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Hyperthermia, Radiation And Chemotherapy: The Role Of Heat In Multidisciplinary Cancer Care., Mark Hurwitz, Md, Paul R. Stauffer Dec 2014

Hyperthermia, Radiation And Chemotherapy: The Role Of Heat In Multidisciplinary Cancer Care., Mark Hurwitz, Md, Paul R. Stauffer

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

The compelling biologic basis for combining hyperthermia with modern cancer therapies including radiation and chemotherapy was first appreciated nearly half a century ago. Hyperthermia complements radiation as conditions contributing to radio-resistance generally enhance sensitivity to heat and sensitizing effects occur through increased perfusion/tumor oxygenation and alteration of cellular death pathways. Chemosensitization with hyperthermia is dependent on the particular mechanism of effect for each agent with synergistic effects noted for several commonly used agents. Clinically, randomized trials have demonstrated benefit including survival with the addition of hyperthermia to radiation or chemotherapy in treatment of a wide range of malignancies. Improvements in …


The Long Non-Coding Rna Pcat-1 Promotes Prostate Cancer Cell Proliferation Through Cmyc., John R. Prensner, Wei Chen, Sumin Han, Matthew K. Iyer, Qi Cao, Vishal Kothari, Joseph R. Evans, Karen E. Knudsen, Michelle T. Paulsen, Mats Ljungman, Theodore S. Lawrence, Arul M. Chinnaiyan, Felix Y. Feng Nov 2014

The Long Non-Coding Rna Pcat-1 Promotes Prostate Cancer Cell Proliferation Through Cmyc., John R. Prensner, Wei Chen, Sumin Han, Matthew K. Iyer, Qi Cao, Vishal Kothari, Joseph R. Evans, Karen E. Knudsen, Michelle T. Paulsen, Mats Ljungman, Theodore S. Lawrence, Arul M. Chinnaiyan, Felix Y. Feng

Department of Cancer Biology Faculty Papers

Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) represent an emerging layer of cancer biology, contributing to tumor proliferation, invasion, and metastasis. Here, we describe a role for the oncogenic lncRNA PCAT-1 in prostate cancer proliferation through cMyc. We find that PCAT-1-mediated proliferation is dependent on cMyc protein stabilization, and using expression profiling, we observed that cMyc is required for a subset of PCAT-1-induced expression changes. The PCAT-1-cMyc relationship is mediated through the post-transcriptional activity of the MYC 3' untranslated region, and we characterize a role for PCAT-1 in the disruption of MYC-targeting microRNAs. To further elucidate a role for post-transcriptional regulation, we demonstrate …


Inhibition Of Rac1 Gtpase Sensitizes Pancreatic Cancer Cells To Γ-Irradiation., Y Yan, Ashley L. Hein, Asserewou Etekpo, Katrina M. Burchett, Chi Lin, Charles A. Enke, Surinder K. Batra, Kenneth Cowan, M Ouellette Nov 2014

Inhibition Of Rac1 Gtpase Sensitizes Pancreatic Cancer Cells To Γ-Irradiation., Y Yan, Ashley L. Hein, Asserewou Etekpo, Katrina M. Burchett, Chi Lin, Charles A. Enke, Surinder K. Batra, Kenneth Cowan, M Ouellette

Journal Articles: Radiation Oncology

Radiation therapy is a staple treatment for pancreatic cancer. However, owing to the intrinsic radioresistance of pancreatic cancer cells, radiation therapy often fails to increase survival of pancreatic cancer patients. Radiation impedes cancer cells by inducing DNA damage, which can activate cell cycle checkpoints. Normal cells possess both a G1 and G2 checkpoint. However, cancer cells are often defective in G1 checkpoint due to mutations/alterations in key regulators of this checkpoint. Accordingly, our results show that normal pancreatic ductal cells respond to ionizing radiation (IR) with activation of both checkpoints whereas pancreatic cancer cells respond to IR with G2/M arrest …


Nerve Growth Factor Regulates Neurolymphatic Remodeling During Corneal Inflammation And Resolution., Darci M. Fink, Alicia L. Connor, Philip M. Kelley, Maria M. Steele, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Richard M. Tempero Nov 2014

