elena Flom, Jan Schmeller, Fotios Chatzinikolaou, Daniel C. Christoph, Kosmas Tsakiridis, Nikolaos Barbetakis, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Robert Werner, and Dimitrios Paliouras
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0301 basic medicine ,platin-based chemotherapy ,Medizin ,DNA-damage repair ,MLH1 ,600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften::610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,XRCC2 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,XRCC3 ,CDKN2A ,NanoString nCounter ,medicine ,Stage (cooking) ,digital gene expression analysis ,Lymph node ,business.industry ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,ERCC1 ,pleural mesothelioma ,PARP1 Gene ,business ,Research Paper - Abstract
Background: Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare, predominantly asbestos-related and biologically highly aggressive tumour leading to a dismal prognosis. Multimodality therapy consisting of platinum-based chemotherapy is the treatment of choice. The reasons for the rather poor efficacy of platinum compounds remain largely unknown. Material and Methods: For this exploratory mRNA study, 24 FFPE tumour specimens were screened by digital gene expression analysis. Based on data from preliminary experiments and recent literature, a total of 366 mRNAs were investigated using a Custom CodeSet from NanoString. All statistical analyses were calculated with the R i386 statistical programming environment. Results: CDC25A and PARP1 gene expression were correlated with lymph node spread, BRCA1 and TP73 expression levels with higher IMIG stage. NTHL1 and XRCC3 expression was associated with TNM stage. CHECK1 as well as XRCC2 expression levels were correlated with tumour progression in the overall cohort of patients. CDKN2A and MLH1 gene expression influenced overall survival in this collective. In the adjuvant treated cohort only, CDKN2A, CHEK1 as well as ERCC1 were significantly associated with overall survival. Furthermore, TP73 expression was associated with progression in this subgroup. Conclusion: DNA-damage response plays a crucial role in response to platin-based chemotherapeutic regimes. In particular, CHEK1, XRCC2 and TP73 are strongly associated with tumour progression. ERCC1, MLH1, CDKN2A and most promising CHEK1 are prognostic markers for OS in MPM. TP73, CDKN2A, CHEK1 and ERCC1 seem to be also predictive markers in adjuvant treated MPMs. After a prospective validation, these markers may improve clinical and pathological practice, finally leading to a patients' benefit by an enhanced clinical management.
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- 2016
29. OSNA: A Fast Molecular Test Based on CK19 mRNA Concentration for Assessment of EBUS-TBNA Samples in Lung Cancer Patients
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Thomas Hager, Filiz Oezkan, Lutz Freitag, Daniel C. Christoph, Kaid Darwiche, and AM Khan
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Adenocarcinoma ,Malignancy ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Lung cancer ,Lymph node ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Ultrasonography ,Aged, 80 and over ,Keratin-19 ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Molecular Diagnostic Techniques ,030228 respiratory system ,Oncology ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Mediastinal lymph node ,Predictive value of tests ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Radiology ,Lymph ,business - Abstract
Background Lung cancer is the major cause of cancer death worldwide. Mediastinal lymph node staging is important for pretreatment lung cancer management. Endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration (EBUS-TBNA) is a well established method for mediastinal lymph node staging. Although EBUS-TBNA samples are much smaller than surgical lymph node biopsies, histopathological evaluation and molecular testing can successfully be performed. One step nucleic acid amplification (OSNA), which measures cytokeratin 19 (CK19) mRNA concentration, is a target marker that is gaining importance in quick detection of lymph node metastases in breast cancer and other cancers. Recent publications suggest accurate and rapid detection of lung cancer metastases in surgically removed lymph nodes. In this study we aimed to investigate if CK19 mRNA detection via OSNA is feasible to accurately detect lymph node metastases in lung cancer patients using EBUS-TBNA samples. Materials and Methods A total of 102 EBUS-TBNA samples of 55 patients were collected. EBUS-TBNA was performed in lymph nodes exceeding 5 mm. OSNA was performed using a ready to use amplification kit (Lynoamp; Sysmex, Kobe, Japan) in the RD-100 I, an automated real-time detection system (Sysmex). Results Histopathological analysis confirmed malignancy in 90 cases and excluded malignancy in 12 cases. Overall sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy were 78.9%, 58.3%, 93.4%, 26.9%, and 76.5%, respectively. Conclusions One step nucleic acid amplification is feasible for EBUS-TBNA lymph node samples of lung cancer patients, but CK19 mRNA is an inaccurate marker, which is unlikely to be useful as an adjuvant test for EBUS-TBNA. Further studies are required to define the optimal sample size and sampling method.
