Searched for: person:pavlia01
Phase I and pharmacokinetic study of imatinib mesylate in patients with advanced malignancies and varying degrees of renal dysfunction: a study by the National Cancer Institute Organ Dysfunction Working Group
Gibbons, Joseph; Egorin, Merrill J; Ramanathan, Ramesh K; Fu, Pingfu; Mulkerin, Daniel L; Shibata, Stephen; Takimoto, Chris H M; Mani, Sridhar; LoRusso, Patricia A; Grem, Jean L; Pavlick, Anna; Lenz, Heinz-Josef; Flick, Susan M; Reynolds, Sherrie; Lagattuta, Theodore F; Parise, Robert A; Wang, Yanfeng; Murgo, Anthony J; Ivy, S Percy; Remick, Scot C
PURPOSE: This study was undertaken to determine the safety, dose-limiting toxicities (DLT), maximum-tolerated dose (MTD), and pharmacokinetics of imatinib in cancer patients with renal impairment and to develop dosing guidelines for imatinib in such patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Sixty adult patients with advanced solid tumors and varying renal function (normal, creatinine clearance [CrCL] >or= 60 mL/min; mild dysfunction, CrCL 40 to 59 mL/min; moderate dysfunction, CrCL 20 to 39 mL/min; and severe dysfunction, CrCL < 20 mL/min) received daily imatinib doses of 100 to 800 mg. Treatment cycles were 28 days long. RESULTS: The MTD was not reached for any group. DLTs occurred in two mild group patients (600 and 800 mg) and two moderate group patients (200 and 600 mg). Serious adverse events (SAEs) were more common in the renal dysfunction groups than in the normal group (P = .0096). There was no correlation between dose and SAEs in any group. No responses were observed. Several patients had prolonged stable disease. Imatinib exposure, expressed as dose-normalized imatinib area under the curve, was significantly greater in the mild and moderate groups than in the normal group. There was a positive correlation between serum alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (AGP) concentration and plasma imatinib, and an inverse correlation between plasma AGP concentration and imatinib clearance. Urinary excretion accounted for 3% to 5% of the daily imatinib dose. CONCLUSION: Daily imatinib doses up to 800 or 600 mg were well tolerated by patients with mild and moderate renal dysfunction, respectively, despite their having increased imatinib exposure
PMID: 18235116
ISSN: 1527-7755
CID: 97004
Role of radiologic imaging at the time of initial diagnosis of stage T1b-T3b melanoma
Yancovitz, Molly; Finelt, Nika; Warycha, Melanie A; Christos, Paul J; Mazumdar, Madhu; Shapiro, Richard L; Pavlick, Anna C; Osman, Iman; Polsky, David; Berman, Russell S
BACKGROUND: In patients with T1b-T3b cutaneous melanoma the utility of radiologic imaging at the time of diagnosis is unclear. Whether initial imaging led to a change in stage or treatment plan was investigated. METHODS: The melanoma database was searched for patients with T1b-T3b primary lesions, clinically N0, and asymptomatic for metastatic disease. Radiologic studies conducted before wide local excision +/- sentinel lymph node biopsy as well as all further imaging and investigations were analyzed. Outcome measures included upstaging, change in initial surgical management, true-positive, false-positive, true-negative, and false-negative rates of each imaging modality. RESULTS: In all, 344 preoperative imaging studies (chest x-ray [CXR], computed tomography [CT], positron emission tomography [PET]/CT) were performed on 158 patients, resulting in 49 findings suspicious for metastatic melanoma and 134 findings suggestive of nonmelanoma pathology. Only 1 of 344 (0.3%) studies, a PET/CT, correlated with confirmed metastatic melanoma. The false-positive rates were CXR 5 of 7 (71.4%), chest CT 21 of 24 (87.5%), abdomen/pelvis CT 10 of 11 (90.9%), head CT 2 of 2 (100.0%), PET/CT 3 of 5 (60.0%). No patient was upstaged or had a change in initial surgical management based on preoperative imaging. The cost of all initial imaging and imaging to follow-up abnormal findings was estimated as $555,308 for the 158 patients studied. CONCLUSIONS: Imaging at the time of initial diagnosis of T1b-T3b, clinically N0, M0 melanoma was of low yield with a high false-positive rate, and did not lead to upstaging or change in initial surgical management. These findings suggest that imaging of asymptomatic patients at the time of diagnosis may not be warranted
