Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:granol01 or pierrj07 or allenj01 or carrow01 or gardns01 or mannoc01 or nicolt01 or romane13 or raetze01 or rubena02 or yohayk01

Total Results:

1309


Non-Classical Monocyte Abundance Is an Independent Adverse Risk Factor for Relapse in Pediatric B-ALL [Meeting Abstract]

Contreras, Yametti G P; Evensen, N A; Devidas, M; Raetz, E A; Rabin, K R; Teachey, D T; Aifantis, I; Carroll, W L; Witkowski, M
Background Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) is the most common pediatric cancer and while curable in the majority of cases, 15%-20% of children will relapse with only 50% surviving long-term. Treatment failures arise from the outgrowth of pre-existing or acquired sub-clones that are genetically or epigenetically primed to resist treatment. In addition, the bone marrow microenvironment is known to provide a protective niche. We performed the first mapping of the human B-cell ALL (B-ALL) immune bone marrow (BM) microenvironment at single cell resolution at diagnosis, remission and relapse (Witkowski, 2020). We uncovered a striking rewiring of the myeloid compartment during B-ALL progression with significant over-representation of a leukemia-associated monocyte subpopulation expressing high levels of the Macrophage Colony Stimulating Factor Receptor (M-CSFR/CSF1R). Using both peripheral blood (PB) complete blood count analysis and RNA-seq data, we demonstrated that high monocyte abundance at B-ALL diagnosis is predictive of inferior pediatric and adult overall survival in two large independent clinical cohorts. To determine the association of non-classical monocyte abundance in BM and PB with risk of relapse, we examined a cohort of clinical samples from children enrolled on Children's Oncology Group (COG) protocols. Methods Using an unmatched case-control design, we established a preliminary cohort of PB and BM samples collected at diagnosis from 24 B-ALL patients with eventual relapse and 24 patients in long-term remission. Four remission samples from an NYU Langone cohort were used to validate the expansion of this population in the presence of B-ALL. We applied a customized flow cytometry based assay to identify CD115-expressing human monocyte subsets: classical (CD45 +CD56 -CD14 +CD16 -), non-classical (CD45 +CD56 -CD14 -CD16 +), as well as B-cells (CD19, CD22, CD10) and T/NK cells (CD3, CD56). We then performed univariate and multivariable analysis of outcome (relapse versus long-term remission) compared to monocyte subset abundance, adjusting for potential confounding factors (age, gender, CNS status, NCI risk, genetic subtype, WBC at diagnosis, and end of induction minimal residual disease). Results We observed a significantly higher percentage of non-classical monocytes in the diagnostic BM from the COG cohort when compared to remission samples (COG diagnostic B-ALL BM non-classical percentage mean 52.19% vs NYU B-ALL remission BM non-classical percentage mean 1.775%, P = 0.0001). We also observed a strong correlation between the percentage of non-classical monocytes in the PB when compared to their matched BM specimens (r = 0.6, P = 0.0001). Multivariable analysis revealed a significant association between PB non-classical monocyte percentage at diagnosis and patient outcome (remission cohort non-classical monocyte percentage [mean, range]: 52.4%, 33.3-68.1%, n = 24, relapse cohort non-classical monocyte percentage: 65.9%, 56.4-84.7%, n = 24, P = 0.021). Similarly, a strong trend was observed in the BM, although it did not reach statistical significance. Flow cytometric analysis confirmed CD115 (M-CSFR/CSF1R) expression in this non-classical monocyte population, thereby validating a novel target for intervention. Conclusions These findings validate the presence of a unique monocyte subpopulation associated with childhood B-ALL and suggests that assessing this population in PB at diagnosis may be of prognostic significance. The availability of small molecule inhibitors and monoclonal antibodies targeting CSF1R-expressing monocytes may offer a novel approach to treating B-ALL. [Formula presented] Disclosures: Raetz: Pfizer: Research Funding; Celgene: Other: DSMB member. Teachey: Sobi: Consultancy; NeoImmune Tech: Research Funding; Janssen: Consultancy; BEAM Therapeutics: Consultancy, Research Funding. Aifantis: AstraZeneca: Research Funding; Foresite (FL2020-010) LLC: Consultancy.
Copyright
EMBASE:2016087634
ISSN: 1528-0020
CID: 5104362

Racial, Ethnic, and Socioeconomic Factors Result in Disparities in Outcome Among Children with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Not Fully Attenuated By Disease Prognosticators: A Children's Oncology Group (COG) Study [Meeting Abstract]

