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508


Potential Of Autoimmune Response Against Tumor-Associated Antigens To Predict Risk Of Developing Lung Cancer [Meeting Abstract]

Tsay, JJ; Dai, L; Yie, T-A; Munger, J; Pass, H; Tan, E; Zhang, J; Rom, WN
ISI:000390749602364
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 2414592

Progression From Respiratory Dysfunction To Failure In Late-Onset Pompe Disease [Meeting Abstract]

Berger, KI; Chan, Y; Rom, WN; Goldring, RM
ISI:000390749604671
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 2414762

Sonic Hedgehog (shh) Signaling Regulates Myofibroblast Function During Alveolar Septum Formation In Postnatal Lung [Meeting Abstract]

Kugler, MC; Loomis, CA; Ramos, J; Joyner, AL; Rom, WN; Rifkin, DB; Munger, J
ISI:000390749601588
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 2414542

Serum Short Chain Fatty Acids Increase The Risk Of Tuberculosis In Hiv Patients On Antiretroviral Therapy And Inhibit Th1 And Th17 Immune Response [Meeting Abstract]

Weiden, MD; Clemente, JC; Li, Y; Friedman, E; Ruan, C; Cao, J; Pooran, A; Davids, M; Calligaro, G; Dawson, R; Van Zyl-Smit, RN; Dheda, K; Rom, WN; Segal, L
ISI:000390749602137
ISSN: 1535-4970
CID: 2414562

Inflammatory cytokines and non-small cell lung cancer in a CT-scan screening cohort: Background review of the literature

DeCotiis, Christopher; Hu, Yingjie; Greenberg, Alissa K; Huie, Maryann; Tsay, Jun-Chieh J; Pass, Harvey; Goldberg, Judith D; Rom, William N
BACKGROUND: Inflammatory cytokines are at the intersection of tumor cell biology and host immune response. Peripheral cytokine expression levels may reflect the microscopic tumor milieu, and specific cytokines play an integral role in tumor initiation, growth, and metastasis. High-throughput cytokine analysis may identify panels for early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) diagnosis and identify individuals at high-risk for lung cancer with indeterminate lung nodules 8-20 mm in size. METHODS: Thirteen serum cytokines from the NYU Lung Cancer Biomarker Center cohort with early-stage NSCLC were analyzed using bead-based immunoassay technology. RESULTS: In the NYU cohort, a one unit increase in interferon-gamma increased risk of lung cancer by 3% (OR = 1.03, 95% CI, 1.02-1.05) and a one unit increase in TNF-alpha decreased the risk of lung cancer by 53% (OR = 0.47, 95% Cl, 0.31-0.71) when both cytokines were included in a logistic regression model with adjustments for age and pack-years of smoking. The resulting AUC for the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve was 0.88; the sensitivity and specificity at the optimal cutpoint were 78.9% and 90.3%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Cytokines have limited value in the early diagnosis of early-stage NSCLC. Our review of the literature suggests that although inflammation is important for the development of NSCLC, that cytokines are increased in more advanced lung cancer than when the diagnosis occurs at presentation.
PMID: 26756613
ISSN: 1875-8592
CID: 1912582

Proteomic profiling of lung adenocarcinoma indicates heightened DNA repair, antioxidant mechanisms and identifies LASP1 as a potential negative predictor of survival