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- 2016
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30. Folic-acid metabolism and DNA-repair phenotypes differ between neuroendocrine lung tumors and associate with aggressive subtypes, therapy resistance and outcome
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Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Claudia Vollbrecht, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Robert Werner, Thomas Hager, Daniel C. Christoph, and Kurt Werner Schmid
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Male ,Pathology ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Neuroendocrine tumors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Aged, 80 and over ,Molecular pathology ,neuroendocrine pulmonary tumors ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,humanities ,Survival Rate ,Neuroendocrine Tumors ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Research Paper ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DNA repair ,MLH1 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Folic Acid ,Internal medicine ,NanoString nCounter ,medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Folate Receptor 1 ,folic acid metabolism ,Lung cancer ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Small Cell Lung Carcinoma ,MSH6 ,lung cancer ,030104 developmental biology ,DNA Repair Enzymes ,MSH2 ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Carcinoma, Large Cell ,ERCC1 ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
// Robert Fred Henry Walter 1, 2, * , Fabian Dominik Mairinger 2, 3, * , Robert Werner 4 , Claudia Vollbrecht 3 , Thomas Hager 2 , Kurt Werner Schmid 2 , Jeremias Wohlschlaeger 2, 5 , Daniel Christian Christoph 6 1 Ruhrlandklinik Essen, West German Lung Centre, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 2 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 3 Institute of Pathology, Division of Molecular Pathology, Charite, Berlin, Germany 4 Department of Pathology, Helios Klinikum Emil von Behring, Berlin, Germany 5 Institute of Pathology, Ev.-Luth. Diakonissenkrankenhaus Flensburg, Flensburg, Germany 6 Department of Medical Oncology, West German Cancer Centre, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany * These authors have contributed equally to this work Correspondence to: Robert Fred Henry Walter, e-mail: robert.walter@ruhrlandklinik.uk-essen.de Keywords: lung cancer, neuroendocrine pulmonary tumors, folic acid metabolism, DNA repair, NanoString nCounter Received: January 29, 2016 Accepted: January 30, 2016 Published: February 26, 2016 ABSTRACT Purpose: 25% of all lung cancer cases are neuroendocrine (NELC) including typical (TC) and atypical carcinoid (AC), large-cell neuroendocrine (LCNEC) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC). Prognostic and predictive biomarkers are lacking. Experimental Design: Sixty patients were used for nCounter mRNA expression analysis of the folic-acid metabolism ( ATIC , DHFR , FOLR1 , FPGS , GART , GGT1 , SLC19A1 , TYMS ) and DNA-repair ( ERCC1 , MLH1 , MSH2 , MSH6 , XRCC1 ). Phenotypic classification classified tumors (either below or above the median expression level) with respect to the folic acid metabolism or DNA repair. Results: Expression of FOLR1 , FPGS , MLH1 and TYMS (each p
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- 2016
31. 1912TiP NICITA: Nivolumab with chemotherapy in pleural mesothelioma after surgery
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J. Jürgens, S. Sackmann, Mark Kriegsmann, C. Wesseler, Helge Bischoff, M. de Wit, Michael Ried, Marc A Schneider, Harland S. Winter, Cornelius F. Waller, Martin Reck, Martin E. Eichhorn, Niels Reinmuth, T. Wehler, Manuel Feißt, Michael Thomas, H.-G. Kopp, Rajiv Shah, Daniel C. Christoph, and Laura V. Klotz
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Pleural mesothelioma ,Internal medicine ,medicine.medical_treatment ,medicine ,Hematology ,Nivolumab ,business - Published
- 2020
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32. 1374P Docetaxel/nindetanib as efficient treatment option after failure of immune checkpoint inhibition: Real-world evidence
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Daniel C. Christoph, S. Winke, I.T. Azeh, K-O. Kambartel, Amin T. Turki, Martin Metzenmacher, Matthias Scheffler, F. Rizzo, Diana S.Y. Abdulla, Jens Panse, and Mathias Hoiczyk
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Docetaxel ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Treatment options ,Hematology ,business ,Real world evidence ,Immune checkpoint ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2020
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33. Processing Escape Mechanisms Through Altered Proteasomal Cleavage of Epitopes Affect Immune Response in Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Tumors
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Elena Mairinger, Anna Streubel, Daniel C. Christoph, Claudia Vollbrecht, Wilfried Eberhardt, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Thomas Mairinger, Robert Werner, Jan Schmeller, Michael Wessolly, Thomas Herold, Jens Kollmeier, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Sabrina Borchert, Kurt Werner Schmid, Robert Fred Henry Walter, and Thomas Hager
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Neuroendocrine tumors ,Epitope ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,medicine ,neuroendocrine ,processing escape ,Lung cancer ,epitope ,Massive parallel sequencing ,Lung ,business.industry ,massive parallel sequencing ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,Immune checkpoint ,lung cancer ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Original Article ,immunotherapy ,business - Abstract
CA Wessolly Background: Immunotherapy, especially immune checkpoint inhibition, is one of the most sophisticated approaches in cancer therapy. Immune checkpoint inhibition has already been successfully applied for treatment of non-small cell lung cancer and various other entities. Unfortunately, 60% of the cases show signs of therapy resistance. Additionally, a proportion of cases shows initial insensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibition. We consider a novel escape mechanism in association with deficient proteasomal epitope processing to be one prominent reason for initial insensitivity and therapy resistance. Therefore, we aim to identify mutations in association with these so-called processing escapes, in a highly diverse collective of pulmonary neuroendocrine lung tumors. Materials and Methods: Seventy representative tumor specimens of pulmonary neuroendocrine lung tumors were analyzed retrospectively via immunohistochemical detection of CD4, CD8, CD68, and CD20 as well as programmed cell death protein 1 and programmed cell death 1 ligand 1 for tumor immune infiltration and composition. Afterward, samples were screened for alterations in 48 genes, including 221 known mutational hotspots by massive parallel sequencing using the Illumina TruSeq Amplicon-Cancer Panel. For prediction of proteasomal cleavage probabilities, an R implementation of the machine learning tool NetChop 3.1 was utilized. Results: Immune cell infiltration of different compositions could be found in the majority of tumors. Deficient epitope processing was revealed to be a common event in those with steady distribution across all different subtypes. Despite immune infiltration, no significant antitumor response could be detected. Conclusion: Since it is widely acknowledged that tumors need to avoid the immune system to ensure their survival, processing escapes should already be present during primary tumor development. In line, processing escapes can be found in all tumors, regardless of subtype and mutational burden. Furthermore, there is solid evidence that processing escapes have a negative impact on the antitumor activity of tumor infiltrating immune cells.
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- 2018
34. Clinical Experience of Immunotherapy Treatment: Efficacy and Toxicity Analysis of the Compassionate Use Program of Nivolumab in Patients with Advanced Squamous Cell Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
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Ernst Späth-Schwalbe, Sebastian Thiel, Jürgen Fischer, Jürgen Alt, Daniel C. Christoph, Frank Griesinger, Sylke Kurz, W. Schütte, Frederik Krefting, Nadezda Basara, and M Kimmich
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Oncology ,Compassionate Use Trials ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antineoplastic Agents, Immunological ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Adverse effect ,Lung cancer ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,business.industry ,Compassionate Use ,Hematology ,Immunotherapy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Progression-Free Survival ,Clinical trial ,Nivolumab ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Toxicity ,Female ,business - Abstract
Background: Anti-PD1 monoclonal antibody nivolumab is an approved therapy option for the treatment of advanced squamous cell non-small cell lung cancer (SQ-NSCLC) patients. Data outside clinical trials about therapy efficacy and safety in later therapy line treatments have rarely been described until now. Methods: We performed a retrospective data analysis of patients who were enrolled into the nivolumab Compassionate Use Program (CUP) in Germany. Sufficient clinical data of 40 patients were available for efficacy and safety analysis. Results: Overall, 47.5% of all treated patients were not affected by any adverse events (AEs); 17.5% of patients suffered from severe AEs. The 1-year survival rate was 61.3%. Estimated median progression-free survival (PFS) was 5.3 months. Patients who received nivolumab as third or later therapy line treatment (77.5%) achieved similar median PFS and 12-month overall survival rate of 52%. Conclusion: Our findings of immunotherapy treatment outside clinical trials support the results of studies in the past and confirm the efficacy and favorable toxicity profile of nivolumab treatment in advanced SQ-NSCLC patients. In addition, we can present some rarely described information about nivolumab treatment of heavily pretreated patients, which provides some evidence that immunotherapy could also be useful in later therapy lines.