Gupta, S; Teachey, D T; Devidas, M; Dai, Y; Aplenc, R; Winestone, L; Bona, K O; Rabin, K R; Zweidler-McKay, P A; Maloney, K W; Mattano, L A; Larsen, E C; Angiolillo, A L; Schore, R J; Burke, M J; Salzer, W L; Winter, S S; Dunsmore, K P; Winick, N J; Carroll, W L; Hunger, S P; Loh, M L
[Formula presented] Introduction: Health disparities are major issue for racial, ethnic, and socioeconomically disadvantaged groups. Though outcomes in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have steadily improved, identifying persistent disparities is critical. Prior studies evaluating ALL outcomes by race or ethnicity have noted narrowing disparities or that residual disparities are secondary to differences in leukemia biology or socioeconomic status (SES). We aimed to identify persistent inequities by race/ethnicity and SES in childhood ALL in the largest cohort ever assembled for this purpose.
Method(s): We identified a cohort of newly-diagnosed patients with ALL, age 0-30.99 years who were enrolled on COG trials between 2004-2019. Race/ethnicity was categorized as non-Hispanic white vs. Hispanic vs. non-Hispanic Black vs. non-Hispanic Asian vs. Non-Hispanic other. SES was proxied by insurance status: United States (US) Medicaid (public health insurance for low-income individuals) vs. US other (predominantly private insurance) vs. non-US patients (mainly jurisdictions with universal health insurance). Event-free and overall survival (EFS, OS) were compared across race/ethnicity and SES. The relative contribution of disease prognosticators (age, sex, white blood cell count, lineage, central nervous system status, cytogenetics, end Induction minimal residual disease) was examined with Cox proportional hazard multivariable models of different combinations of the three constructs of interest (race/ethnicity, SES, disease prognosticators) and examining hazard ratio (HR) attenuation between models.
Result(s): The study cohort included 24,979 children, adolescents, and young adults with ALL. Non-Hispanic White patients were 13,872 (65.6%) of the cohort, followed by 4,354 (20.6%) Hispanic patients and 1,517 (7.2%) non-Hispanic Black patients. Those insured with US Medicaid were 6,944 (27.8%). Five-year EFS (Table 1) was 87.4%+/-0.3% among non-Hispanic White patients vs. 82.8%+/-0.6% [HR 1.37, 95 th confidence interval (95CI) 1.26-1.49; p<0.0001] among Hispanic patients and 81.9%+/-1.2% (HR 1.45, 95CI 1.28-1.56; p<0.0001) among non-Hispanic Black patients. Outcomes for non-Hispanic Asian patients were similar to those of non-Hispanic White patients. US patients on Medicaid had inferior 5-year EFS as compared to other US patients (83.2%+/-0.5% vs. 86.3%+/-0.3%, HR 1.21, 95CI 1.12-1.30; p<0.0001) while non-US patients had the best outcomes (5-year EFS 89.0%+/-0.7%, HR 0.78, 95CI 0.71-0.88; p<0.0001). There was substantial imbalance in traditional disease prognosticators (e.g. T-cell lineage) across both race/ethnicity and SES, and of race/ethnicity by SES. For example, T-lineage ALL accounted for 17.6%, 9.4%, and 6.6% of Non-Hispanic Black, Non-Hispanic White, and Hispanic patients respectively (p<0.0001). Table 2 shows the multivariable models and illustrates different patterns of HR adjustment among specific racial/ethnic and SES groups. Inferior EFS among Hispanic patients was substantially attenuated by the addition of disease prognosticators (HR decreased from 1.37 to 1.17) and further (but not fully) attenuated by the subsequent addition of SES (HR 1.11). In contrast, the increased risk among non-Hispanic Black children was minimally attenuated by both the addition of disease prognosticators and subsequent addition of SES (HR 1.45 to 1.38 to 1.32). Similarly, while the superior EFS of non-US insured patients was substantially attenuated by the addition of race/ethnicity and disease prognosticators (HR 0.79 to 0.94), increased risk among US Medicaid patients was minimally attenuated by the addition of race/ethnicity or disease prognosticators (HR 1.21 to 1.16). OS disparities followed similar patterns but were consistently worse than in EFS, particularly among patients grouped as non-Hispanic other.
Conclusion(s): Substantial disparities in survival outcomes persist by race/ethnicity and SES in the modern era. Our findings suggest that reasons for these disparities vary between specific disadvantaged groups. Additional work is required to identify specific drivers of survival disparities that may be mitigated by targeted interventions. [Formula presented] Disclosures: Gupta: Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees. Teachey: NeoImmune Tech: Research Funding; Sobi: Consultancy; BEAM Therapeutics: Consultancy, Research Funding; Janssen: Consultancy. Zweidler-McKay: ImmunoGen: Current Employment. Loh: MediSix therapeutics: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
Copyright
EMBASE:2016077940
ISSN: 0006-4971
CID: 5099032