PMID: 17620286
ISSN: 0008-543x
CID: 74405
Expression of the cancer/testis antigen NY-ESO-1 in primary and metastatic malignant melanoma (MM)--correlation with prognostic factors
Velazquez, Elsa F; Jungbluth, Achim A; Yancovitz, Molly; Gnjatic, Sacha; Adams, Sylvia; O'Neill, David; Zavilevich, Kira; Albukh, Tatyana; Christos, Paul; Mazumdar, Madhu; Pavlick, Anna; Polsky, David; Shapiro, Richard; Berman, Russell; Spira, Joanna; Busam, Klaus; Osman, Iman; Bhardwaj, Nina
Cancer/testis (CT) antigens are potential targets for cancer immunotherapy, with NY-ESO-1 being among the most immunogenic. In several clinical trials in malignant melanoma (MM) patients, NY-ESO-1 protein/peptides showed clear evidence of inducing specific immunity. However, little is known about NY-ESO-1 expression in primary and metastatic MM and its relationship to disease progression. We analyzed NY-ESO-1 expression immunohistochemically in a series of primary and metastatic MMs and its relation to prognostic parameters and survival. We studied 61 primary and 63 metastatic MM specimens (from 61 and 56 patients, respectively). The prevalence of NY-ESO-1 expression was significantly higher in metastatic versus primary tumors [18/56 (32%) versus 8/61 (13%), P = 0.015]. There was a significant association between initial stage at presentation and NY-ESO-1 expression [stage I (3.45%), stage II (9.52%) and stage III (45.45%), P = 0.0014]. Primary MMs expressing NY-ESO-1 were significantly thicker than NY-ESO-1 negative cases (median thickness 4.7 mm versus 1.53 mm respectively, P = 0.03). No significant difference was seen in overall survival. In conclusion, NY-ESO-1 is more frequently expressed in metastatic than in primary MM and its expression is associated with thicker primary lesions and a higher frequency of metastatic disease, indicative of a worse prognosis. Our study suggests that patients with metastatic MM who express NY-ESO-1 may benefit from NY-ESO-1-based immunotherapy
PMCID:2935749
PMID: 17625806
ISSN: 1424-9634
CID: 73347
Vaccination with NY-ESO-1 protein and CpG in Montanide induces integrated antibody/Th1 responses and CD8 T cells through cross-priming
Valmori, Danila; Souleimanian, Naira E; Tosello, Valeria; Bhardwaj, Nina; Adams, Sylvia; O'Neill, David; Pavlick, Anna; Escalon, Juliet B; Cruz, Crystal M; Angiulli, Angelica; Angiulli, Francesca; Mears, Gregory; Vogel, Susan M; Pan, Linda; Jungbluth, Achim A; Hoffmann, Eric W; Venhaus, Ralph; Ritter, Gerd; Old, Lloyd J; Ayyoub, Maha
The use of recombinant tumor antigen proteins is a realistic approach for the development of generic cancer vaccines, but the potential of this type of vaccines to induce specific CD8(+) T cell responses, through in vivo cross-priming, has remained unclear. In this article, we report that repeated vaccination of cancer patients with recombinant NY-ESO-1 protein, Montanide ISA-51, and CpG ODN 7909, a potent stimulator of B cells and T helper type 1 (Th1)-type immunity, resulted in the early induction of specific integrated CD4(+) Th cells and antibody responses in most vaccinated patients, followed by the development of later CD8(+) T cell responses in a fraction of them. The correlation between antibody and T cell responses, together with the ability of vaccine-induced antibodies to promote in vitro cross-presentation of NY-ESO-1 by dendritic cells to vaccine-induced CD8(+) T cells, indicated that elicitation of NY-ESO-1-specific CD8(+) T cell responses by cross-priming in vivo was associated with the induction of adequate levels of specific antibodies. Together, our data provide clear evidence of in vivo cross-priming of specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes by a recombinant tumor antigen vaccine, underline the importance of specific antibody induction for the cross-priming to occur, and support the use of this type of formulation for the further development of efficient cancer vaccines