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- 2018
35. Inhibition of MDM2 via Nutlin-3A : A Potential Therapeutic Approach for Pleural Mesotheliomas with MDM2-Induced Inactivation of Wild-Type P53
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Robert Werner, Sabrina Borchert, Thomas Hager, Michael Wessolly, Wilfried Eberhardt, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Jan Schmeller, Jens Kollmeier, Thomas Mairinger, Till Plönes, Daniel C. Christoph, Elena Mairinger, Clemens Aigner, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Agnes Bankfalvi, Kurt Werner Schmid, and Robert Fred Henry Walter
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0301 basic medicine ,Senescence ,Article Subject ,DNA damage ,Medizin ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,neoplasms ,Cisplatin ,biology ,business.industry ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Ubiquitin ligase ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Apoptosis ,Cell culture ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer cell ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Mdm2 ,business ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
Previously, our group demonstrated that nuclear expression of E3 ubiquitin ligase (MDM2) in malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is significantly associated with decreased overall survival. A possible explanation may be that overexpression of MDM2 leads to a proteasomal degradation of TP53 that eventually results in a loss of TP53-induced apoptosis and senescence. It is well known from other tumor entities that restoration of TP53 activity, e.g., by MDM2 inhibition, results in an instant TP53-induced stress and/or DNA damage response of cancer cells. Nutlin-3A (acis-imidazoline analogue) has been described as a potent and selective MDM2 inhibitor preventing MDM2-TP53-interaction by specific binding to the hydrophobic TP53-binding pocket of MDM2. In the present study, the effects of MDM2 inhibition in MPM via Nutlin-3A and standard platinum based chemotherapeutic agents were comparatively tested in three MPM cell lines (NCI-H2052, MSTO-211H, and NCI-H2452) showing different expression profiles of TP53, MDM2, and its physiological inhibitor of MDM2—P14/ARF. Ourin vitroexperiments on MPM cell lines revealed that Nutlin-3A in combination with cisplatin resulted in up to 9.75 times higher induction of senescence (p=0.0050) and up to 5 times higher apoptosis rate (p=0.0067) compared to the commonly applied cisplatin and pemetrexed regimens. Thus Nutlin-3A, a potent inhibitor of MDM2, is associated with a significant induction of senescence and apoptosis in MPM cell lines, making Nutlin-3A a promising substance for a targeted therapy in the subgroup of MPM showing MDM2 overexpression.
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- 2018
36. Identification of deregulation of apoptosis and cell cycle in neuroendocrine tumors of the lung via NanoString nCounter expression analysis
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Claudia Vollbrecht, Dirk Theegarten, Robert Werner, Daniel C. Christoph, Kurt Werner Schmid, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Saskia Ting, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, and Jeremias Wohlschlaeger
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Cell Cycle Proteins ,Carcinoid Tumor ,Neuroendocrine tumors ,CDKN2A ,NanoString nCounter ,small-cell lung cancer ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Humans ,Nanotechnology ,RNA, Messenger ,Lung cancer ,neoplasms ,biology ,business.industry ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Cell Cycle ,apoptosis ,carcinoids ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Cancer ,Cell cycle ,medicine.disease ,Small Cell Lung Carcinoma ,Research Paper: Pathology ,humanities ,respiratory tract diseases ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Oncology ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,large-cell neuroendocrine lung cancer ,Carcinoma, Large Cell ,Female ,CDKN1B ,Cyclin-dependent kinase 6 ,Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins ,business - Abstract
// Robert Fred Henry Walter 1,2 , Robert Werner 2 , Saskia Ting 2 , Claudia Vollbrecht 3 , Dirk Theegarten 2 , Daniel Christian Christoph 4 , Kurt Werner Schmid 2 , Jeremias Wohlschlaeger 2 and Fabian Dominik Mairinger 2 1 Ruhrlandklinik, West German Lung Center, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 2 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 3 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Cologne, Cologne, Germany 4 Department of Medical Oncology, West German Cancer Center, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany Correspondence to: Robert Fred Henry Walter, email: // Keywords : small-cell lung cancer, large-cell neuroendocrine lung cancer, carcinoids, apoptosis, NanoString nCounter Received : March 11, 2015 Accepted : April 15, 2015 Published : May 04, 2015 Abstract Background: Neuroendocrine tumors of the lung comprise typical (TC) and atypical carcinoids (AC), large-cell neuroendocrine cancer (LCNEC) and small-cell lung cancer (SCLC). Cell cycle and apoptosis are key pathways of multicellular homeostasis and deregulation of these pathways is associated with cancerogenesis. Materials and Methods: Sixty representative FFPE-specimens (16 TC, 13 AC, 16 LCNEC and 15 SCLC) were used for mRNA expression analysis using the NanoString technique. Eight genes related to apoptosis and ten genes regulating key points of cell cycle were investigated. Results: ASCL1 , BCL2 , CASP8 , CCNE1 , CDK1 , CDK2 , CDKN1A and CDKN2A showed lower expression in carcinoids compared to carcinomas. In contrast, CCNE1 and CDK6 showed elevated expression in carcinoids compared to carcinomas. The calculated BCL2/BAX ratio showed increasing values from TC to SCLC. Between SCLC and LCNEC CDK2 , CDKN1B , CDKN2A and PNN expression was significantly different with higher expression in SCLC. Conclusion: Carcinoids have increased CDK4/6 and CCND1 expression controlling RB1 phosphorylation via this signaling cascade. CDK2 and CCNE1 were increased in carcinomas showing that these use the opposite way to control RB1. BAX and BCL2 are antagonists in regulating apoptosis. BCL2 expression increased over BAX expression with increasing malignancy of the tumor from TC to SCLC.