Deconvoluting Mechanisms of Acquired Resistance to RAF Inhibitors in BRAFV600E-Mutant Human Glioma [Comment]

Schreck, Karisa C; Morin, Andrew; Zhao, Guisheng; Allen, Amy N; Flannery, Patrick; Glantz, Michael; Green, Adam L; Jones, Chris; Jones, Kenneth L; Kilburn, Lindsay B; Nazemi, Kellie J; Samuel, David; Sanford, Bridget; Solomon, David A; Wang, Jiawan; Pratilas, Christine A; Nicolaides, Theodore; Mulcahy Levy, Jean M
PURPOSE:-mutated glioma, though emergent and adaptive resistance occurs through ill-defined mechanisms. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN:-mutant glioma cell lines. RESULTS:) restored sensitivity to BRAFi. We identified and validated CRAF upregulation as a mechanism of resistance in one resistant sample. RNA-seq analysis identified two emergent expression patterns in resistant samples, consistent with expression patterns of known glioma subtypes. CONCLUSIONS:Resistance mechanisms to BRAFi in glioma are varied and may predict effective precision combinations of targeted therapy, highlighting the importance of a personalized approach.
PMID: 34433654
ISSN: 1557-3265
CID: 5115802

Levocarnitine for pegaspargase-induced hepatotoxicity in older children and young adults with acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Schulte, Rachael; Hinson, Ashley; Huynh, Van; Breese, Erin H; Pierro, Joanna; Rotz, Seth; Mixon, Benjamin A; McNeer, Jennifer L; Burke, Michael J; Orgel, Etan
BACKGROUND:Pegaspargase (PEG-ASP) is an integral component of therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) but is associated with hepatotoxicity that may delay or limit future therapy. Obese and adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients are at high risk. Levocarnitine has been described as potentially beneficial for the treatment or prevention of PEG-ASP-associated hepatotoxicity. METHODS:We collected data for patients age ≥10 years who received levocarnitine during induction therapy for ALL, compared to a similar patient cohort who did not receive levocarnitine. The primary endpoint was conjugated bilirubin (c.bili) >3 mg/dl. Secondary endpoints were transaminases >10× the upper limit of normal and any Grade ≥3 hepatotoxicity. RESULTS:Fifty-two patients received levocarnitine for prophylaxis (n = 29) or rescue (n = 32) of hepatotoxicity. Compared to 109 patients without levocarnitine, more patients receiving levocarnitine were obese and/or older and had significantly higher values for some hepatotoxicity markers at diagnosis and after PEG-ASP. Levocarnitine regimens varied widely; no adverse effects of levocarnitine were identified. Obesity and AYA status were associated with an increased risk of conjugated hyperbilirubinemia and severe transaminitis. Multivariable analysis identified a protective effect of levocarnitine on the development of c.bili >3 mg/dl (OR 0.12, p = 0.029). There was no difference between groups in CTCAE Grade ≥3 hepatotoxicity. C.bili >3 mg/dl during induction was associated with lower event-free survival. CONCLUSIONS:This real-world data on levocarnitine supplementation during ALL induction highlights the risk of PEG-ASP-associated hepatotoxicity in obese and AYA patients, and hepatotoxicity's potential impact on survival. Levocarnitine supplementation may be protective, but prospective studies are needed to confirm these findings.
PMCID:8559504
PMID: 34528411
ISSN: 2045-7634
CID: 5067262

Tumor-Educated Platelets: A Review of Current and Potential Applications in Solid Tumors

