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Microbiota-derived 3-IAA influences chemotherapy efficacy in pancreatic cancer

Tintelnot, Joseph; Xu, Yang; Lesker, Till R; Schönlein, Martin; Konczalla, Leonie; Giannou, Anastasios D; Pelczar, Penelope; Kylies, Dominik; Puelles, Victor G; Bielecka, Agata A; Peschka, Manuela; Cortesi, Filippo; Riecken, Kristoffer; Jung, Maximilian; Amend, Lena; Bröring, Tobias S; Trajkovic-Arsic, Marija; Siveke, Jens T; Renné, Thomas; Zhang, Danmei; Boeck, Stefan; Strowig, Till; Uzunoglu, Faik G; Güngör, Cenap; Stein, Alexander; Izbicki, Jakob R; Bokemeyer, Carsten; Sinn, Marianne; Kimmelman, Alec C; Huber, Samuel; Gagliani, Nicola
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is expected to be the second most deadly cancer by 2040, owing to the high incidence of metastatic disease and limited responses to treatment1,2. Less than half of all patients respond to the primary treatment for PDAC, chemotherapy3,4, and genetic alterations alone cannot explain this5. Diet is an environmental factor that can influence the response to therapies, but its role in PDAC is unclear. Here, using shotgun metagenomic sequencing and metabolomic screening, we show that the microbiota-derived tryptophan metabolite indole-3-acetic acid (3-IAA) is enriched in patients who respond to treatment. Faecal microbiota transplantation, short-term dietary manipulation of tryptophan and oral 3-IAA administration increase the efficacy of chemotherapy in humanized gnotobiotic mouse models of PDAC. Using a combination of loss- and gain-of-function experiments, we show that the efficacy of 3-IAA and chemotherapy is licensed by neutrophil-derived myeloperoxidase. Myeloperoxidase oxidizes 3-IAA, which in combination with chemotherapy induces a downregulation of the reactive oxygen species (ROS)-degrading enzymes glutathione peroxidase 3 and glutathione peroxidase 7. All of this results in the accumulation of ROS and the downregulation of autophagy in cancer cells, which compromises their metabolic fitness and, ultimately, their proliferation. In humans, we observed a significant correlation between the levels of 3-IAA and the efficacy of therapy in two independent PDAC cohorts. In summary, we identify a microbiota-derived metabolite that has clinical implications in the treatment of PDAC, and provide a motivation for considering nutritional interventions during the treatment of patients with cancer.
PMID: 36813961
ISSN: 1476-4687
CID: 5467182

How many brain metastases can be treated with stereotactic radiosurgery before the radiation dose delivered to normal brain tissue rivals that associated with standard whole brain radiotherapy?

Becker, Stewart J; Lipson, Evan J; Jozsef, Gabor; Molitoris, Jason K; Silverman, Joshua S; Presser, Joseph; Kondziolka, Douglas
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Clinical trial data comparing outcomes after administration of stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT) to patients with brain metastases (BM) suggest that SRS better preserves cognitive function and quality of life without negatively impacting overall survival. Here, we estimate the maximum number of BM that can be treated using single and multi-session SRS while limiting the dose of radiation delivered to normal brain tissue to that associated with WBRT. METHODS:Multiple-tumor SRS was simulated using a Monte Carlo - type approach and a pre-calculated dose kernel method. Tumors with diameters ≤36 mm were randomly placed throughout the contoured brain parenchyma until the brain mean dose reached 3 Gy, equivalent to the radiation dose delivered during a single fraction of a standard course of WBRT (a total dose of 30 Gy in 10 daily fractions of 3 Gy). Distribution of tumor sizes, dose coverage, selectivity, normalization, and maximum dose data used in the simulations were based on institutional clinical metastases data. RESULTS:The mean number of tumors treated, mean volume of healthy brain tissue receiving > 12 Gy (V12) per tumor, and total tumor volume treated using mixed tumor size distributions were 12.7 ± 4.2, 2.2 cc, and 12.9 cc, respectively. Thus, we estimate that treating 12-13 tumors per day over 10 days would deliver the dose of radiation to healthy brain tissue typically associated with a standard course of WBRT. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Although in clinical practice, treatment with SRS is often limited to patients with ≤15 BM, our findings suggest that many more lesions could be targeted while still minimizing the negative impacts on quality of life and neurocognition often associated with WBRT. Results from this in silico analysis require clinical validation.
PMCID:10018670
PMID: 36628586
ISSN: 1526-9914
CID: 5434362

Dose prescription and reporting in stereotactic body radiotherapy: A multi-institutional study