Nerve Growth Factor Regulates Neurolymphatic Remodeling During Corneal Inflammation And Resolution., Darci M. Fink, Alicia L. Connor, Philip M. Kelley, Maria M. Steele, Michael A. Hollingsworth, Richard M. Tempero

Journal Articles: Eppley Institute

The cellular and physiologic mechanisms that regulate the resolution of inflammation remain poorly defined despite their widespread importance in improving inflammatory disease outcomes. We studied the resolution of two cardinal signs of inflammation-pain and swelling-by investigating molecular mechanisms that regulate neural and lymphatic vessel remodeling during the resolution of corneal inflammation. A mouse model of corneal inflammation and wound recovery was developed to study this process in vivo. Administration of nerve growth factor (NGF) increased pain sensation and inhibited neural remodeling and lymphatic vessel regression processes during wound recovery. A complementary in vivo approach, the corneal micropocket assay, revealed that …


Role Of A Genetic Variant On The 15q25.1 Lung Cancer Susceptibility Locus In Smoking-Associated Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma, Xuemei Ji, Weidong Zhang, Jiang Gui, Xia Fan, Weiwei Zhang, Yafang Li, Guangyu An, Dakai Zhu, Qiang Hu Oct 2014

Role Of A Genetic Variant On The 15q25.1 Lung Cancer Susceptibility Locus In Smoking-Associated Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma, Xuemei Ji, Weidong Zhang, Jiang Gui, Xia Fan, Weiwei Zhang, Yafang Li, Guangyu An, Dakai Zhu, Qiang Hu

Dartmouth Scholarship

Background: The 15q25.1 lung cancer susceptibility locus, containing CHRNA5, could modify lung cancer susceptibility and multiple smoking related phenotypes. However, no studies have investigated the association between CHRNA5 rs3841324, which has been proven to have the highest association with CHRNA5 mRNA expression, and the risk of other smoking-associated cancers, except lung cancer. In the current study we examined the association between rs3841324 and susceptibility to smoking-associated nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC).

Methods: In this case-control study we genotyped the CHRNA5 rs3841324 polymorphism with 400 NPC cases and 491 healthy controls who were Han Chinese and frequency-matched by age (±5 years), gender, and …


Visualization-Aided Classification Ensembles Discriminate Lung Adenocarcinoma And Squamous Cell Carcinoma Samples Using Their Gene Expression Profiles, Ao Zhang, Chi Wang, Shiji Wang, Liang Li, Zhongmin Liu, Suyan Tian Oct 2014

Visualization-Aided Classification Ensembles Discriminate Lung Adenocarcinoma And Squamous Cell Carcinoma Samples Using Their Gene Expression Profiles, Ao Zhang, Chi Wang, Shiji Wang, Liang Li, Zhongmin Liu, Suyan Tian

Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications

INTRODUCTION: The widespread application of microarray experiments to cancer research is astounding including lung cancer, one of the most common fatal human tumors. Among non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC), there are two major histological types of NSCLC, adenocarcinoma (AC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC).

RESULTS: In this paper, we proposed to integrate a visualization method called Radial Coordinate Visualization (Radviz) with a suitable classifier, aiming at discriminating two NSCLC subtypes using patients' gene expression profiles. Our analyses on simulated data and a real microarray dataset show that combining with a classification method, Radviz may play a role in …


Barriers And Facilitators For Colorectal Cancer Screening Practices In The Latino Community: Perspectives From Community Leaders, Ana Natale-Pereira, Jonnie Marks, Marielos Vega, Dawne Mouzon, Shawna Hudson, Debbie Salas-Lopez Sep 2014

Barriers And Facilitators For Colorectal Cancer Screening Practices In The Latino Community: Perspectives From Community Leaders, Ana Natale-Pereira, Jonnie Marks, Marielos Vega, Dawne Mouzon, Shawna Hudson, Debbie Salas-Lopez

Debbie Salas-Lopez MD, MPH

BACKGROUND: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second-leading cause of cancer-related death in the United States and the third most commonly diagnosed cancer among Latinos. While Latinos represent one of the fastest-growing ethnic groups in the United States, their participation in cancer prevention and treatment trials is low. METHODS: Thirty-six Latino community leaders participated in five focus groups that examined factors affecting CRC screening practices among Latinos. RESULTS: The top four barriers identified were low knowledge and awareness of CRC, language barriers, lack of insurance, and undocumented legal status. Additional barriers included seeking health care only when sick, fatalism, fear, denial …


Another Armed Cd4(+) T Cell Ready To Battle Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Roniel Cabrera, Gyongyi Szabo Sep 2014

Another Armed Cd4(+) T Cell Ready To Battle Hepatocellular Carcinoma, Roniel Cabrera, Gyongyi Szabo

Gyongyi Szabo

No abstract provided.


