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Integration of multimodality approaches in the management of malignant pleural mesothelioma

Martino, Derlis; Pass, Harvey I
More than half a century after the first descriptions of mesothelioma as a pathologic entity, satisfactory treatment is still elusive. Although relatively uncommon, the incidence of mesothelioma will most likely increase over the next 10-20 years. Advances have been made in understanding the pathogenesis, diagnosis, and staging, but they have not translated into markedly improved survival. Some use palliative treatment as the primary means of therapy even now. On the other hand, a cadre of individuals have studied how surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy affect the disease. Although each individual modality has had limited success by itself, a multimodality approach has been documented to improve survival and quality of life. In addition, intriguing discoveries in immunology and gene profiling and therapy promise hope for further improvement. In this article, we will illustrate the current views on integrating these different approaches and delineate areas of active research
PMID: 15086967
ISSN: 1525-7304
CID: 59025

Gene expression profiles predict survival and progression of pleural mesothelioma

Pass, Harvey I; Liu, Zhandong; Wali, Anil; Bueno, Raphael; Land, Susan; Lott, Daniel; Siddiq, Fauzia; Lonardo, Fulvio; Carbone, Michele; Draghici, Sorin
PURPOSE: Clinical outcomes for malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients having surgery are imprecisely predicted by histopathology and intraoperative staging. We hypothesized that gene expression profiles could predict time to progression and survival in surgically cytoreduced pleural mesothelioma of all stages. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Gene expression analyses from 21 MPM patients having cytoreductions and identical postoperative adjuvant therapy were performed using the U95 Affymetrix gene chip. Using both dChip and SAM, neural networks constructed a common 27 gene classifier, which was associated with either the high-risk and low-risk group of patients. Data were validated using real-time PCR and immunohistochemical staining. The 27 gene classifier was also used for validation in a separate set of 17 MPM patients from another institution. RESULTS: The groups predicted by the gene classifier recapitulated the actual time to progression and survival of the test set with 95.2% accuracy using 10-fold cross-validation. Clinical outcomes were independent of histology, and heterogeneity of progression and survival in early stage patients was defined by the classifier. The gene classifier had a 76% accuracy in the separate validation set of MPMs. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that pretherapy gene expression analysis of mesothelioma biopsies may predict which patients may benefit from a surgical approach
PMID: 14871960
ISSN: 1078-0432
CID: 59027

Disseminated malignant solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura [Case Report]

Zhang, Hongquan; Lucas, David R; Pass, Harvey I; Che, Mingxin
Solitary fibrous tumor (SFT) of the pleura typically forms a localized pleura-based mass, and most are benign. A rare case of disseminated malignant SFT of the pleura is reported. The patient was a 71-year-old man who presented with complaints of shortness of breath to his primary care physician. A diagnosis of malignant mesothelioma was suspected, based on clinical, radiological and needle biopsy findings. He was referred to our institution for surgery. An extrapleural pneumonectomy, encompassing all pleural masses, was performed. Gross examination of the resected specimen was remarkable for numerous masses, ranging in size from 0.2 to 13.5 cm, covering the majority of the visceral pleura. Histologically, the tumor was composed of short spindle cells admixed with variable proportions of collagenous stroma. There were great intra- and intertumoral heterogeneity in tumor growth pattern, cellularity, pleomorphism and mitoses. Histologically malignant areas were present in all of the masses examined. The neoplastic cells were diffusely and intensely positive for bcl-2. Most tumor cells were also strongly stained for CD34 and CD99. Staining for cytokeratin was negative. The tumor also revealed p53 over-expression. Thus, the histological and immunohistochemical features of the tumor were consistent with a disseminated malignant SFT. This report shows that SFT rarely presents with disseminated pleural involvement, and a panel with CD34, bcl-2 and cytokeratin are valuable for differentiating SFT from malignant mesothelioma and other malignant spindle cell neoplasms of the pleura
PMID: 14720142
ISSN: 1320-5463
CID: 59028

Mutation analysis of the BRAF codon 599 in malignant pleural mesothelioma by enriched PCR-RFLP