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- 2015
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37. HER2 expression and markers of phosphoinositide-3-kinase pathway activation define a favorable subgroup of metastatic pulmonary adenocarcinomas
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Saskia Ting, Marcel Wiesweg, Henning Reis, Stefan Kasper, Daniel C. Christoph, Stefan Welter, Martin Schuler, Thomas Herold, U. Huber, Karl Worm, K.W. Schmid, Dirk Theegarten, Wilfried Eberhardt, Kaid Darwiche, Georgios Stamatis, R Karpf-Wissel, and Karina Kostbade
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Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Cancer Research ,Lung Neoplasms ,Receptor, ErbB-2 ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Population ,Medizin ,Gene Expression ,Chromogenic in situ hybridization ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Adenocarcinoma ,medicine.disease_cause ,Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,PTEN ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,education ,CISH ,neoplasms ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Gene Amplification ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Oncology ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Immunohistochemistry ,Female ,KRAS ,business ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Objectives Pulmonary adenocarcinomas (ADC) can be sub-grouped based on dominant oncogenic drivers. EGFR mutations define an entity of metastatic ADC with favorable prognosis and high susceptibility to EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibition. In contrast, the clinical impact of additional ERBB family members in ADC is less defined. To this end we prospectively studied HER2 expression, gene amplification, and mutation in relation to outcome of patients with advanced or metastatic ADC. Materials and methods Diagnostic tumor biopsies from 193 sequential patients with stage III/IV ADC were prospectively studied for HER2 expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Cases with IHC scores 2+ or 3+ were analyzed by HER2 chromogenic in situ hybridization (CISH), and sequencing of HER2 exons 20 and 23. Additional prospectively determined biomarkers included PTEN, cMET, pAKT, and pERK expression, KRAS , EGFR , BRAF and PIK3CA mutations, and ALK fluorescence ISH (FISH) . Results and conclusion HER2–IHC was feasible in 176 (91.2%) cases. Of 53 (30%) cases with IHC scores 2+/3+, 45 (85%) could be studied by CISH and 34 (64%) by sequencing. The lower number of HER2 -mutational analyses resulted from exhaustion of tumor tissue and DNA following mutational analysis of KRAS , EGFR , BRAF and PIK3CA . HER2 amplification was detected in 4 cases (2.3%), while no mutation was found. HER2 expression correlated with expression of pAKT and cMET. Expression of HER2 and pAKT was associated with favorable overall survival in stage IV disease. HER2-expressing ADC more frequently harbored KRAS mutations, while HER2 expression was absent in all 4 cases with BRAF mutation. HER2–IHC was not predictive of HER2 gene amplification or mutation, which both were rare events in prospectively studied patients with advanced or metastatic ADC. Expression of HER2 and pAKT define a population of patients with stage IV ADC with a distinct disease course, who could benefit from specifically tailored pharmacotherapies.
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- 2015
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38. MDM2 is an important prognostic and predictive factor for platin–pemetrexed therapy in malignant pleural mesotheliomas and deregulation of P14/ARF (encoded by CDKN2A) seems to contribute to an MDM2-driven inactivation of P53
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Claudia Vollbrecht, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Dirk Theegarten, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Thomas Mairinger, Saskia Ting, Daniel C. Christoph, and Kurt Werner Schmid
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Male ,Mesothelioma ,Cancer Research ,Guanine ,Organoplatinum Compounds ,Pleural Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Pemetrexed ,MDM2 ,Glutamates ,CDKN2A ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pleural Neoplasm ,neoplasms ,Molecular Diagnostics ,Survival analysis ,Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p16 ,Aged ,Cisplatin ,Aged, 80 and over ,Predictive marker ,biology ,business.industry ,P14/ARF ,Nutlin-3 ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2 ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,targeted therapy ,Survival Analysis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,qPCR ,Oncology ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Mdm2 ,Female ,pleural mesothelioma ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a highly aggressive tumour that is first-line treated with a combination of cisplatin and pemetrexed. Until now, predictive and prognostic biomarkers are lacking, making it a non-tailored therapy regimen with unknown outcome. P53 is frequently inactivated in MPM, but mutations are extremely rare. MDM2 and P14/ARF are upstream regulators of P53 that may contribute to P53 inactivation. Methods: A total of 72 MPM patients were investigated. MDM2 immunoexpression was assessed in 65 patients. MDM2 and P14/ARF mRNA expression was analysed in 48 patients of the overall collective. The expression results were correlated to overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS). Results: OS and PFS correlated highly significantly with MDM2 mRNA and protein expression, showing a dismal prognosis for patients with elevated MDM2 expression (for OS: Score (logrank) test: P⩽0.002, and for PFS: Score (logrank) test; P
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- 2015
39. Immunohistochemically detectable metallothionein expression in malignant pleural mesotheliomas is strongly associated with early failure to platin-based chemotherapy
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Thomas Mairinger, Thomas Hager, Jens Kollmeier, Daniel C. Christoph, Kurt Werner Schmid, Jan Schmeller, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Wilfried Eberhardt, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Bharat Jasani, Agnes Bankfalvi, Sabrina Borchert, Till Plönes, Elena Mairinger, Michael Wessolly, and Fabian Dominik Mairinger