Das, Indra J; Yadav, Poonam; Andersen, Aaron D; Chen, Zhe Jay; Huang, Long; Langer, Mark P; Lee, Choonik; Li, Lin; Popple, Richard A; Rice, Roger K; Schiff, Peter B; Zhu, Timothy C; Abazeed, Mohamed E
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Radiation dose prescriptions are foundational for optimizing treatment efficacy and limiting treatment-related toxicity. We sought to assess the lack of standardization of SBRT dose prescriptions across institutions. MATERIALS & METHODS/METHODS:were used to assess dosimetric variability. RESULTS: ≥ 110 % was found in nearly half of the institutions. There was significant dosimetric variation across institutions. CONCLUSIONS:The SBRT prescriptions in the literature or in treatment guidelines currently lack nuance and hence there is significant variation in dose prescriptions across academic institutions. These findings add greater importance to the identification of dose parameters associated with improved clinical outcome comparisons as we move towards more hypofractionated treatments. There is a need for standardized reporting to help institutions in adapting treatment protocols based on the outcome of clinical trials. Dosimetric parameters are subsequently needed for uniformity and thereby standardizing planning guidelines to maximize efficacy, mitigate toxicity, and reduce treatment disparities are urgently needed.
PMID: 36822361
ISSN: 1879-0887
CID: 5448272

Depatuxizumab mafodotin in EGFR-amplified newly diagnosed glioblastoma: A phase III randomized clinical trial

Lassman, Andrew B; Pugh, Stephanie L; Wang, Tony J C; Aldape, Kenneth; Gan, Hui K; Preusser, Matthias; Vogelbaum, Michael A; Sulman, Erik P; Won, Minhee; Zhang, Peixin; Moazami, Golnaz; Macsai, Marian S; Gilbert, Mark R; Bain, Earle E; Blot, Vincent; Ansell, Peter J; Samanta, Suvajit; Kundu, Madan G; Armstrong, Terri S; Wefel, Jeffrey S; Seidel, Clemens; de Vos, Filip Y; Hsu, Sigmund; Cardona, Andrés F; Lombardi, Giuseppe; Bentsion, Dmitry; Peterson, Richard A; Gedye, Craig; Bourg, Véronique; Wick, Antje; Curran, Walter J; Mehta, Minesh P
BACKGROUND:Approximately 50% of newly diagnosed glioblastomas (GBMs) harbor epidermal growth factor receptor gene amplification (EGFR-amp). Preclinical and early-phase clinical data suggested efficacy of depatuxizumab mafodotin (depatux-m), an antibody-drug conjugate comprised of a monoclonal antibody that binds activated EGFR (overexpressed wild-type and EGFRvIII-mutant) linked to a microtubule-inhibitor toxin in EGFR-amp GBMs. METHODS:In this phase III trial, adults with centrally confirmed, EGFR-amp newly diagnosed GBM were randomized 1:1 to radiotherapy, temozolomide, and depatux-m/placebo. Corneal epitheliopathy was treated with a combination of protocol-specified prophylactic and supportive measures. There was 85% power to detect a hazard ratio (HR) ≤0.75 for overall survival (OS) at a 2.5% 1-sided significance level (ie traditional two-sided p ≤ 0.05) by log-rank testing. RESULTS:There were 639 randomized patients (median age 60, range 22-84; 62% men). Prespecified interim analysis found no improvement in OS for depatux-m over placebo (median 18.9 vs. 18.7 months, HR 1.02, 95% CI 0.82-1.26, 1-sided p = 0.63). Progression-free survival was longer for depatux-m than placebo (median 8.0 vs. 6.3 months; HR 0.84, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.70-1.01, p = 0.029), particularly among those with EGFRvIII-mutant (median 8.3 vs. 5.9 months, HR 0.72, 95% CI 0.56-0.93, 1-sided p = 0.002) or MGMT unmethylated (HR 0.77, 95% CI 0.61-0.97; 1-sided p = 0.012) tumors but without an OS improvement. Corneal epitheliopathy occurred in 94% of depatux-m-treated patients (61% grade 3-4), causing 12% to discontinue. CONCLUSIONS:Interim analysis demonstrated no OS benefit for depatux-m in treating EGFR-amp newly diagnosed GBM. No new important safety risks were identified.
PMCID:9925712
PMID: 35849035
ISSN: 1523-5866
CID: 5426122

The Art of Radiation Therapy: The Necessary Risk of Radiation Necrosis for Durable Control of Brain Metastases

Milano, Michael T; Soltys, Scott G; Marks, Lawrence B; Heron, Dwight E; Yorke, Ellen; Grimm, Jimm; Jackson, Andrew; Mihai, Alina; Timmerman, Robert D; Xue, Jinyu; Kavanagh, Brian D; Redmond, Kristin J
PMID: 36400622
ISSN: 1879-355x
CID: 5385062

Early effectiveness and toxicity outcomes of reirradiation after breast conserving surgery for recurrent or new primary breast cancer

