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Benign and malignant pulmonary parenchymal findings on chest CT among adult survivors of childhood and young adult cancer with a history of chest radiotherapy

Barnea, Dana; Tonorezos, Emily S; Khan, Amber; Chou, Joanne F; Moskowitz, Chaya S; Kaplan, Rana; Wolden, Suzanne L; Bryce, Yolanda; Oeffinger, Kevin C
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Childhood and young adult cancer survivors exposed to chest radiotherapy are at increased risk of lung cancer. In other high-risk populations, lung cancer screening has been recommended. Data is lacking on prevalence of benign and malignant pulmonary parenchymal abnormalities in this population. METHODS:We conducted a retrospective review of pulmonary parenchymal abnormalities in chest CTs performed more than 5 years post-cancer diagnosis in survivors of childhood, adolescent, and young adult cancer. We included survivors exposed to radiotherapy involving the lung field and followed at a high-risk survivorship clinic between November 2005 and May 2016. Treatment exposures and clinical outcomes were abstracted from medical records. Risk factors for chest CT-detected pulmonary nodule were assessed. RESULTS:Five hundred and ninety survivors were included in this analysis: median age at diagnosis, 17.1 years (range, 0.4-39.8); and median time since diagnosis, 22.3 years (range, 1-58.6). At least one chest CT more than 5 years post-diagnosis was performed in 338 survivors (57%). Among these, 193 (57.1%) survivors had at least one pulmonary nodule detected on a total of 1057 chest CTs, resulting in 305 CTs with 448 unique nodules. Follow-up was available for 435 of these nodules; 19 (4.3%) were malignant. Risk factors for first pulmonary nodule were older age at time of CT, CT performed more recently, and splenectomy. CONCLUSIONS:Benign pulmonary nodules are very common among long-term survivors of childhood and young adult cancer. IMPLICATIONS FOR CANCER SURVIVORS/CONCLUSIONS:High prevalence of benign pulmonary nodules in cancer survivors exposed to radiotherapy could inform future guidelines on lung cancer screening in this population.
PMID: 37209240
ISSN: 1932-2267
CID: 5810012

Renal and pulmonary late effects of cancer therapy

Skinner, Roderick; Kaplan, Rana; Nathan, Paul C
Both the kidneys and lungs are susceptible to the toxic effects of cancer therapy, with specific chemotherapy agents, as well as radiation therapy, leading to acute toxicities and the risk for long-term dysfunction. The kidneys also are vulnerable to the direct impact of the cancer itself and to supportive care drugs such as certain anti-infectives and immunosuppressive agents, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories, and radiocontrast media. The lungs are especially vulnerable after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), particularly in patients who develop chronic graft-versus-host disease. This article will discuss the epidemiology, specific risk factors, pathogenesis, natural history, recommended screening, preventive strategies, treatment, and areas for future research into renal and pulmonary toxicity in survivors of cancer.
PMID: 24331195
ISSN: 1532-8708
CID: 5810002

Phase II study of everolimus in metastatic urothelial cancer

Milowsky, Matthew I; Iyer, Gopa; Regazzi, Ashley M; Al-Ahmadie, Hikmat; Gerst, Scott R; Ostrovnaya, Irina; Gellert, Lan L; Kaplan, Rana; Garcia-Grossman, Ilana R; Pendse, Deepa; Balar, Arjun V; Flaherty, Anne Marie; Trout, Alisa; Solit, David B; Bajorin, Dean F
UNLABELLED: What's known on the subject? and what does the study add?: No recent advances have been made in the treatment of patients with advanced bladder cancer and, to date, targeted therapies have not resulted in an improvement in outcome. The mammalian target of rapamycin pathway has been shown to be up-regulated in bladder cancer and represents a rational target for therapeutic intervention. In the present phase II study of everolimus, one near-complete response, one partial response and several minor responses suggest that everolimus possesses biological activity in a subset of patients with bladder cancer. To maximize benefit from targeted agents such as everolimus, the preselection of patients based on molecular phenotype is required. OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy and tolerability of everolimus in advanced urothelial carcimoma (UC). PATIENTS AND METHODS: The present study comprised a single-arm, non-randomized study in which all patients received everolimus 10 mg orally once daily continuously (one cycle = 4 weeks). In total, 45 patients with metastatic UC progressing after one to four cytotoxic agents were enrolled between February 2009 and November 2010 at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. The primary endpoints were 2-month progression-free survival (PFS) and the safety of everolimus, with the secondary endpoint being the response rate. A Simon minimax two-stage design tested the null hypothesis that the true two month PFS rate was /= 70%. RESULTS: The most common grade 3/4 toxicities were fatigue, infection, anaemia, lymphopaenia, hyperglycaemia and hypophosphataemia. There were two partial responses in nodal metastases, with one patient achieving a 94% decrease in target lesions and remaining on drug at 26 months. An additional 12 patients exhibited minor tumour regression. There were 23 of 45 (51%) patients who were progression-free at 2 months with a median (95% CI) PFS of 2.6 (1.8-3.5) months and a median (95% CI) overall survival of 8.3 (5.5-12.1) months. No clear association was observed between mammalian target of rapamycin pathway marker expression and 2-month PFS. CONCLUSIONS: Although everolimus did not meet its primary endpoint, one partial response, one near-complete response and twelve minor regressions were observed. Everolimus possesses meaningful anti-tumour activity in a subset of patients with advanced UC. Studies aiming to define the genetic basis of everolimus activity in individual responders are ongoing.
PMCID:4020005
PMID: 23551593
ISSN: 1464-410x
CID: 2715222