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,platin-based chemotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,overall survival ,Medizin ,Drug resistance ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Pathology ,Metallothionein ,Medicine ,malignant pleural mesothelioma ,Progression-free survival ,Early failure ,prognostic biomarker ,Survival analysis ,Cisplatin ,Chemotherapy ,Molecular pathology ,business.industry ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,metallothionein ,Carboplatin ,Research Paper: Pathology ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
// Fabian D. Mairinger 1, * , Jan Schmeller 1, * , Sabrina Borchert 1 , Michael Wessolly 1 , Elena Mairinger 1 , Jens Kollmeier 2 , Thomas Hager 1 , Thomas Mairinger 3 , Daniel C. Christoph 4, 5 , Robert F.H. Walter 1, 6 , Wilfried E.E. Eberhardt 4, 6 , Till Plones 7 , Jeremias Wohlschlaeger 1, 8 , Bharat Jasani 9 , Kurt Werner Schmid 1 and Agnes Bankfalvi 1 1 Institute of Pathology, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 2 Department of Pneumology, Helios Klinikum Emil von Behring, Berlin, Germany 3 Department of Pathology, Helios Klinikum Emil von Behring, Berlin, Germany 4 Department of Medical Oncology, West German Cancer Center, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 5 Department of Internistic Oncology, Kliniken Essen Mitte, Essen, Germany 6 Ruhrlandklinik, West German Lung Centre, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 7 Department of Thoracic Surgery and Thoracical Endoscopy, Ruhrlandklinik, University Hospital Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany 8 Department of Pathology, Diakonissenkrankenhaus Flensburg, Flensburg, Germany 9 Department of Pathology, Targos Molecular Pathology GmbH, Kassel, Germany * These authors have contributed equally to this work Correspondence to: Fabian D. Mairinger, email: fabian.mairinger@uk-essen.de Keywords: malignant pleural mesothelioma; metallothionein; overall survival; prognostic biomarker; platin-based chemotherapy; Pathology Received: August 18, 2017 Accepted: March 11, 2018 Published: April 27, 2018 ABSTRACT Background: Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a biologically highly aggressive tumor arising from the pleura with a dismal prognosis. Cisplatin is the drug of choice for the treatment of MPM, and carboplatin seems to have comparable efficacy. Nevertheless, cisplatin treatment results in a response rate of merely 14% and a median survival of less than seven months. Due to their role in many cellular processes, methallothioneins (MTs) have been widely studied in various cancers. The known heavy metal detoxifying effect of MT-I and MT-II may be the reason for heavy metal drug resistance of various cancers including MPM. Methods: 105 patients were retrospectively analyzed immunohistochemically for their MT expression levels. Survival analysis was done by Cox-regression, and statistical significance determined using likelihood ratio, Wald test and Score (logrank) tests. Results: Cox-regression analyses were done in a linear and logarithmic scale revealing a significant association between expression of MT and shortened overall survival (OS) in a linear (p=0.0009) and logarithmic scale (p=0.0003). Reduced progression free survival (PFS) was also observed for MT expressing tumors (linear: p=0.0134, log: p=0.0152). Conclusion: Since both, overall survival and progression-free survival are negatively correlated with detectable MT expression in MPM, our results indicate a possible resistance to platin-based chemotherapy associated with MT expression upregulation, found exclusively in progressive MPM samples. Initial cell culture studies suggest promoter DNA hypomethylation and expression of miRNA-566 a direct regulator of copper transporter SLC31A1 and a putative regulator of MT1A and MT2A gene expression, to be responsible for the drug resistance.
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- 2017
40. miRNA regulation is important for DNA damage repair and recognition in malignant pleural mesothelioma
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Thomas Mairinger, Sabrina Borchert, Michael Wessolly, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Jens Kollmeier, Elena Flom, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Daniel C. Christoph, Jan Schmeller, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Kurt Werner Schmid, Thomas Hager, and Robert Werner
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0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Mesothelioma ,Lung Neoplasms ,DNA Repair ,DNA damage ,Pleural Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,microRNA ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,In patient ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,In Situ Hybridization ,Aged ,Pleural mesothelioma ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Mesothelioma, Malignant ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,DNA Damage Repair ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,MicroRNAs ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Molecular Profile ,Female ,Transcriptome ,DNA Damage - Abstract
Platin-containing regimes are currently considered as state-of-the-art therapies in malignant pleural mesotheliomas (MPM) but show dissatisfying response rates ranging from 6 to 16% only. Still, the reasons for the rather poor efficacy remain largely unknown. A clear stratification of patients based on new biomarkers seems to be a promising approach to enhance clinical management, which would be a long-needed improvement for MPM patients but does not seem likely soon unless new biomarkers can be validated. Twenty-four formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tumour specimens were subjected to a miRNA expression screening of 800 important miRNAs using digital quantification via the nCounter technique (NanoString). We defined a small subset of miRNAs regulating the key enzymes involved in the repair of platin-associated DNA damage. Particularly, the TP53 pathway network for DNA damage recognition as well as genes related to the term “BRCAness” are the main miRNA targets within this context. The TP53 pathway network for DNA damage recognition as well as genes related to the term “BRCAness” are the main players for risk stratification in patients suffering from this severe disease. Taking the specific molecular profile of the tumour into account can help to enhance the clinical management prospectively and to smooth the way to better response prediction.