Varkey, Joyce; Nicolaides, Theodore
In this current era of precision medicine, liquid biopsy poses a unique opportunity for an easily accessible, comprehensive molecular profile that would allow for the identification of therapeutic targets and sequential monitoring. Solid tumors are definitively diagnosed by analyzing primary tumor tissue, but surgical sampling is not always sufficient to generate a comprehensive genetic fingerprint at the time of diagnosis, or an appropriate means for continued monitoring. Platelets are known to have a dynamic, bidirectional relationship with tumors, acting beyond their role of hemostasis. Tumor-educated platelets (TEP) are modified by the tumor in multiple ways and act as a carrier and protector of metastasis. Data so far have shown that the mRNA in TEP can be harnessed for cancer diagnostics, with many potential applications.
PMCID:8635758
PMID: 34873529
ISSN: 2168-8184
CID: 5110172

Predictors of Severe Toxicity and Poor Efficacy of Reinduction Chemotherapy in First Relapse of B-Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: Report from the Children's Oncology Group (COG) AALL1331 [Meeting Abstract]

Hogan, L; Bhatla, T; Lingyun, J; Xu, X; Gore, L; Raetz, E; Hunger, S; Loh, M; Brown, P
Background and Aims: Standard treatment for B-ALL first relapse begins with reinduction chemotherapy. Predictors of severe toxicity and poor efficacy would identify patients for whom alternative approaches could be prioritized.
Method(s): Patients aged 1-30 years received reinduction with vincristine, dexamethasone, pegaspargase, mitoxantrone and intrathecal chemotherapy (UKALLR3 mitoxantrone arm), followed by risk stratification and randomization to chemotherapy vs. blinatumomab. We reviewed reinduction response [morphologic and flow minimal residual disease (MRD)] and adverse events (AEs) by age (<12 vs 12-17 vs 18+ years), sex, site of relapse [marrow vs extramedullary (EM)] and duration of first remission (<18 months vs. 18-36 months vs >36 months). Pearson's chi-squared test or Fisher's exact test was used to evaluate associations. P values are two-sided and a p value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.
Result(s): Of 662 patients starting reinduction, 24 (4%) died during reinduction (22 AEs; 2 disease progression). Death was associated only with shorter first remission duration (p=0.006). Of those surviving, 44 (7%) had treatment failure (M3 marrow and/or persistent CNS disease) and 67 (11%) had non-fatal severe AEs (grade 4 febrile neutropenia, infection, sepsis or mucositis). Treatment failure was associated with site of relapse (marrow greater than EM, p=0.029) and shorter first remission duration (p<0.001). Severe AEs were associated only with older age (p=0.014). Of patients without death or treatment failure, 272 (46%) were MRD-positive (>=0.01%); MRD-positivity was associated with older age (p=0.038) and marrow relapse (p<0.001).
Conclusion(s): Patients with early relapse are at higher risk of toxic death and early treatment failure. Older patients are at higher risk of non-fatal severe AEs and MRD positivity. Patients with bone marrow relapse are at higher risk of early treatment failure and MRD positivity. Males and females have similar risks of poor reinduction outcomes
EMBASE:636406220
ISSN: 1545-5017
CID: 5044672