Hardy-Abeloos, Camille; Xiao, Julie; Oh, Cheongeun; Barbee, David; Perez, Carmen A; Oratz, Ruth; Schnabel, Freya; Axelrod, Deborah; Guth, Amber; Braunstein, Lior Z; Khan, Atif; Choi, J Isabelle; Gerber, Naamit
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Breast reirradiation (reRT) after breast conserving surgery (BCS) has emerged as a viable alternative to mastectomy for women presenting with recurrent or new primary breast cancer. There are limited data on safety of different fractionation regimens. This study reports safety and efficacy among women treated with repeat BCS and reRT. METHODS AND MATERIALS/METHODS:Patients who underwent repeat BCS followed by RT from 2015 to 2021 at 2 institutions were analyzed. Univariate logistic regression models were used to identify predictors of acute and late toxicities. Kaplan-Meier estimates were used to evaluate overall survival (OS), distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS) and locoregional recurrence-free survival (LR-RFS). RESULTS:Sixty-six patients were reviewed with median follow-up of 16 months (range: 3-60 months). At time of first recurrence, 41% had invasive carcinoma with a ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) component, 41% had invasive carcinoma alone and 18% had DCIS alone. All were clinically node negative. For the reirradiation course, 95% received partial breast irradiation (PBI) (57.5% with 1.5 Gy BID; 27% with 1.8 Gy daily; 10.5% with hypofractionation), and 5% received whole breast irradiation (1.8-2 Gy/fx), all of whom had received PBI for initial course. One patient experienced grade 3 fibrosis, and one patient experienced grade 3 telangiectasia. None had grade 4 or higher late adverse events. We found no association between the fractionation of the second course of RT or the cumulative dose (measured as EQD2) with acute or late toxicity. At 2 years, OS was 100%, DMFS was 91.6%, and LR-RFS was 100%. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:In this series of patients with recurrent or new primary breast cancer, a second breast conservation surgery followed by reirradiation was effective with no local recurrences and an acceptable toxicity profile across a range of available fractionation regimens at a median follow up of 16 months. Longer follow up is required.
PMID: 36604352
ISSN: 1573-7217
CID: 5410082

Time-dependent diffusivity and kurtosis in phantoms and patients with head and neck cancer

Solomon, Eddy; Lemberskiy, Gregory; Baete, Steven; Hu, Kenneth; Malyarenko, Dariya; Swanson, Scott; Shukla-Dave, Amita; Russek, Stephen E; Zan, Elcin; Kim, Sungheon Gene
PURPOSE:To assess the reliability of measuring diffusivity, diffusional kurtosis, and cellular-interstitial water exchange time with long diffusion times (100-800 ms) using stimulated-echo DWI. METHODS: RESULTS: CONCLUSIONS:Based on two well-established diffusion phantoms, we found that time-dependent diffusion MRI measurements can provide stable diffusion and kurtosis values over a wide range of diffusion times and across multiple MRI systems. Moreover, estimation of cellular-interstitial water exchange time can be achieved using the Kärger model for the metastatic lymph nodes in patients with head and neck cancer.
PMCID:9712275
PMID: 36219464
ISSN: 1522-2594
CID: 5646302

Editorial: Insights in neuro-oncology and neurosurgical oncology: 2021

Sulman, Erik P.; Eisenstat, David D.
SCOPUS:85147181258
ISSN: 2234-943x
CID: 5424342

Different Re-Irradiation Techniques after Breast-Conserving Surgery for Recurrent or New Primary Breast Cancer

Abeloos, Camille Hardy; Purswani, Juhi M; Galavis, Paulina; McCarthy, Allison; Hitchen, Christine; Choi, J Isabelle; Gerber, Naamit K
Breast re-irradiation (reRT) after breast-conserving surgery (BCS) using external beam radiation is an increasingly used salvage approach for women presenting with recurrent or new primary breast cancer. However, radiation technique, dose and fractionation as well as eligibility criteria differ between studies. There is also limited data on efficacy and safety of external beam hypofractionation and accelerated partial-breast irradiation (APBI) regimens. This paper reviews existing retrospective and prospective data for breast reRT after BCS, APBI reRT outcomes and delivery at our institution and the need for a randomized controlled trial using shorter courses of radiation to better define patient selection for different reRT fractionation regimens.
PMCID:9857440
PMID: 36661737
ISSN: 1718-7729
CID: 5415062

Radiation Management of DCIS and Elimination of RT in Low-risk Disease

Shah, Aishwarya; Gerber, Naamit Kurshan
Purpose of Review: This study summarizes the management and outcomes of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS). It will review recent literature including data supporting the use of a radiation boost, partial breast irradiation, endocrine therapy, HER2 therapy, genomic assays, and omission of radiation or surgery. Recent Findings: Evidence suggests there are a cohort of patients who may benefit from either tumor bed boost, partial breast irradiation, or omission of radiation. Summary: The management for DCIS is continuously evolving in order to identify patients who have higher risk features that necessitate aggressive treatment and those with more favorable features in whom we can de-escalate treatment.
SCOPUS:85165174989
ISSN: 1943-4588
CID: 5549362