Nuclear Factor Of Activated T-Cells 5 Increases Intestinal Goblet Cell Differentiation Through An Mtor/Notch Signaling Pathway, Yuning Zhou, Qingding Wang, Heidi L. Weiss, B. Mark Evers Sep 2014

Nuclear Factor Of Activated T-Cells 5 Increases Intestinal Goblet Cell Differentiation Through An Mtor/Notch Signaling Pathway, Yuning Zhou, Qingding Wang, Heidi L. Weiss, B. Mark Evers

Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications

The intestinal mucosa undergoes a continual process of proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis that is regulated by multiple signaling pathways. Previously, we have shown that the nuclear factor of activated T-cells 5 (NFAT5) is involved in the regulation of intestinal enterocyte differentiation. Here we show that treatment with sodium chloride (NaCl), which activates NFAT5 signaling, increased mTORC1 repressor regulated in development and DNA damage response 1 (REDD1) protein expression and inhibited mTOR signaling; these alterations were attenuated by knockdown of NFAT5. Knockdown of NFAT5 activated mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling and significantly inhibited REDD1 mRNA expression and protein expression. Consistently, …


Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphate Synthesis By 6-Phosphofructo-2-Kinase/Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphatase 4 (Pfkfb4) Is Required For The Glycolytic Response To Hypoxia And Tumor Growth, Jason Chesney, Jennifer Clark, Alden C. Klarer, Yoannis Imbert-Fernandez, Andrew N. Lane, Sucheta Telang Aug 2014

Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphate Synthesis By 6-Phosphofructo-2-Kinase/Fructose-2,6-Bisphosphatase 4 (Pfkfb4) Is Required For The Glycolytic Response To Hypoxia And Tumor Growth, Jason Chesney, Jennifer Clark, Alden C. Klarer, Yoannis Imbert-Fernandez, Andrew N. Lane, Sucheta Telang

Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications

Fructose-2,6-bisphosphate (F2,6BP) is a shunt product of glycolysis that allosterically activates 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase (PFK-1) resulting in increased glucose uptake and glycolytic flux to lactate. The F2,6BP concentration is dictated by four bifunctional 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatases (PFKFB1-4) with distinct kinase:phosphatase activities. PFKFB4 is over-expressed in human cancers, induced by hypoxia and required for survival and growth of several cancer cell lines. Although PFKFB4 appears to be a rational target for anti-neoplastic drug development, it is not clear whether its kinase or phosphatase activity is required for cancer cell survival. In this study, we demonstrate that recombinant human PFKFB4 kinase activity is 4.3-fold greater than …


Loss Of 4e-Bp1 Function Induces Emt And Promotes Cancer Cell Migration And Invasion Via Cap-Dependent Translational Activation Of Snail, Weijia Cai, Qing Ye, Qing-Bai She Aug 2014

Loss Of 4e-Bp1 Function Induces Emt And Promotes Cancer Cell Migration And Invasion Via Cap-Dependent Translational Activation Of Snail, Weijia Cai, Qing Ye, Qing-Bai She

Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications

The cap-dependent translation is frequently deregulated in a variety of cancers associated with tumor progression. However, the molecular basis of the translation activation for metastatic progression of cancer remains largely elusive. Here, we demonstrate that activation of cap-dependent translation by silencing the translational repressor 4E-BP1 causes cancer epithelial cells to undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), which is associated with selective upregulation of the EMT inducer Snail followed by repression of E-cadherin expression and promotion of cell migratory and invasive capabilities as well as metastasis. Conversely, inhibition of cap-dependent translation by a dominant active mutant 4E-BP1 effectively downregulates Snail expression and suppresses …


