scholarly journals Somatic Mutations in Colorectal Cancer Identify Patients at High-risk of Treatment Failure Following Low-BED Spine Radiotherapy

2020 ◽  
Vol 108 (3) ◽  
pp. e572-e573
Author(s):  
Z.R. Moore ◽  
A. Shamseddine ◽  
E. Lis ◽  
D.S. Higginson ◽  
M. Bilsky ◽  
...  
1997 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 333-336
Author(s):  
J. D. Maass ◽  
S. Gottschlich ◽  
B. M. Lippert ◽  
C. Kuelkens ◽  
B. J. Folz ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 5169-5169
Author(s):  
John Moppett ◽  
Jerry Hancock ◽  
Christopher J.C. Knechtli ◽  
Anthony Oakhill ◽  
Nicholas J. Goulden

Abstract BMT remains the treatment of choice for early BM relapse of childhood ALL. We reasoned that further intensification of cytoreductive therapy pre-BMT may further improve survival amongst those with the highest risk of treatment failure, early BM relapse (BFM groups S3/4) and high level MRD pre-BMT. A cohort of 32 patients transplanted at a single institution (1996–1999) provided an historical control. 8 high risk patients transplanted 1999–2000 received additional fludarabine cytoreduction therapy at the time of transplant (FLA group). MRD analysis and time to relapse were used in a subsequent cohort of 22 patients (BMT 2000–2002) to allocate those at highest risk of treatment failure to receive a further cytoreductive block, FLX, pre-BMT. Method. All patients were conditioned with cyclophosphamide (60mg/m2 x2) and TBI (14.4 Gy). UD and haplo-BMT were T-cell depleted with Campth-1M in vitro and Campath-1G day -9 to -5 (Control and FLA group), and by Miltenyi CD34+ cell depletion (FLX group). GvHD prophylaxis - CSA + MTX for matched related, CSA for Campath treated grafts and none for Miltenyi grafts. The FLA group received fludarabine 25mg/m2 from d −12 to d −10. Patients with on treatment relapse (S4) or high level MRD pre-BMT (MRD++) in the FLX group received DaunoXome 100mg/m2, fludarabine 30mg/m2 x 5d and cytosine 2g/m2 x 5d 3 weeks prior to BMT. Patients and donors. Control group: 28 precursor-B ALL 4 T-ALL; donors - 7 matched related, 13 matched unrelated (MUD) and 12 mismatched unrelated (MMUD); 14 S2, 18 S3/4. FLA group: 5 presursor-B ALL and 3 T-ALL; donors - 2 SIB, 4 MUD, 1 MMUD and 2 haplo; all S4. FLX group: 21 precursor-B and 1 T-ALL; donors - 6 SIB, 7 MUD, 5 MMUD and 4 haplo;13 S2, 9 S4. 7 patients received FLX intensified conditioning (6 S4, 5 high level MRD ++). 3 high risk patients violated protocol and did not receive FLX (1 age <1yr on treatment relapse, 2 S2 MRD ++). Results. Considering those in the high-risk S3/4 group, there was no significant difference in OS between the 3 groups. Survival by study and risk group Study S2 S3/4 Overall Control 10/14 (71%) 3/18 (17%) 13/32 (41%) FLA 2/8 (25%) 2/8 (25%) FLX 11/13 (85%) 3/9 (33%) 14/22 (64%) No excess cardiac events were seen. The TRM is higher in the FLX group than in the control. Outcome data Study TRM Relapse Alive Total Control 3 16 13 32 S2 2 2 10 14 S3/4 1 14 3 18 FLA 3 3 6 12 S2 - - - - S3/4 3 3 3 9 FLX 6 2 14 22 S2 2 0 11 13 S3/4 4 2 3 9 Total 12 21 33 66 2 of 7 patients treated with FLX are in CCR, 2 relapsed and 3 died of TRM. The 3 high risk patients in the FLX study, but who did not receive FLX, are also in CCR. Survival in those in the S2 group (late BM relapse) has been good throughout the study period. Conclusion. In this study the addition of intensive pre-BMT conditioning has not improved survival amongst high risk (S3/4 or MRD ++ pre-BMT) relapses. The number of post-BMT relapses has fallen but this is not clearly related to the use of FLX. The use of more haploidentical donors, more immunosupressive BMT regimes and additional cytoreductive chemotherapy may have contributed to the increased TRM seen. Time and site of relapse remain the clearest predictor of outcome. Further novel strategies are required to improve survival for the S4 risk group. The good OS for children receiving BMT in the S2 group should be noted.


2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 143-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abraham Pulido-Cejudo ◽  
Mario Guzmán-Gutierrez ◽  
Abel Jalife-Montaño ◽  
Alejandro Ortiz-Covarrubias ◽  
Jose Luis Martínez-Ordaz ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 737
Author(s):  
David Sidloff ◽  
Philip Stather ◽  
Eddie Choke ◽  
Matt Bown ◽  
Robert Sayers

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 1825-1825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra Traverse-Glehen ◽  
Diane Damotte ◽  
Peggy Dartigues ◽  
Laurent Martin ◽  
Marie Parrens ◽  
...  

