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Outcome of Patients With Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumors Enrolled on Sarcoma Alliance for Research Through Collaboration (SARC) Phase II Trials

Akshintala, Srivandana; Mallory, Nicole C; Lu, Yao; Ballman, Karla V; Schuetze, Scott M; Chugh, Rashmi; Maki, Robert G; Reinke, Denise K; Widemann, Brigitte C; Kim, Ae Rang
BACKGROUND:Evaluation of prior phase II trials for malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST) may help develop more suitable trial endpoints in future studies. METHODS:We analyzed outcomes of patients with recurrent or unresectable/metastatic MPNST enrolled on prior Sarcoma Alliance for Research through Collaboration (SARC) phase II trials and estimated the progression-free survival (PFS). PFS from SARC006 (NCT00304083), the phase II trial of upfront chemotherapy in chemotherapy naïve patients, was analyzed separately. Impact of baseline enrollment characteristics on PFS was evaluated. RESULTS:Sixty-four patients (29 male, 35 female, median age 39 years (range 15-81)) with MPNST were enrolled on 1 of 5 trials of single agent or combination therapy that were determined to be inactive. Patients had received a median of 1 (range 0-5) prior systemic therapy, and most had undergone prior surgery (77%) and radiation (61%). Seventy-three percent had metastatic disease at enrollment. Median PFS was 1.77 months (95% CI, 1.61-3.45), and the PFS rate at 4 months was 15%. Greater number of prior systemic therapies and worse performance status were associated with inferior PFS. There was no significant difference in PFS based on age at enrollment, treatment trial, response criteria, presence of metastatic disease, disease site at enrollment, and prior surgery or radiation. In comparison, on the SARC006 trial the PFS rate at 4 months was 94% in 40 patients. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:These data provide a historical baseline PFS that may be used as a comparator in future clinical trials for patients with MPNST.
PMID: 36724001
ISSN: 1549-490x
CID: 5420102

Activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase-extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway in childhood B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Pillai, Pallavi M; Mallory, Nicole; Pierro, Joanna; Saliba, Jason; Newman, Daniel; Hu, Jiyuan; Bhatla, Teena; Raetz, Elizabeth; Carroll, William L; Evensen, Nikki A
RAS mutations are frequently observed in childhood B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) and previous studies have yielded conflicting results as to whether they are associated with a poor outcome. We and others have demonstrated that the mitogen-activated protein kinase-extracellular signal-regulated kinase (MAPK) pathway can be activated through epigenetic mechanisms in the absence of RAS pathway mutations. Herein, we examined whether MAPK activation, as determined by measuring phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (pERK) levels in 80 diagnostic patient samples using phosphoflow cytometry, could be used as a prognostic biomarker for pediatric B-ALL. The mean fluorescence intensity of pERK (MFI) was measured at baseline and after exogenous stimulation with or without pretreatment with the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor trametinib. Activation levels (MFI stimulated/MFI baseline) ranged from 0.76 to 4.40 (median = 1.26), and inhibition indexes (MFI stimulated/MFI trametinib stimulated) ranged from 0.439 to 5.640 (median = 1.30), with no significant difference between patients with wildtype versus mutant RAS for either. Logistic regression demonstrated that neither MAPK activation levels nor RAS mutation status at diagnosis alone or in combination was prognostic of outcome. However, 35% of RAS wildtype samples showed MAPK inhibition indexes greater than the median, thus raising the possibility that therapeutic strategies to inhibit MAPK activation may not be restricted to patients whose blasts display Ras pathway defects.
PMID: 35593589
ISSN: 1545-5017
CID: 5247702

HEREDITARY HEMOLYTIC ANEMIA ASSOCIATED WITH NOVEL SPTA1 & NT5C3A ALTERATIONS [Meeting Abstract]

Nuzum, Tatiana; Mallory, Nicole; Masterson, Margaret
ISI:000530720700097
ISSN: 1545-5009
CID: 5202882

MAP KINASE PATHWAY ACTIVATION AS BIOMARKER FOR MEK INHIBITION IN PEDIATRIC B-LYMPHOBLASTIC LEUKEMIA [Meeting Abstract]

Mallory, Nicole; Madhusoodhan, Pillai Pallavi; Bhatla, Teena; Raetz, Elizabeth; Evensen, Nikki; Carroll, William
ISI:000490282100028
ISSN: 1545-5009
CID: 5202872