Rorα Binds To E2f1 To Inhibit Cell Proliferation And Regulate Mammary Gland Branching Morphogenesis, Gaofeng Xiong, Ren Xu Aug 2014

Rorα Binds To E2f1 To Inhibit Cell Proliferation And Regulate Mammary Gland Branching Morphogenesis, Gaofeng Xiong, Ren Xu

Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications

Retinoic acid receptor-related orphan nuclear receptor alpha (RORα) is a potent tumor suppressor that reduces cell proliferation and inhibits tumor growth. However, the molecular mechanism by which it inhibits cell proliferation remains unknown. We demonstrate a noncanonical nuclear receptor pathway in which RORα binds to E2F1 to inhibit cell cycle progression. We showed that RORα bound to the heptad repeat and marked box region of E2F1 and suppressed E2F1-regulated transcription in epithelial cells. Binding of RORα inhibited E2F1 acetylation and its DNA-binding activity by recruiting histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) to the protein complexes. Knockdown of HDAC1 or inhibition of HDAC …


Methylseleninic Acid Sensitizes Notch3-Activated Ovca429 Ovarian Cancer Cells To Carboplatin., Tiffany J. Tzeng, Lei Cao, Yangxin Fu, Huawei Zeng, Wen-Hsing Cheng Jul 2014

Methylseleninic Acid Sensitizes Notch3-Activated Ovca429 Ovarian Cancer Cells To Carboplatin., Tiffany J. Tzeng, Lei Cao, Yangxin Fu, Huawei Zeng, Wen-Hsing Cheng

College of Agriculture & Life Sciences Publications and Scholarship

Ovarian cancer, the deadliest of gynecologic cancers, is usually not diagnosed until advanced stages. Although carboplatin has been popular for treating ovarian cancer for decades, patients eventually develop resistance to this platinum-containing drug. Expression of neurogenic locus notch homolog 3 (Notch3) is associated with chemoresistance and poor overall survival in ovarian cancer patients. Overexpression of NICD3 (the constitutively active form of Notch3) in OVCA429 ovarian cancer cells (OVCA429/NICD3) renders them resistance to carboplatin treatment compared to OVCA429/pCEG cells expressing an empty vector. We have previously shown that methylseleninic acid (MSeA) induces oxidative stress and activates ataxia-telangiectasia mutated and DNA-dependent protein …


Family-Specific, Novel, Deleterious Germline Variants Provide A Rich Resource To Identify Genetic Predispositions For Brcax Familial Breast Cancer., Hongxiu Wen, Yeong C. Kim, Carrie Snyder, Fengxia Xiao, Elizabeth A. Fleissner, Dina Becirovic, Jiangtao Luo, Bradley Downs, Simon Sherman, Kenneth Cowan, Henry T. Lynch, San Ming Wang Jun 2014

Family-Specific, Novel, Deleterious Germline Variants Provide A Rich Resource To Identify Genetic Predispositions For Brcax Familial Breast Cancer., Hongxiu Wen, Yeong C. Kim, Carrie Snyder, Fengxia Xiao, Elizabeth A. Fleissner, Dina Becirovic, Jiangtao Luo, Bradley Downs, Simon Sherman, Kenneth Cowan, Henry T. Lynch, San Ming Wang

Journal Articles: Eppley Institute

BACKGROUND: Genetic predisposition is the primary risk factor for familial breast cancer. For the majority of familial breast cancer, however, the genetic predispositions remain unknown. All newly identified predispositions occur rarely in disease population, and the unknown genetic predispositions are estimated to reach up to total thousands. Family unit is the basic structure of genetics. Because it is an autosomal dominant disease, individuals with a history of familial breast cancer must carry the same genetic predisposition across generations. Therefore, focusing on the cases in lineages of familial breast cancer, rather than pooled cases in disease population, is expected to provide …


Heuristic Modeling Of Carcinogenesis For The Population With Dichotomous Susceptibility To Cancer: A Pancreatic Cancer Example., Tengiz Mdzinarishvili, Simon Sherman Jun 2014

Heuristic Modeling Of Carcinogenesis For The Population With Dichotomous Susceptibility To Cancer: A Pancreatic Cancer Example., Tengiz Mdzinarishvili, Simon Sherman