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- 2017
41. Phase II Trial of Atezolizumab As First-Line or Subsequent Therapy for Patients With Programmed Death-Ligand 1-Selected Advanced Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer (BIRCH)
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Melissa Lynne Johnson, Martin Früh, Cheryl Ho, Enriqueta Felip, Scott N. Gettinger, Martin Reck, Zhengrong Li, Solange Peters, Laura Q.M. Chow, Daniel C. Christoph, Enric Carcereny Costa, Geetha Shankar, Luis Paz-Ares, Michel M. van den Heuvel, Takayasu Kurata, Marcin Kowanetz, Alan Sandler, Pasi A. Jänne, Jamie E. Chaft, Jiaheng Qiu, Naiyer A. Rizvi, Marianna Koczywas, Jyoti D. Patel, Frances A. Shepherd, Marina Chiara Garassino, Chee Keong Toh, Simonetta Mocci, Jeffrey Rothenstein, Genentech, and National Institutes of Health P30 grant
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,B7-H1 Antigen ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Atezolizumab ,Internal medicine ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Clinical endpoint ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Lung cancer ,Infusions, Intravenous ,610 Medicine & health ,Survival analysis ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Other Research Radboud Institute for Health Sciences [Radboudumc 0] ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,030104 developmental biology ,Tolerability ,Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Female ,business - Abstract
Purpose BIRCH was designed to examine the efficacy of atezolizumab, a humanized anti–programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) monoclonal antibody, in advanced non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) across lines of therapy. Patients were selected on the basis of PD-L1 expression on tumor cells (TC) or tumor-infiltrating immune cells (IC). Patients and Methods Eligible patients had advanced-stage NSCLC, no CNS metastases, and zero to two or more lines of prior chemotherapy. Patients whose tumors expressed PD-L1 using the SP142 immunohistochemistry assay on ≥ 5% of TC or IC (TC2/3 or IC2/3 [TC or IC ≥ 5% PD-L1–expressing cells, respectively]) were enrolled. Atezolizumab 1,200 mg was administered intravenously every 3 weeks. Efficacy-evaluable patients (N = 659) comprised three cohorts: first line (cohort 1; n = 139); second line (cohort 2; n = 268); and third line or higher (cohort 3; n = 252). The primary end point was independent review facility–assessed objective response rate (ORR; Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors [RECIST] version 1.1). Secondary end points included median duration of response, progression-free survival, and overall survival (OS). Results BIRCH met its primary objective of demonstrating a significant ORR versus historical controls. With a minimum of 12 months of follow-up, the independent review facility–assessed ORR was 18% to 22% for the three cohorts, and 26% to 31% for the TC3 or IC3 subgroup; most responses are ongoing. Responses occurred regardless of EGFR or KRAS mutation status. The median OS from an updated survival analysis (minimum of 20 month follow up) for cohort 1 was 23.5 months (26.9 months for TC3 or IC3 patients); the median OS in cohorts 2 and 3 was 15.5 and 13.2 months, respectively. The safety profile was similar across cohorts and consistent with previous atezolizumab monotherapy trials. Conclusion BIRCH demonstrated responses with atezolizumab monotherapy in patients with PD-L1–selected advanced NSCLC, with good tolerability. PD-L1 status may serve as a predictive biomarker for identifying patients most likely to benefit from atezolizumab.
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- 2017
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42. Growth patterns of pulmonary metastases : Should we adjust resection techniques to primary histology and size?
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Gerhard Weinreich, Dirk Theegarten, Thomas Hager, Christian Roesel, Elias Arfanis, Daniel C. Christoph, Stefan Welter, and Clemens Aigner
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Medizin ,Histology ,General Medicine ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Metastasis ,Lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Surgery ,Sarcoma ,Metastasectomy ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Infiltration (medical) - Abstract
OBJECTIVES Safety margins in pulmonary metastasectomy are not yet well defined. We hypothesize that histological subtype, size of the lesion and local growth characteristics must be taken into consideration during metastasectomy. This study was conducted to examine and classify growth patterns at resection margins and define the relationships between aggressive local growth, metastasis size and local recurrence to direct metastasectomy. METHODS Histologic sections of pulmonary metastases were prospectively collected and haematoxylin-eosin stains were systematically evaluated and classified by their pattern of lung tissue infiltration. Logistic regression was used to model the association between the subgroups of colorectal, renal cell and epithelial cancers and melanomas and sarcomas. RESULTS From 183 patients, 412 lung specimens were removed, which contained 459 pulmonary metastases. We found that 58% of all lesions had microscopic signs of aggressive local dissemination. The metastases showed histology-specific patterns of local growth: sarcoma was associated with pleural infiltration; colorectal metastases with interstitial spread and aerogenous spread of floating cancer cell clusters; and melanoma with perivascular growth and with lymph vessel involvement. Aggressive patterns of growth had an increasing probability of around 3% for each additional millimetre of metastasis diameter. Local intrapulmonary recurrence was significantly more common in association with interstitial growth and pleural penetration as well as safety margins
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- 2017
43. Gene Expression Analysis of the 26S Proteasome Subunit PSMB4 Reveals Significant Upregulation, Different Expression and Association with Proliferation in Human Pulmonary Neuroendocrine Tumours
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Claudia Vollbrecht, Konstantinos Zarogoulidis, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Thomas Mairinger, Robert Werner, Qiang Li, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Paul Zarogoulidis, Thomas Hager, Karl Worm, Kosmas Tsakiridis, Georgios Stamatis, Kurt Werner Schmid, Hideo A. Baba, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Dirk Theegarten, Haidong Huang, Daniel C. Christoph, and Saskia Ting
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PSMD1 ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tissue microarray ,TaqMan qPCR ,Medizin ,carcinoid tumours ,Biology ,PSMB4 ,medicine.disease_cause ,PSMA5 ,PSMB5 ,26S Proteasome ,Oncology ,Gene expression ,neuroendocrine lung tumours ,Cancer research ,medicine ,Carcinoid tumour ,neuroendocrine lung carcinoma ,Carcinogenesis ,Research Paper - Abstract
Background: Proteasomal subunit PSMB4 was suggested to be a survival gene in an animal model of hepatocellular carcinoma and in glioblastoma cell lines. In pulmonary adenocarcinoma, a high expression of these genes was found to be associated with poor differentiation and survival. This study investigates the gene expression levels of 26S proteasome subunits in human pulmonary neuroendocrine tumours including typical (TC) and atypical (AC) carcinoid tumours as well as small cell (SCLC) and large cell (LCNEC) neuroendocrine carcinomas. Material and methods: Gene expression levels of proteasomal subunits (PSMA1, PSMA5, PSMB4, PSMB5 and PSMD1) were investigated in 80 neuroendocrine pulmonary tumours (each 20 TC, AC, LCNLC and SCLC) and compared to controls. mRNA levels were determined by using TaqMan assays. Immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays (TMA) was performed to determine the expression of ki67, cleaved caspase 3 and PSMB4. Results: All proteasomal subunit gene expressions were significantly upregulated in TC, AC, SCLC and LCNEC compared to controls. PSMB4 mRNA is differently expressed between all neuroendocrine tumour subtypes demonstrating the highest expression and greatest range in LCNEC (p=0.043), and is significantly associated with proliferative activity (p=0.039). Conclusion: In line with other 26S proteasomal subunits PSMB4 is significantly increased, but differently expressed between pulmonary neuroendocrine tumours and is associated with the proliferative activity. Unlike in pulmonary adenocarcinomas, no association with biological behaviour was observed, suggesting that increased proteasomal subunit gene expression is a common and probably early event in the tumorigenesis of pulmonary neuroendocrine tumours regardless of their differentiation.