PMCID:1885608
PMID: 17517626
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 72446
Detection of mutant BRAF alleles in the plasma of patients with metastatic melanoma
Yancovitz, Molly; Yoon, Joanne; Mikhail, Maryann; Gai, Weiming; Shapiro, Richard L; Berman, Russell S; Pavlick, Anna C; Chapman, Paul B; Osman, Iman; Polsky, David
Mutations in the BRAF oncogene at amino acid 600 have been reported in 40 to 70% of human metastatic melanoma tissues, and the critical role of BRAF in the biology of melanoma has been established. Sampling the blood compartment to detect the mutational status of a solid tumor represents a highly innovative advance in cancer medicine, and such an approach could have advantages over tissue-based techniques. We report the development of a fluorescence-based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to detect mutant BRAF alleles in plasma. A mutant-specific PCR assay was optimized to specifically amplify the mutant BRAF allele without amplifying the wild-type allele. Experiments mixing DNA from a BRAF mutant melanoma cell line with wild-type human placental DNA in varying proportions were performed to determine the threshold of this assay and to compare it with routine DNA sequencing. The assay was then applied to tissue and plasma specimens from patients with metastatic melanoma. The assay detected 0.1 ng of mutant DNA mixed in 100 ng of wild-type DNA and was 500-fold more sensitive than DNA sequencing. The assay detected mutant BRAF alleles in plasma samples from 14 of 26 (54%) metastatic melanoma patients. These data demonstrate the feasibility of blood-based testing for BRAF mutations in metastatic melanoma patients
PMCID:1867452
PMID: 17384209
ISSN: 1525-1578
CID: 71931
Clinical relevance of neutral endopeptidase (NEP/CD10) in melanoma
Velazquez, Elsa F; Yancovitz, Molly; Pavlick, Anna; Berman, Russell; Shapiro, Richard; Bogunovic, Dusan; O'Neill, David; Yu, Yi-Lo; Spira, Joanna; Christos, Paul J; Zhou, Xi Kathy; Mazumdar, Madhu; Nanus, David M; Liebes, Leonard; Bhardwaj, Nina; Polsky, David; Osman, Iman
BACKGROUND: Overexpression of Neutral Endopeptidase (NEP) has been reported in metastatic carcinomas, implicating NEP in tumor progression and suggesting a role for NEP inhibitors in its treatment. We investigated the role of NEP expression in the clinical progression of cutaneous melanoma. METHODS: We screened 7 melanoma cell lines for NEP protein expression. NEP-specific siRNA was transfected into the lines to examine the role of gene transcription in NEP expression. Immunohistochemistry was done for 93 specimens and correlated with clinicopathologic parameters. Thirty-seven metastatic melanoma specimens were examined for NEP transcript expression using Affymetrix GeneChips. In a subset of 25 specimens for which both transcript and protein expression was available, expression ratios were used to identify genes that co-express with NEP in GeneChip analysis. RESULTS: NEP was overexpressed in 4/7 human melanoma cell lines, and siRNA knock-down of NEP transcripts led to downregulation of its protein expression. NEP protein overexpression was significantly more common in metastatic versus primary tumors (P = 0.002). Twelve of 37 (32%) metastatic tumors had increased NEP transcript expression, and an association was observed between NEP transcript