Journal Articles: Eppley Institute

At present, carcinogenic models imply that all individuals in a population are susceptible to cancer. These models either ignore a fall of the cancer incidence rate at old ages, or use some poorly identifiable parameters for its accounting. In this work, a new heuristic model is proposed. The model assumes that, in a population, only a small fraction (pool) of individuals is susceptible to cancer and decomposes the problem of the carcinogenic modeling on two sequentially solvable problems: (i) determination of the age-specific hazard rate in individuals susceptible to cancer (individual hazard rate) from the observed hazard rate in the …


Ultraviolet Radiation, Aging And The Skin: Prevention Of Damage By Topical Camp Manipulation, Alexandra Amaro-Ortiz, Betty Yan, John A. D’Orazio May 2014

Ultraviolet Radiation, Aging And The Skin: Prevention Of Damage By Topical Camp Manipulation, Alexandra Amaro-Ortiz, Betty Yan, John A. D’Orazio

Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications

Being the largest and most visible organ of the body and heavily influenced by environmental factors, skin is ideal to study the long-term effects of aging. Throughout our lifetime, we accumulate damage generated by UV radiation. UV causes inflammation, immune changes, physical changes, impaired wound healing and DNA damage that promotes cellular senescence and carcinogenesis. Melanoma is the deadliest form of skin cancer and among the malignancies of highest increasing incidence over the last several decades. Melanoma incidence is directly related to age, with highest rates in individuals over the age of 55 years, making it a clear age-related disease. …


Pharmacologic Suppression Of Jak1/2 By Jak1/2 Inhibitor Azd1480 Potently Inhibits Il-6-Induced Experimental Prostate Cancer Metastases Formation., Lei Gu, Pooja Talati, Paraskevi Vogiatzi, Ana L Romero-Weaver, Junaid Abdulghani, Zhiyong Liao, Benjamin E. Leiby, David T. Hoang, Tuomas Mirtti, Kalle Alanen, Michael Zinda, Dennis Huszar, Marja T. Nevalainen May 2014

Pharmacologic Suppression Of Jak1/2 By Jak1/2 Inhibitor Azd1480 Potently Inhibits Il-6-Induced Experimental Prostate Cancer Metastases Formation., Lei Gu, Pooja Talati, Paraskevi Vogiatzi, Ana L Romero-Weaver, Junaid Abdulghani, Zhiyong Liao, Benjamin E. Leiby, David T. Hoang, Tuomas Mirtti, Kalle Alanen, Michael Zinda, Dennis Huszar, Marja T. Nevalainen

Department of Medical Oncology Faculty Papers

Metastatic prostate cancer is lethal and lacks effective strategies for prevention or treatment, requiring novel therapeutic approaches. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a cytokine that has been linked with prostate cancer pathogenesis by multiple studies. However, the direct functional roles of IL-6 in prostate cancer growth and progression have been unclear. In the present study, we show that IL-6 is produced in distant metastases of clinical prostate cancers. IL-6-activated signaling pathways in prostate cancer cells induced a robust 7-fold increase in metastases formation in nude mice. We further show that IL-6 promoted migratory prostate cancer cell phenotype, including increased prostate cancer cell …


A Pilot Clinical Trial Of Intravesical Mitomycin-C And External Deep Pelvic Hyperthermia For Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer., Brant A Inman, Paul R. Stauffer, Oana A Craciunescu, Paolo F Maccarini, Mark W Dewhirst, Zeljko Vujaskovic May 2014

A Pilot Clinical Trial Of Intravesical Mitomycin-C And External Deep Pelvic Hyperthermia For Non-Muscle-Invasive Bladder Cancer., Brant A Inman, Paul R. Stauffer, Oana A Craciunescu, Paolo F Maccarini, Mark W Dewhirst, Zeljko Vujaskovic

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE: This paper aims to evaluate the safety and heating efficiency of external deep pelvic hyperthermia combined with intravesical mitomycin C (MMC) as a novel therapy for non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC).