Dote, Hideaki; Tsukuda, Kazunori; Toyooka, Shinichi; Yano, Masaaki; Pass, Harvey I; Shimizu, Nobuyoshi
BRAF encodes a RAS-regulated serine/threonine kinase that mediates the pathway for cell growth and malignant transformation. Point mutations of BRAF were reported recently in 66% of melanomas, over 30% of thyroid papillary and low-grade ovarian cancers, and a smaller percentage of other human cancers. Mutations in malignant cells were reported to occur only in exons 11 and 15. Among these mutations, BRAF V599E is most frequent and proved to invert its transcript to the dominant active form. To exclude the interference of co-existing normal cells in clinical samples, we developed a new enriched PCR-RFLP assay for detecting mutations of BRAF codon 599 mutation. The sensitivity of this assay was examined to find that one mutant allele among 10(2) wild-type alleles could be detected. We applied this method for 53 cases of primary malignant pleural mesotheliomas (MPMs) and 6 cell lines and found no mutations in these samples. Our results demonstrate that the developed enriched PCR-RFLP is a sensitive assay to detect BRAF codon 599 mutation. However, it may be a rare type of mutation in MPMs. Our new assay is useful and can be applied for screening of BRAF codon 599 mutation in various kinds of clinical samples
PMID: 14719068
ISSN: 1021-335x
CID: 59029

Consensus report IASLC workshop Bruges, September 2002: pretreatment minimal staging for non-small cell lung cancer

Postmus, Pieter E; Rocmans, Pierre; Asamura, Hisao; Ball, David; Belderbos, Jose; Cappello, Matteo; Jassem, Jacek; Novello, Silvia; Pass, Harvey; Passlick, Bernward; Pirker, Robert; Ready, Neal; Sause, William; Scagliotti, Giorgio; Vansteenkiste, Johan; Westeel, Virginie; van Zandwijk, Nico
PMID: 14708514
ISSN: 0169-5002
CID: 59030

Induction treatment before surgery for non-small cell lung cancer

Eberhardt, W E; Albain, K S; Pass, H; Putnam, J B; Gregor, A; Assamura, H; Mornex, F; Senan, S; Belderbos, J; Westeel, V; Thomas, M; Van Schil, P; Vansteenkiste, J; Manegold, C; Mirimanoff, R O; Stuschke, M; Pignon, J; Rocmans, P; Shepherd, F A
Surgery alone is currently still accepted 'standard of care' for patients with operable NSCLC, this includes stages IA and IIB, as well as selected early subsets of IIIA disease. In more advanced and inoperable stage III disease, combinations of chemotherapy and radiotherapy remain the standard treatment approach for patients with good performance status. The role of surgery following induction therapy in these advanced stage III patients is at the moment not conclusively defined. More evidence from randomized trials is clearly needed to tailor treatment for the large number of patients that present in these locally advanced stages. Enrollment of patients into ongoing prospective clinical trials should be encouraged, whenever possible, to further define prognostic factors and improve multimodality strategies in this clinical setting
PMID: 14708516
ISSN: 0169-5002
CID: 110894

New developments about the association of SV40 with human mesothelioma

Carbone, M; Pass, H I; Miele, L; Bocchetta, M
Simian virus 40 (SV40) has been detected in human tumors in over 40 different laboratories. Many of these reports linked SV40 to human mesotheliomas. The Vaccine Safety Committee of the Institute of Medicine (IOM), National Academy of Sciences, USA, recently reviewed the evidence associating polio vaccines and/or SV40 with human tumors. The IOM conclusions about polio vaccines and human cancer were: (1) 'the evidence is inadequate to accept or reject a causal relation between SV40-containing polio vaccines and cancer' because the 'epidemiological studies are sufficiently flawed'; (2) 'the biological evidence is of moderate strength that SV40 exposure from the polio vaccines is related to SV40 infection in humans'. The epidemiological studies were considered flawed because it was not possible to distinguish reliably among exposed and nonexposed cohorts. Concerning SV40, the IOM concluded that (1) 'the evidence is strong that SV40 is a transforming virus; (2) the evidence is of moderate strength that SV40 exposure could lead to cancer in humans under natural conditions' (IOM, 2002). Similar conclusions were reached at an International consensus meeting on SV40 and human tumors held at the University of Chicago in 2001. G Klein and C Croce, who chaired the final panel that reviewed all the published evidence linking SV40 to human tumors, stated that 'the presence of SV40 in human tumors has been convincingly demonstrated' (Klein et al., 2002). In addition, a workshop organized by the Biological Carcinogenesis Branch of the National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, chaired by J Pagano, has reached similar conclusions (Wong et al., 2002). Therefore, three independent scientific panels have all agreed that there is compelling evidence that SV40 is present in some human cancers and that SV40 could contribute to the pathogenesis of some of them. It should be noted that the presence of SV40 in mesothelioma and other human tumor types has been challenged by a research team that has consistently reported negative findings (Strickler et al., 2001). However, a member of this research team has recently acknowledged - in sworn testimony -sensitivity problems and possible irregularities that raise concerns about these negative reports (MacLachlan, 2002). These revelations, together with the conclusions of the three independent panels mentioned above, appear to bring to an end the apparent controversy about the presence of SV40 in human mesotheliomas and brain tumors
PMID: 12910254
ISSN: 0950-9232
CID: 59047