Association of Combined Focal 22q11.22 Deletion and IKZF1 Alterations With Outcomes in Childhood Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Mangum, David Spencer; Meyer, Julia A; Mason, Clinton C; Shams, Soheil; Maese, Luke D; Gardiner, Jamie D; Downie, Jonathan M; Pei, Deqing; Cheng, Cheng; Gleason, Adam; Luo, Minjie; Pui, Ching-Hon; Aplenc, Richard; Hunger, Stephen P; Loh, Mignon; Greaves, Mel; Trede, Nikolaus; Raetz, Elizabeth; Frazer, J Kimble; Mullighan, Charles G; Engel, Michael E; Miles, Rodney R; Rabin, Karen R; Schiffman, Joshua D
Importance/UNASSIGNED:Alterations in the IKZF1 gene drive B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) but are not routinely used to stratify patients by risk because of inconsistent associations with outcomes. We describe a novel deletion in 22q11.22 that was consistently associated with very poor outcomes in patients with B-ALL with IKZF1 alterations. Objective/UNASSIGNED:To determine whether focal deletions within the λ variable chain region in chromosome 22q11.22 were associated with patients with B-ALL with IKZF1 alterations with the highest risk of relapse and/or death. Design, Setting, and Participants/UNASSIGNED:This cohort study included 1310 primarily high-risk pediatric patients with B-ALL who were taken from 6 independent clinical cohorts, consisting of 3 multicenter cohorts (AALL0232 [2004-2011], P9906 [2000-2003], and patients with Down syndrome who were pooled from national and international studies) and 3 single-institution cohorts (University of Utah [Salt Lake City], Children's Hospital of Philadelphia [Philadelphia, Pennsylvania], and St. Jude Children's Hospital [Memphis, Tennessee]). Data analysis began in 2011 using patients from the older studies first, and data analysis concluded in 2021. Exposures/UNASSIGNED:Focal 22q11.22 deletions. Main Outcomes and Measures/UNASSIGNED:Event-free and overall survival was investigated. The hypothesis that 22q11.22 deletions stratified the prognostic effect of IKZF1 alterations was formulated while investigating nearby deletions in VRPEB1 in 2 initial cohorts (n = 270). Four additional cohorts were then obtained to further study this association (n = 1040). Results/UNASSIGNED:This study of 1310 patients with B-ALL (717 male [56.1%] and 562 female patients [43.9%]) found that focal 22q11.22 deletions are frequent (518 of 1310 [39.5%]) in B-ALL and inconsistent with physiologic V(D)J recombination. A total of 299 of 1310 patients with B-ALL had IKZF1 alterations. Among patients with IKZF1 alterations, more than half shared concomitant focal 22q11.22 deletions (159 of 299 [53.0%]). Patients with combined IKZF1 alterations and 22q11.22 deletions had worse outcomes compared with patients with IKZF1 alterations and wild-type 22q11.22 alleles in every cohort examined (combined cohorts: 5-year event-free survival rates, 43.3% vs 68.5%; hazard ratio [HR], 2.18; 95% CI, 1.54-3.07; P < .001; 5-year overall survival rates, 66.9% vs 83.9%; HR, 2.05; 95% CI, 1.32-3.21; P = .001). While 22q11.22 deletions were not prognostic in patients with wild-type IKZF1 , concomitant 22q11.22 deletions in patients with IKZF1 alterations stratified outcomes across additional risk groups, including patients who met the IKZF1plus criteria, and maintained independent significance in multivariate analysis for event-free survival (HR, 2.05; 95% CI, 1.27-3.29; P = .003) and overall survival (HR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.01-3.34; P = .05). Conclusions and Relevance/UNASSIGNED:This cohort study suggests that 22q11.22 deletions identify patients with B-ALL and IKZF1 alterations who have very poor outcomes and may offer a new genetic biomarker to further refine B-ALL risk stratification and treatment strategies.
PMCID:8377604
PMID: 34410295
ISSN: 2374-2445
CID: 5011562

Long-term neuropsychological outcomes of survivors of young childhood brain tumors treated on the Head Start II protocol

Levitch, Cara F; Malkin, Benjamin; Latella, Lauren; Guerry, Whitney; Gardner, Sharon L; Finlay, Jonathan L; Sands, Stephen A
Background/UNASSIGNED:The Head Start treatment protocols have focused on curing young children with brain tumors while avoiding or delaying radiotherapy through using a combination of high-dose, marrow-ablative chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (AuHCT). Late effects data from treatment on the Head Start II (HS II) protocol have previously been published for short-term follow-up (STF) at a mean of 39.7 months post-diagnosis. The current study examines long-term follow-up (LTF) outcomes from the same cohort. Methods/UNASSIGNED:Eighteen HS II patients diagnosed with malignant brain tumors <10 years of age at diagnosis completed a neurocognitive battery and parents completed psychological questionnaires at a mean of 104.7 months' post-diagnosis. Results/UNASSIGNED:There was no significant change in Full Scale IQ at LTF compared to baseline or STF. Similarly, most domains had no significant change from STF, including verbal IQ, performance IQ, academics, receptive language, learning/memory, visual-motor integration, and externalizing behaviors. Internalizing behaviors increased slightly at LTF. Clinically, most domains were within the average range, except for low average mathematics and receptive language. Additionally, performance did not significantly differ by age at diagnosis or time since diagnosis. Of note, children treated with high-dose methotrexate for disseminated disease or atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor displayed worse neurocognitive outcomes. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:These results extend prior findings of relative stability in intellectual functioning for a LTF period. Ultimately, this study supports that treatment strategies for avoiding or delaying radiotherapy using high-dose, marrow-ablative chemotherapy and AuHCT may decrease the risk of neurocognitive and social-emotional declines in young pediatric brain tumor survivors.
PMCID:8475224
PMID: 34594573
ISSN: 2054-2577
CID: 5067582