MATERIALS AND METHODS: We enrolled subjects with bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) refractory NMIBC to an early phase clinical trial of external deep pelvic hyperthermia (using a BSD-2000 device) combined with MMC. Bladders were heated to 42 °C for 1 h during intravesical MMC treatment. Treatments were given weekly for 6 weeks, then monthly for 4 months. Heating parameters, treatment toxicity, and clinical outcomes were systematically measured.

RESULTS: Fifteen patients were …


Thermal Dosimetry Characteristics Of Deep Regional Heating Of Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer., Titania Juang, Paul R. Stauffer, Oana A Craciunescu, Paolo F Maccarini, Yu Yuan, Shiva K Das, Mark W Dewhirst, Brant A Inman, Zeljko Vujaskovic May 2014

Thermal Dosimetry Characteristics Of Deep Regional Heating Of Non-Muscle Invasive Bladder Cancer., Titania Juang, Paul R. Stauffer, Oana A Craciunescu, Paolo F Maccarini, Yu Yuan, Shiva K Das, Mark W Dewhirst, Brant A Inman, Zeljko Vujaskovic

Department of Radiation Oncology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE: The aim of this paper is to report thermal dosimetry characteristics of external deep regional pelvic hyperthermia combined with intravesical mitomycin C (MMC) for treating bladder cancer following transurethral resection of bladder tumour, and to use thermal data to evaluate reliability of delivering the prescribed hyperthermia dose to bladder tissue.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 14 patients were treated with MMC and deep regional hyperthermia (BSD-2000, Sigma Ellipse or Sigma 60). The hyperthermia objective was 42° ± 2 °C to bladder tissue for ≥40 min per treatment. Temperatures were monitored with thermistor probes and recorded values were used …


A Long-Term Study Of The Effects Of Antiviral Therapy On Survival Of Patients With Hbv-Associated Hepatocellular Carcinoma (Hcc) Following Local Tumor Ablation., Hie-Won Hann, Robert Coben, Daniel Brown, Laurence Needleman, Ernest Rosato, Albert Min, Richard Hann, Kyong Bin Park, Stephen Dunn, Anthony J. Dimarino Apr 2014

A Long-Term Study Of The Effects Of Antiviral Therapy On Survival Of Patients With Hbv-Associated Hepatocellular Carcinoma (Hcc) Following Local Tumor Ablation., Hie-Won Hann, Robert Coben, Daniel Brown, Laurence Needleman, Ernest Rosato, Albert Min, Richard Hann, Kyong Bin Park, Stephen Dunn, Anthony J. Dimarino

Department of Medicine Faculty Papers

The ultimate goal of antiviral therapy for chronic hepatitis B (CHB) is prevention of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Earlier we reported favorable effects of antiviral therapy on survival of HCC patients following curative tumor ablation (Int J Cancer online 14 April 2010; doi: 10.1002/ijc.25382). It was the first observation made in the United States. We now report 12 year follow-up of this patient group. CHB patients with no prior antiviral therapy with a single HCC (≤ 7 cm) were studied. All patients underwent local tumor ablation as their first option. Patients diagnosed before 1999 received no antiviral treatment while those diagnosed …


Influence Networks Based On Coexpression Improve Drug Target Discovery For The Development Of Novel Cancer Therapeutics, Nadia M. Penrod, Jason H. Moore Feb 2014

Influence Networks Based On Coexpression Improve Drug Target Discovery For The Development Of Novel Cancer Therapeutics, Nadia M. Penrod, Jason H. Moore

Dartmouth Scholarship

Background: Thedemandfornovelmolecularlytargeteddrugswillcontinuetoriseaswemoveforwardtowardthe goal of personalizing cancer treatment to the molecular signature of individual tumors. However, the identification of targets and combinations of targets that can be safely and effectively modulated is one of the greatest challenges facing the drug discovery process. A promising approach is to use biological networks to prioritize targets based on their relative positions to one another, a property that affects their ability to maintain network integrity and propagate information-flow. Here, we introduce influence networks and demonstrate how they can be used to generate influence scores as a network-based metric to rank genes as potential drug targets. …


An Imaging-Based Platform For High-Content, Quantitative Evaluation Of Therapeutic Response In 3d Tumour Models, Jonathan P. Celli, Imran Rizvi, Adam R. Blanden, Iqbal Massodi, Iqbal Massodi, Michael D. Glidden, Brian Pogue, Tayyaba Hasan Jan 2014