Abstract Although progression free survival and overall survival of patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) has improved with modern treatment in the past 10 years, 10 % of patients will fail to conventional therapy and die of their lymphoma. The search of new prognostic factors for identifying these high risk patients at diagnosis of HL remains challenging in daily practice. The evaluation of the tumor microenvironnement was shown to help identifying a subset of patients treated with ABVD having a high risk of treatment failure (Tan KL et al, Blood 2012). PET positivity after 2 cycles of chemotherapy allows also identifying a subset of patients with poor outcome (Gallamini, JCO 2007) and PET-guided strategy were developed to improve the management of HL patients in order to either intensify treatment for high risk patients or deescalate treatment for sparing the others from toxicities. The aim of this study was therefore to evaluate the impact of baseline tumor microenvironnement in a large cohort of HL patients prospectively treated with upfront escalated BEACOPP in a randomized phase III clinical trial evaluating a PET-driven strategy (AHL 2011, NCT01358747) and to compare its prognostic value with other clinicopathological markers. Material and Methods Tumoral material was collected from May 2011 to May 2014 from HL patients prospectively enrolled in the AHL 2011 study. The AHL 2011 trial was designed to evaluate in 16-60 years old HL patients with Ann Arbor stage III, IV or high risk IIB, a de-escalade PET-driven strategy after 2 cycles of BEACOPPesc randomly compared to a standard treatment not driven by PET and delivering 6 cycles of BEACOPPesc. PET were centrally reviewed and interpreted according to Deauville criteria. As recently reported (Casasnovas, ASH 2015 Abs 577), the 2y-PFS was similar in the PET-driven (88%) and the standard arm (91%; p =0.79). The tumor microenvironnement was analyzed on formalin fixed paraffin embedded lymph node biopsy obtained for the diagnosis before treatment by morphological evaluation on standard staining (% polynuclear eosinophils, % lymphocytes, % plasmocytes, % histiocytes), and immunohistochemistry (IHC) scoring (score 0-1-2-3) for CD20, CD3, CD68-TAMs (tumor-associated macrophages) and CD163 and were centrally reviewed. Percentage of tumoral cells and EBV status were also analysed. In this analysis, the prognosis value of tissue markers expressions were compared to those of clinical and biological patient's characteristics, and PET results after 2 cycles of escalated BEACOPP. Results Six hundred fifty eight patients with available IHC data out of 823 enrolled in AHL2011 study were included in the analysis. With a median follow-up of 16.1 months, 2-year PFS was 89.4% (95% CI [86.2% ; 91.9%]) and 2-year OS 98.7% (95% CI [96.4% ; 99.5%]). In univariate analysis male gender, at least one extra-nodal involvement, B symptoms, Hemoglobin <10.5g/dL, Albumin <40g/L, IPS score≥ 3, positive PET2, immunophenotyping CD20 (2-3vs0-1) and CD163 (2-3 vs 1) were significantly associated with shorter PFS. In multivariate analysis positive PET2 was the only factor retaining an independent prognosis value and associated to a shorter PFS (p=.04, HR=2.5, CI95% (1.03-5.8)). Among baseline patients characteristics, male gender, hemoglobin <10.5g/dL, IPS score ≥3, low % of lymphocytes, immunophenotyping CD3 (score ≥1), high CD20 (score ≥2), CD68 and CD163 expression were significantly associated with a higher risk of PET2 positivity. In multivariate analysis high CD68 expression (score 2-3 vs 1) was the only independent prognostic factor predicting PET2 positivity (p=.03, HR=2.4, CI95% (1.1-5.2)). 79% of PET2 positive patients have high CD68 expression and the combination of high CD68 expression and PET2 positivity identifies a subset of 50 patients (%) with a shorter 2y-PFS (72%) than PET2+/CD68low patients (2y-PFS=100%, p 0.066). In conclusion, CD68 expression was confirmed to be an important prognostic marker in this large prospective cohort of patients treated with upfront escalated BEACOPP in a modern PET-guided strategy. Baseline high CD68 expression is associated to a higher risk of PET2 positivity and the combination of this microenvironment marker and PET2 results allowed identifying a population of patients with high risk of treatment failure. Figure 1 Figure 1. Figure 2 Figure 2. Disclosures Brice: Takeda Pharmaceuticals International Co.: Honoraria, Research Funding; Bristol Myers-Squibb: Honoraria; Seattle Genetics: Research Funding; Gilead: Honoraria; Roche: Honoraria. Casasnovas:BMS: Consultancy, Honoraria; Sanofi: Consultancy, Honoraria; Takeda: Consultancy, Honoraria; Abbvie: Consultancy, Honoraria; Gilead: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding; ROCHE: Consultancy, Honoraria, Research Funding.


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