upregulation and protein overexpression (P < 0.0001). Thirty-eight genes were found to significantly co-express with NEP (p < 0.005). Thirty-three genes positively correlated with NEP, including genes involved in the MAP kinase pathway, antigen processing and presentation, apoptosis, and WNT signaling pathway, and 5 genes negatively correlated with NEP, including genes of focal adhesion and the notch signaling pathways. CONCLUSION: NEP overexpression, which seems to be largely driven by increased transcription, is rare in primary melanoma and occurs late in melanoma progression. Functional studies are needed to better understand the mechanisms of NEP regulation in melanoma
PMCID:1770905
PMID: 17207277
ISSN: 1479-5876
CID: 74679
Imiquimod -- a TLR 7 agonist as vaccine adjuvant [Meeting Abstract]
Adams S; O'Neill D; Pavlick A; Hardin E; Nonaka D; Chiriboga L; Siu K; Shapiro R; Berman R; Strober B; Cruz C; Angiulli A; Manchez O; Berner N; Mukhi V; Shao Y; Bhardwaj N
ORIGINAL:0006152
ISSN: 0736-7589
CID: 73377
Bcl-2 antisense (oblimersen sodium) plus dacarbazine in patients with advanced melanoma: the Oblimersen Melanoma Study Group
Bedikian, Agop Y; Millward, Michael; Pehamberger, Hubert; Conry, Robert; Gore, Martin; Trefzer, Uwe; Pavlick, Anna C; DeConti, Ronald; Hersh, Evan M; Hersey, Peter; Kirkwood, John M; Haluska, Frank G
PURPOSE: Chemotherapy resistance in melanoma has been linked to antiapoptotic effects mediated by Bcl-2 protein. We evaluated whether targeting Bcl-2 using an antisense oligonucleotide (oblimersen sodium) could improve the efficacy of systemic chemotherapy in patients with advanced melanoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We randomly assigned chemotherapy-naive patients with advanced melanoma to treatment with dacarbazine (1,000 mg/m2) alone or preceded by a 5-day continuous intravenous infusion of oblimersen sodium (7 mg/kg/d) every 3 weeks for up to eight cycles. Patients were stratified by Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status, liver metastases, disease site, and serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). The primary efficacy end point was overall survival. RESULTS: Among 771 patients randomly assigned, the addition of oblimersen to dacarbazine yielded a trend toward improved survival at 24-month minimum follow-up (median, 9.0 v 7.8 months; P = .077) and significant increases in progression-free survival (median, 2.6 v 1.6 months; P < .001), overall response (13.5% v 7.5%; P = .007), complete response (2.8% v 0.8%), and durable response (7.3% v 3.6%; P = .03). A significant interaction between baseline serum LDH and treatment was observed; oblimersen significantly increased survival in patients whose baseline serum LDH was not elevated (median overall survival, 11.4 v 9.7 months; P = .02). Neutropenia and thrombocytopenia were increased in the oblimersen-dacarbazine group; however, there was no increase in serious infections or bleeding events. CONCLUSION: The addition of oblimersen to dacarbazine significantly improved multiple clinical outcomes in patients with advanced melanoma and increased overall survival in patients without an elevated baseline serum LDH
PMID: 16966688
ISSN: 1527-7755
CID: 97005
Clinical relevance of neutral endopeptidase overexpression in melanoma [Meeting Abstract]
Yancovitz, M; Velazquez, E; Christos, P; Pavlick, A; Berman, R; Shapiro, R; Bhardwaj, N; Nanus, D; Polsky, D; Osman, I
ISI:000239009403139
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 69301
Phase I study of bortezomib and oxaliplatin (BOX) in solid tumors : improved neurotoxicity (NT) profile with lower bortezomib (B) dose [Meeting Abstract]
Kosloff, RA; Wright, J; Ivy, P; Escalon, J; Norwood, B; Levinson, B; Pavlick, A; Beric, A; Muggia, FM; Hochster, H
ORIGINAL:0008586
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 601302