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- 2014
44. Activation of Angiogenesis Differs Strongly Between Pulmonary Carcinoids and Neuroendocrine Carinomas and Is Crucial for Carcinoid Tumourgenesis
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Paul Zarogoulidis, Konstantinos Zarogoulidis, Daniel C. Christoph, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Claudia Vollbrecht, Haidong Huang, Robert Fred Henry Walter, Robert Werner, Kurt Werner Schmid, Saskia Ting, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, and Qiang Li
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carcinoid ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Angiogenesis ,business.industry ,Medizin ,Cancer ,HIF1A ,Malignancy ,medicine.disease ,Metastasis ,CRHR2 ,Prostate cancer ,lung cancer ,Breast cancer ,Oncology ,KDR ,Cancer research ,medicine ,FIGF ,Lung cancer ,business ,FLT4 ,Research Paper - Abstract
Background: Lung cancer still remains the leading cause of cancer for men after prostate cancer and breast cancer for women. Angiogenesis is considered a major microenvironment modifier. Material and Methods: Demographic data and study design; The study is based on a collective of twenty representative specimens of each tumour entity (Typical Carcinoid, Atypical Carcinoid, Large-Cell Neuroendocrine Carcinoma , Small Cell Lung Cancer) for mRNA expression analysis. The following methods were performed: RNA Extraction and RNA Integrity Assessment, NanoString CodeSet Design and Expression Quantification, NanoString Data Processing and Statistical Analysis. Results: KDR rendered significant association to aggressiveness of the tumour and decreases with increasing malignancy (p=0.049). A decreased expression of HIF1A and KDR mRNA as associated with a higher risk of tumour invasion in vessels (HIF1A: p=0.034; KDR: p=0.029). FIGF and HIF1A expression levels are significantly associated with progression-free survival (FIGF: p= 0.021; HIF1A: p= 0.049). CRHR2 and FLT4 are stronger expressed in female than in male patients (CRHR2: p=0.024, FLT4: p=0.004). FIGF expression is still significant between LCNEC and SCLC (p=0.023). FLT4 and KDR show highly significant association to one of the analysed groups (FLT4: p=0.001; KDR: p=0.006). Additionally, HIF1A expression differs significantly between these focus cohorts (p=0.018). Conclusion: We should consider for clinical practice application which factors affect most the tumour growth and distal metastasis, thereafter investigate easy to administer drugs with low side effects. Probably a cluster system of therapy should be established where a drug targets simultaneously different pathways of the same origin.
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- 2014
45. Systemic treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma
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Daniel C. Christoph and Wilfried Eberhardt
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Mesothelioma ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Guanine ,Lung Neoplasms ,Bevacizumab ,Pleural Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Pemetrexed ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Malignancy ,Metastasis ,Glutamates ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Pleural Neoplasm ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Mesothelioma, Malignant ,medicine.disease ,Survival Analysis ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Treatment Outcome ,Cisplatin ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose of review Malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) is a rare malignancy with limited therapeutic options and its incidence is still increasing in both Europe and the developing nations. Prognosis of MPM patients is poor even if the median survival durations have been slightly improved after the introduction of the up-to-date chemotherapy combination with pemetrexed and cisplatin. There is a continuing unmet need to develop better systemic treatment for this disease, but the rarity of the tumor type creates formidable challenges in clinical trial research. Recent findings Better understanding of the molecular machinery of MPM leads to the design and synthesis of novel compounds targeted against pathways identified as crucial for MPM cell proliferation and metastasis. Most efforts aim at improving standard first-line therapy, or developing effective second-line treatments. Several classes of drugs are currently being explored either in combination with cisplatin and pemetrexed or as single agent for relapsed or progressive MPM. Summary This review focuses on several ongoing or recently completed clinical trials investigating novel, promising agents as first-line or second-line therapy for advanced MPM.
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- 2014
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46. P1.06-12 Defects in Homologous Recombination Repair Indicates Susceptibility for Olaparib Treatment in Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma
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K.W. Schmid, Thomas Hager, Thomas Herold, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Jens Kollmeier, Daniel C. Christoph, Robert Walter, Clemens Aigner, Sabrina Borchert, Michael Wessolly, Fabian Dominik Mairinger, Jan Schmeller, Wilfried Eberhardt, Elena Mairinger, Thomas Mairinger, and Till Plönes
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Oncology ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Pleural mesothelioma ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,Homologous recombination ,business ,Olaparib - Published
- 2019
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47. PACIFIC-R: First real-world study of patients with unresectable, stage III NSCLC treated with durvalumab after chemoradiotherapy
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M. Licour, Daniel C. Christoph, Nicolas Girard, A.B. Klein, M.C. Garassino, Fiona McDonald, Françoise Mornex, R. Fietkau, John K. Field, Andrea Riccardo Filippi, Solange Peters, and P. Garrido Lopez
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Durvalumab ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Stage III NSCLC ,Medicine ,Hematology ,business ,Chemoradiotherapy - Published
- 2019
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48. Phase-I study of sagopilone in combination with cisplatin in chemotherapy-naive patients with metastasised small-cell lung cancer
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N. Frickhofen, Rudolf M. Huber, Marius Giurescu, Wilfried Eberhardt, Juergen R. Fischer, Daniel C. Christoph, Katrin Roth, Thomas Gauler, and Christine Gonschorek
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Male ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Epothilone ,Pharmacokinetics ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Internal medicine ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,medicine ,Humans ,Benzothiazoles ,Prospective Studies ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Lung cancer ,Cisplatin ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,medicine.disease ,Epothilones ,Toxicity ,Female ,Ovarian cancer ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Sagopilone (ZK219477) is a new and fully synthetic epothilone with activity against multi-drug resistant tumour cell lines. It has demonstrated clinical activity in several solid tumours like ovarian cancer and melanoma. Data about clinical efficacy of sagopilone in small-cell lung cancer are lacking. Here we report the first phase-I trial of sagopilone in combination with cisplatin in previously untreated metastatic small-cell lung cancer patients. Methods Chemonaive patients with metastatic small-cell lung cancer (SCLC) received sagopilone in four different dosing schedules ranging from 12 to 22 mg/m2 (on day 1 as 3-h infusion) followed by a fixed dose of cisplatin of 75 mg/m2 as 1-h infusion on day 1. Chemotherapy was administered every 3 weeks to a maximum of six cycles. The primary objective was determination of dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) and the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) in this setting. Secondary objectives were assessment of objective response rates (ORR) as well as investigation of sagopilone pharmacokinetics. Results Twenty-six patients received a total of 107 treatment cycles of the platinum–sagopilone doublet. The recommended phase-II dose (RD) and schedule was found to be 19 mg/m2 sagopilone followed by 75 mg/m2 cisplatin. Peripheral neuropathy turned out as dose-limiting toxicity when the combination was administered over a median of four cycles. Objective responses were observed in six out of seven SCLC patients (85.7%) treated with the RD. Conclusions Sagopilone and cisplatin can be safely combined in the first-line treatment of metastasised SCLC. This combination demonstrated preliminary efficacy and should be further evaluated within phase-II trials.