Fahrmann, Johannes F; Grapov, Dmitry; Phinney, Brett S; Stroble, Carol; DeFelice, Brian C; Rom, William; Gandara, David R; Zhang, Yanhong; Fiehn, Oliver; Pass, Harvey; Miyamoto, Suzanne
BACKGROUND: Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in the United States. Non-small cell lung cancer accounts for 85% of all lung cancers for which adenocarcinoma is the most common histological type. Management of lung cancer is hindered by high false-positive rates due to difficulty resolving between benign and malignant tumors. Better molecular analysis comparing malignant and non-malignant tissues will provide important evidence of the underlying biology contributing to tumorigenesis. METHODS: We utilized a proteomics approach to analyze 38 malignant and non-malignant paired tissue samples obtained from current or former smokers with early stage (Stage IA/IB) lung adenocarcinoma. Statistical mixed effects modeling and orthogonal partial least squares discriminant analysis were used to identify key cancer-associated perturbations in the adenocarcinoma proteome. Identified proteins were subsequently assessed against clinicopathological variables. RESULTS: Top cancer-associated protein alterations were characterized by: (1) elevations in APEX1, HYOU1 and PDIA4, indicative of increased DNA repair machinery and heightened anti-oxidant defense mechanisms; (2) increased LRPPRC, STOML2, COPG1 and EPRS, suggesting altered tumor metabolism and inflammation; (3) reductions in SPTB, SPTA1 and ANK1 implying dysregulation of membrane integrity; and (4) decreased SLCA41 suggesting altered pH regulation. Increased protein levels of HYOU1, EPRS and LASP1 in NSCLC adenocarcinoma was independently validated by tissue microarray immunohistochemistry. Immunohistochemistry for HYOU1 and EPRS indicated AUCs of 0.952 and 0.841, respectively, for classifying tissue as malignant. Increased LASP1 correlated with poor overall survival (HR 3.66 per unit increase; CI 1.37-9.78; p = 0.01). CONCLUSION: These results reveal distinct proteomic changes associated with early stage lung adenocarcinoma that may be useful prognostic indicators and therapeutic targets.
PMCID:5084393
PMID: 27799870
ISSN: 1542-6416
CID: 2296482

Differential N-Glycosylation Patterns in Lung Adenocarcinoma Tissue

Ruhaak, L Renee; Taylor, Sandra L; Stroble, Carol; Nguyen, Uyen Thao; Parker, Evan A; Song, Ting; Lebrilla, Carlito B; Rom, William N; Pass, Harvey; Kim, Kyoungmi; Kelly, Karen; Miyamoto, Suzanne
To decrease the mortality of lung cancer, better screening and diagnostic tools as well as treatment options are needed. Protein glycosylation is one of the major post-translational modifications that is altered in cancer, but it is not exactly clear which glycan structures are affected. A better understanding of the glycan structures that are differentially regulated in lung tumor tissue is highly desirable and will allow us to gain greater insight into the underlying biological mechanisms of aberrant glycosylation in lung cancer. Here, we assess differential glycosylation patterns of lung tumor tissue and nonmalignant tissue at the level of individual glycan structures using nLC-chip-TOF-MS. Using tissue samples from 42 lung adenocarcinoma patients, 29 differentially expressed (FDR < 0.05) glycan structures were identified. The levels of several oligomannose type glycans were upregulated in tumor tissue. Furthermore, levels of fully galactosylated glycans, some of which were of the hybrid type and mostly without fucose, were decreased in cancerous tissue, whereas levels of non- or low-galactosylated glycans mostly with fucose were increased. To further assess the regulation of the altered glycosylation, the glycomics data was compared to publicly available gene expression data from lung adenocarcinoma tissue compared to nonmalignant lung tissue. The results are consistent with the possibility that the observed N-glycan changes have their origin in differentially expressed glycosyltransferases. These results will be used as a starting point for the further development of clinical glycan applications in the fields of imaging, drug targeting, and biomarkers for lung cancer.
PMCID:4644186
PMID: 26322380
ISSN: 1535-3907
CID: 1834292

Cigarette side-stream smoke lung and bladder carcinogenesis: inducing mutagenic acrolein-DNA adducts, inhibiting DNA repair and enhancing anchorage-independent-growth cell transformation