Outcome of patients with refractory malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNST) enrolled on phase 2 trials. [Meeting Abstract]

Akshintala, Srivandana; Mallory, Nicole C.; Lu, Yao; Ballman, Karla V.; Kim, AeRang
ISI:000487345803039
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 5202862

The potential of precision medicine for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: opportunities and challenges

Mallory, Nicole; Pierro, Joanna; Raetz, Elizabeth; Carroll, William L.
ISI:000453774800004
ISSN: 2380-8993
CID: 5202852

Polymorphism in the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AGTR1) is associated with age at diagnosis in pulmonary arterial hypertension

Chung, Wendy K; Deng, Liyong; Carroll, J Sheila; Mallory, Nicole; Diamond, Beverly; Rosenzweig, Erika Berman; Barst, Robyn J; Morse, Jane H
BACKGROUND:Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare, lethal disease associated with single gene disorders, connective tissue disease, exposures to anorexigens, and often, idiopathic etiology. Genes can modify the risk of PAH: (1) monogenic disorders associated with PAH are incompletely penetrant, and (2) not all patients with associated conditions at increased risk for PAH develop the disease. The renin angiotensin aldosterone system (RAAS) provides a set of candidate genes that could modulate pulmonary vascular disease similar to its effects on renal and peripheral vasculature. METHODS:We studied 247 patients with PAH, comprising 177 with idiopathic PAH (IPAH), 63 with PAH/connective tissue disease (CTD), and 7 with PAH associated with anorexigens. Patients were genotyped for 5 common polymorphisms in angiotensinogen (AGT), angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), cardiac chymase A (CMA1), angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AGTR1), and aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2). Genotypes were tested for associations with age at diagnosis, hemodynamic parameters at diagnosis, and/or response to acute pulmonary vasodilator testing at diagnosis. RESULTS:Associations were demonstrated for AGTR1 and age at diagnosis in IPAH (p = 0.005). Homozygotes for the 1166C allele (n = 13) were associated with an age at diagnosis 26 years later than those with A/A (n = 139) or A/C (n = 90) genotypes. No associations were demonstrated for AGT, ACE, CMA1, or CYP11B2. CONCLUSIONS:The 1166C polymorphism in AGTR1 appears to be associated with a later age at diagnosis in IPAH, suggesting that this pathway could be involved in the biologic variability that is known to occur in PAH.
PMCID:3712279
PMID: 19332265
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5202902

Clinical implications of determining BMPR2 mutation status in a large cohort of children and adults with pulmonary arterial hypertension

Rosenzweig, Erika B; Morse, Jane H; Knowles, James A; Chada, Kiran K; Khan, Amar M; Roberts, Kari E; McElroy, Jude J; Juskiw, Nicole K; Mallory, Nicole C; Rich, Stuart; Diamond, Beverly; Barst, Robyn J
BACKGROUND:Bone morphogenetic protein receptor type 2 (BMPR2) mutations occur in idiopathic and familial pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH, FPAH); however, the impact of these mutations on clinical assessment and disease severity remains unclear. We investigated the role of BMPR2 mutations on acute vasoreactivity and disease severity in IPAH/FPAH children and adults. METHODS:BMPR2 mutation types were determined in 147 IPAH/FPAH patients. Hemodynamics were obtained at baseline and with acute vasodilator testing. RESULTS:Of 147 patients (69 adults, 78 children; 114 with IPAH, 33 with FPAH), 124 (84%) were BMPR2 mutation-negative, and 23 (16%) were mutation-positive. BMPR2 mutation-positive patients were less likely to respond to acute vasodilator testing than mutation-negative patients (4% vs 33%; p < 0.003; n = 147). BMPR2 mutation-positive children also appeared less likely to respond to acute vasodilator testing than mutation-negative children. BMPR2-positive patients had lower mixed venous saturation (57 +/- 9% vs 62 +/- 10%; p < 0.05) and cardiac index (CI; 2.0 +/- 1.1 vs 2.4 +/- 1.5 liters/min; p < 0.05) than BMPR2-negative patients. CONCLUSIONS:Patients with BMPR2 mutations are less likely to respond to acute vasodilator testing than mutation-negative patients and appear to have more severe disease at diagnosis. Determination of BMPR2 mutations appears to help identify IPAH/FPAH children and adults who are unlikely to respond to acute vasodilator testing and, thus, unlikely to benefit from calcium channel blockade (CCB) treatment.
PMID: 18503968
ISSN: 1557-3117
CID: 5202892