Class II HLA Variants Associate with Risk of Pegaspargase Hypersensitivity

Liu, Yiwei; Yang, Wenjian; Smith, Colton; Cheng, Cheng; Karol, Seth E; Larsen, Eric C; Winick, Naomi; Carroll, William L; Loh, Mignon L; Raetz, Elizabeth A; Hunger, Stephen P; Winter, Stuart S; Dunsmore, Kimberly P; Devidas, Meenakshi; Yang, Jun J; Evans, William E; Jeha, Sima; Pui, Ching-Hon; Inaba, Hiroto; Relling, Mary V
We conducted the first HLA allele and genome wide association study to identify loci associated with hypersensitivity reactions exclusively to the PEGylated preparation of asparaginase (pegaspargase) in racially diverse cohorts of pediatric leukemia patients: St. Jude Children's Research Hospital's Total XVI (TXVI, n = 598), Children's Oncology Group AALL0232 (n = 2472) and AALL0434 (n = 1189). Germline DNA was genotyped using arrays. Genetic variants not genotyped directly were imputed. HLA alleles were imputed using SNP2HLA or inferred using BWAkit. Analyses between genetic variants and hypersensitivity were performed in each cohort first using cohort-specific covariates and then combined using meta-analyses. Nongenetic risk factors included fewer intrathecal injections (P = 2.7x10-5 in TXVI) and male sex (P = 0.025 in AALL0232). HLA alleles DQB1*02:02, DRB1*07:01, and DQA1*02:01 had the strongest associations with pegaspargase hypersensitivity (P < 5.0x10-5 ) in patients with primarily European ancestry (EA), with the three alleles associating in a single haplotype. The top allele HLA-DQB1*02:02 was tagged by HLA-DQB1 rs1694129 in EAs (r2 = 0.96) and less so in non-EAs. All single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with pegaspargase hypersensitivity reaching genome-wide significance in EAs were in class II HLA loci, and were partially replicated in non-EAs, as is true for other HLA associations. The rs9958628 variant, in ARHGAP28 (previously linked to immune response in children) had the strongest genetic association (P = 8.9x10-9 ) in non-EAs. The HLA-DQB1*02:02-DRB1*07:01-DQA1*02:01 associated with hypersensitivity reactions to pegaspargase is the same haplotype associated with reactions to non-PEGylated asparaginase, even though the antigens differ between the two preparations.
PMID: 33768542
ISSN: 1532-6535
CID: 4822982

Phase 0 Clinical Trial of Everolimus in Patients with Vestibular Schwannoma or Meningioma

Karajannis, Matthias A; Mauguen, Audrey; Maloku, Ekrem; Xu, Qingwen; Dunbar, Erin M; Plotkin, Scott R; Yaffee, Anna; Wang, Shiyang; Roland, J Thomas; Sen, Chandranath; Placantonakis, Dimitris G; Golfinos, John G; Allen, Jeffrey C; Vitanza, Nicholas A; Chiriboga, Luis A; Schneider, Robert J; Deng, Jingjing; Neubert, Thomas A; Goldberg, Judith D; Zagzag, David; Giancotti, Filippo G; Blakeley, Jaishri O
Inhibition of mTORC1 signaling has been shown to diminish growth of meningiomas and schwannomas in preclinical studies, and clinical data suggest that everolimus, an orally administered mTORC1 inhibitor, may slow tumor progression in a subset of NF2 patients with vestibular schwannoma (VS). To assess the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and potential mechanisms of treatment resistance, we performed a pre-surgical (phase 0) clinical trial of everolimus in patients undergoing elective surgery for VS or meningiomas. Eligible patients with meningioma or VS requiring tumor resection enrolled on study received everolimus 10 mg daily for 10 days immediately prior to surgery. Everolimus blood levels were determined immediately prior to and after surgery. Tumor samples were collected intraoperatively. Ten patients completed protocol therapy. Median pre- and post-operative blood levels of everolimus were found to be in a high therapeutic range (17.4 ng/ml and 9.4 ng/ml, respectively). Median tumor tissue drug concentration determined by mass spectrometry was 24.3 pg/mg (range 9.2-169.2). We observed only partial inhibition of phospho-S6 in the treated tumors, indicating incomplete target inhibition compared to control tissues from untreated patients (p=0.025). Everolimus led to incomplete inhibition of mTORC1 and downstream signaling. These data may explain the limited anti-tumor effect of everolimus observed in clinical studies for NF2 patients and will inform the design of future pre-clinical and clinical studies targeting mTORC1 in meningiomas and schwannomas.
PMID: 34224367
ISSN: 1538-8514
CID: 4932142