Lee, Hyun-Wook; Wang, Hsiang-Tsui; Weng, Mao-Wen; Chin, Chiu; Huang, William; Lepor, Herbert; Wu, Xue-Ru; Rom, William N; Chen, Lung-Chi; Tang, Moon-Shong
Second-hand smoke (SHS) is associated with 20-30% of cigarette-smoke related diseases, including cancer. Majority of SHS (>80%) originates from side-stream smoke (SSS). Compared to mainstream smoke, SSS contains more tumorigenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and acrolein (Acr). We assessed SSS-induced benzo(a)pyrene diol epoxide (BPDE)- and cyclic propano-deoxyguanosine (PdG) adducts in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL), lung, heart, liver, and bladder-mucosa from mice exposed to SSS for 16 weeks. In SSS exposed mice, Acr-dG adducts were the major type of PdG adducts formed in BAL (p < 0.001), lung (p < 0.05), and bladder mucosa (p < 0.001), with no significant accumulation of Acr-dG adducts in heart or liver. SSS exposure did not enhance BPDE-DNA adduct formation in any of these tissues. SSS exposure reduced nucleotide excision repair (p < 0.01) and base excision repair (p < 0.001) in lung tissue. The levels of DNA repair proteins, XPC and hOGG1, in lung tissues of exposed mice were significantly (p < 0.001 and p < 0.05) lower than the levels in lung tissues of control mice. We found that Acr can transform human bronchial epithelial and urothelial cells in vitro. We propose that induction of mutagenic Acr-DNA adducts, inhibition of DNA repair, and induction of cell transformation are three mechanisms by which SHS induces lung and bladder cancers.
PMCID:4741761
PMID: 26431382
ISSN: 1949-2553
CID: 1790072

The History of the Bellevue Hospital Chest Service (1903-2015)

Rom, William N; Reibman, Joan
The Bellevue Hospital Chest Service is unique in the annals of medical history since it is the oldest chest medicine program in the United States (1903), and was the source of clinical pulmonary fellowship training (primarily tuberculosis) and research fellowship training in its Cardiopulmonary Laboratory. Drs. Cournand and Richards shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1956 for cardiac catheterization with collection of a mixed venous sample to accurately calculate cardiac output using the Fick Principle. The Bellevue Chest Service has emerged as a leader in controlling the TB/HIV and MDR-TB epidemics, developed programs for the early detection of lung cancer, founded the World Trade Center Bellevue Environmental Center for studies of asthma and small airways function, and has constructed the William N. Rom Environmental Lung Disease Laboratory for future research.
PMID: 26406151
ISSN: 2325-6621
CID: 1787082

Factors associated with abnormal spirometry among HIV-infected individuals

Drummond, M Bradley; Huang, Laurence; Diaz, Philip T; Kirk, Gregory D; Kleerup, Eric C; Morris, Alison; Rom, William; Weiden, Michael D; Zhao, Enxu; Thompson, Bruce; Crothers, Kristina
OBJECTIVE: HIV-infected individuals are susceptible to development of chronic lung diseases, but little is known regarding the prevalence and risk factors associated with different spirometric abnormalities in this population. We sought to determine the prevalence, risk factors and performance characteristics of risk factors for spirometric abnormalities among HIV-infected individuals. DESIGN: Cross-sectional cohort study. METHODS: We analyzed cross-sectional US data from the NHLBI-funded Lung-HIV consortium - a multicenter observational study of heterogeneous groups of HIV-infected participants in diverse geographic sites. Logistic regression analysis was performed to determine factors statistically significantly associated with spirometry patterns. RESULTS: A total of 908 HIV-infected individuals were included. The median age of the cohort was 50 years, 78% were men and 68% current smokers. An abnormal spirometry pattern was present in 37% of the cohort: 27% had obstructed and 10% had restricted spirometry patterns. Overall, age, smoking status and intensity, history of Pneumocystis infection, asthma diagnosis and presence of respiratory symptoms were independently associated with an abnormal spirometry pattern. Regardless of the presence of respiratory symptoms, five HIV-infected participants would need to be screened with spirometry to diagnose two individuals with any abnormal spirometry pattern. CONCLUSIONS: Nearly 40% of a diverse US cohort of HIV-infected individuals had an abnormal spirometry pattern. Specific characteristics including age, smoking status, respiratory infection history and respiratory symptoms can identify those at risk for abnormal spirometry. The high prevalence of abnormal spirometry and the poor predictive capability of respiratory symptoms to identify abnormal spirometry should prompt clinicians to consider screening spirometry in HIV-infected populations.
PMCID:4571285
PMID: 26372280
ISSN: 1473-5571
CID: 1778162