SV40 and human brain tumors [Letter]

Carbone, Michele; Bocchetta, Maurizio; Cristaudo, Alfonso; Emri, Salih; Gazdar, Adi; Jasani, Bharat; Lednicky, John; Miele, Lucio; Mutti, Luciano; Pass, Harvey I; Ramael, Marc; Rizzo, Paola; Testa, Joseph R; Weggen, Sascha; Yeung, Anthony
PMID: 12794770
ISSN: 0020-7136
CID: 59031

Expression of human MutT homologue (hMTH1) protein in primary non-small-cell lung carcinomas and histologically normal surrounding tissue

Kennedy, Christopher H; Pass, Harvey I; Mitchell, James B
In situ, oxidation of deoxyguanosine yields 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxo-dG), which is mutation prone and results in a G:C --> T:A transversion following DNA replication. Another pathway to the formation of DNA containing 8-oxo-dG is by the misincorporation of 8-oxo-dGTP via DNA polymerase. Human MutT homologue (hMTH1), an 8-oxo-dGTPase, prevents misincorporation of this oxidized nucleotide by hydrolyzing 8-oxo-dGTP to 8-oxo-dGMP. Previous studies have shown that hMTH1 mRNA is overexpressed in human renal cell carcinomas and breast tumors. Elevated levels of hMTH1 protein have also been detected in brain tumors. In the current study, we determined whether hMTH1 protein is overexpressed in primary non-small-cell lung carcinomas as compared to adjacent histologically normal lung tissue. Twenty matched human lung tumor/normal pairs were examined by Western analysis for expression of hMTH1 protein. Overexpression in the tumors was detected in 4/8 (50%) adenocarcinomas, 4/4 (100%) adenocarcinomas with bronchioalveolar (BAC) features, 2/2 (100%) BACs, and 3/6 (50%) squamous cell carcinomas. The data from Western analysis were validated by immunohistochemical staining for hMTH1 protein. The results of this study indicate that hMTH1 protein may be a potential marker for the detection of persistent oxidative stress in lung cancer
PMID: 12757855
ISSN: 0891-5849
CID: 59032

A phase I study of Foscan-mediated photodynamic therapy and surgery in patients with mesothelioma

Friedberg, Joseph S; Mick, Rosemarie; Stevenson, James; Metz, James; Zhu, Timothy; Buyske, Jo; Sterman, Daniel H; Pass, Harvey I; Glatstein, Eli; Hahn, Stephen M
BACKGROUND: Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a light-based cancer treatment that, in the correct setting, can be delivered intraoperatively as an adjuvant therapy. A phase I clinical trial combining surgical debulking with Foscan-mediated PDT was performed in patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma. The purpose of the study was to define the toxicities and to determine the maximally tolerated dose (MTD) of Foscan-mediated PDT. METHODS: A total of 26 patients completed treatment. Tumor debulking was accomplished with either an extrapleural pneumonectomy (7 patients) or a lung-sparing pleurectomy-decortication (19 patients). Patients were injected with Foscan before surgery, and 652 nm light was delivered intraoperatively after completion of surgical debulking. Four light sensors were placed in the chest, allowing delivery of light to a uniform measured dose throughout the hemithorax. RESULTS: Four dose levels were explored. The MTD was 0.1 mg/kg of Foscan injected 6 days before surgery in combination with 10 J x cm(-2) 652 nm light. Dose limiting toxicity at the next higher dose was a systemic capillary leak syndrome leading to death in 2 of 3 patients treated at that dose. Other PDT-related toxicities included wound burns and skin photosensitivity. In all, 14 patients were treated at the MTD without significant complications. CONCLUSIONS: Foscan-mediated PDT can be safely combined with surgery at the established MTD. Unlike most other surgery-based multimodal treatments for mesothelioma, Foscan-mediated PDT affords the option, in selected patients, of accomplishing tumor debulking with a lung-sparing procedure rather than an extrapleural pneumonectomy. A phase II study is warranted
PMID: 12645723
ISSN: 0003-4975
CID: 59033