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- 2013
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49. Midterm Changes in Quality of Life: A Prospective Evaluation After Open Pulmonary Metastasectomy
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Alexandra Schwan, Daniel C. Christoph, Stefan Welter, Gerhard Weinreich, Kaid Darwiche, Georgios Stamatis, Danjouma Cheufou, and Wilfried Eberhardt
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Adult ,Male ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Medizin ,Prospective evaluation ,Young Adult ,Physical functioning ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Postoperative Period ,Prospective Studies ,Lung cancer ,Aged ,Social functioning ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Standard treatment ,Metastasectomy ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Quality of Life ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Surgery ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Pulmonary metastasectomy has gained the status of a standard treatment for oligometastases of various primaries. Given that the consequences for quality of life (QoL) remain unclear, we initiated this study to characterize the therapy-induced effects of pulmonary metastasectomy on QoL.From 2008 to 2010, patients scheduled for metastasectomy were prospectively evaluated using the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire-C30 (EORTC QLQ-C30) and the lung cancer module (LC13) questionnaire and again 3 months later. We analyzed QoL changes over time and looked for sex-specific and age-specific (70 versus70 years) differences.A total of 126 cases were analyzed. The median age of the 73 male and 53 female patients was 59.2 years (range, 24.2 to 83.9). There was no significant change between preoperative and postoperative QoL values for emotional, cognitive, and social functioning. Significant deterioration of QoL items was found for physical functioning (-11.0; p0.001), role functioning (-16.4; p0.001), fatigue (11.1; p0.001), pain (15.0; p0.001), and dyspnea (16.9; p0.001). There were no differences between sexes concerning preoperative and postoperative scores. Younger patients (70 years) had more preoperative symptoms (1.9; p = 0.03) and a worse function (2.2; p = 0.04). A tendency was found for decreased global QoL (-6.0; p = 0.08) in the older age group (70 years) after metastasectomy.Pulmonary metastasectomy can be offered every patient with a chance of cure or prolongation of life because the anticipated midterm changes in QoL are of moderate clinical importance, and the change in global health-related QoL is trivial.
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- 2013
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50. Significance of Folate Receptor Alpha and Thymidylate Synthase Protein Expression in Patients with Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer Treated with Pemetrexed
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Fred R. Hirsch, Daniel C. Christoph, Thomas Gauler, Julia D. Maltzman, Biftu Hassan, Murry W. Wynes, Jeremias Wohlschlaeger, Wilfried Eberhardt, Daniel J. O'Shannessy, Cindy Tran, Martin Schuler, Bernadette Reyna Asuncion, and Mathias Hoiczyk
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Male ,Oncology ,Cytoplasm ,Pathology ,Lung Neoplasms ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Thymidylate synthase ,Glutamates ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Aged, 80 and over ,biology ,Middle Aged ,Pemetrexed ,Immunohistochemistry ,Female ,Folate receptor 1 ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Folate Receptor Alpha ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Guanine ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Article ,Disease-Free Survival ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Young Adult ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Folate Receptor 1 ,Lung cancer ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Cell Nucleus ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,Cell Membrane ,Thymidylate Synthase ,medicine.disease ,ROC Curve ,biology.protein ,business - Abstract
Introduction: Folate receptor alpha (FRA) regulates cellular uptake of folates and antifolates. Information about FRA protein expression in metastatic non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is limited. We investigated FRA as a biomarker for pemetrexed-based chemotherapy and compared it with thymidylate synthase (TS), the main target of pemetrexed. Methods: Pretreatment tumor specimens from 207 patients with advanced NSCLC were assessed for FRA and TS protein expression by immunohistochemistry using the H-score (range, 0–300) and correlated to patients’ clinicopathological data, radiographic response, progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS). Results: Low total (cytoplasmic and nuclear) TS protein expression (H-score < 210) was associated with improved PFS (median: 5.6 versus 3.5 months; hazard ratio [HR] = 0.6379, p = 0.0131) and prolonged OS (median: 22.5 versus 11.5 months; HR = 0.5680, p = 0.0107). An association between lower TS levels and response to pemetrexed-based therapy was found—mean H-score 187 ± 5, median 180 for responders versus mean H-score 201 ± 4, median 210, for non-responders, p = 0.0244. High intracellular FRA expression (H-score ≥110) was associated with prolonged OS (28.9 versus 11.7 months, HR = 0.5316, p = 0.0040) and a trend for association with PFS (5.6 versus 4.1 months, HR = 0.7395, p = 0.0801) was noted. Membranous FRA expression was seen in 83% of patients, moreover, high membranous expression (H-score ≥20) was associated with improved PFS (5.6 versus 3.7 months, HR = 0.6445, p = 0.0306) and OS (22.1 versus 11.5 months, HR = 0.5378, p = 0.0131). Conclusions: A large number of NSCLC patients have high expression of FRA and/or a low level of TS expression. Expression levels of FRA and TS were associated with clinical benefit from pemetrexed therapy.
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- 2013
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