An Imaging-Based Platform For High-Content, Quantitative Evaluation Of Therapeutic Response In 3d Tumour Models, Jonathan P. Celli, Imran Rizvi, Adam R. Blanden, Iqbal Massodi, Iqbal Massodi, Michael D. Glidden, Brian Pogue, Tayyaba Hasan

Dartmouth Scholarship

While it is increasingly recognized that three-dimensional (3D) cell culture models recapitulate drug responses of human cancers with more fidelity than monolayer cultures, a lack of quantitative analysis methods limit their implementation for reliable and routine assessment of emerging therapies. Here, we introduce an approach based on computational analysis of fluorescence image data to provide high-content readouts of dose-dependent cytotoxicity, growth inhibition, treatment-induced architectural changes and size-dependent response in 3D tumour models. We demonstrate this approach in adherent 3D ovarian and pancreatic multiwell extracellular matrix tumour overlays subjected to a panel of clinically relevant cytotoxic modalities and appropriately designed controls …


Identification Of A Developmental Gene Expression Signature, Including Hox Genes, For The Normal Human Colonic Crypt Stem Cell Niche: Overexpression Of The Signature Parallels Stem Cell Overpopulation During Colon Tumorigenesis., Seema Bhatlekar, Sankar Addya, Moreh Salunek, Christopher R Orr, Saul Surrey, Steven E. Mckenzie, Jeremy Z Fields, Bruce M Boman Jan 2014

Identification Of A Developmental Gene Expression Signature, Including Hox Genes, For The Normal Human Colonic Crypt Stem Cell Niche: Overexpression Of The Signature Parallels Stem Cell Overpopulation During Colon Tumorigenesis., Seema Bhatlekar, Sankar Addya, Moreh Salunek, Christopher R Orr, Saul Surrey, Steven E. Mckenzie, Jeremy Z Fields, Bruce M Boman

Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers

Our goal was to identify a unique gene expression signature for human colonic stem cells (SCs). Accordingly, we determined the gene expression pattern for a known SC-enriched region--the crypt bottom. Colonic crypts and isolated crypt subsections (top, middle, and bottom) were purified from fresh, normal, human, surgical specimens. We then used an innovative strategy that used two-color microarrays (∼18,500 genes) to compare gene expression in the crypt bottom with expression in the other crypt subsections (middle or top). Array results were validated by PCR and immunostaining. About 25% of genes analyzed were expressed in crypts: 88 preferentially in the bottom, …


Prognosis Of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer In Relation To Serum Thyrotropin And Thyroglobulin Antibody Status At Time Of Diagnosis, Donald S. A. Mcleod, David S. Cooper, Paul W. Ladenson, Kenneth B. Ain, James D. Brierley, Henry G. Fein, Bryan R. Haugen, Jacqueline Jonklaas, James Magner, Douglas S. Ross, Monica C. Skarulis, David L. Steward, Harry R. Maxon, Steven I. Sherman Jan 2014

Prognosis Of Differentiated Thyroid Cancer In Relation To Serum Thyrotropin And Thyroglobulin Antibody Status At Time Of Diagnosis, Donald S. A. Mcleod, David S. Cooper, Paul W. Ladenson, Kenneth B. Ain, James D. Brierley, Henry G. Fein, Bryan R. Haugen, Jacqueline Jonklaas, James Magner, Douglas S. Ross, Monica C. Skarulis, David L. Steward, Harry R. Maxon, Steven I. Sherman

Internal Medicine Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Serum thyrotropin (TSH) concentration and thyroid autoimmunity may be of prognostic importance in differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC). Preoperative serum TSH level has been associated with higher DTC stage in cross-sectional studies; data are contradictory on the significance of thyroid autoimmunity at the time of diagnosis.

OBJECTIVE: We sought to assess whether preoperative serum TSH and perioperative antithyroglobulin antibodies (TgAb) were associated with thyroid cancer stage and outcome in DTC patients followed by the National Thyroid Cancer Treatment Cooperative Study, a large multicenter thyroid cancer registry.

METHODS: Patients registered after 1996 with available preoperative serum TSH (n=617; the TSH cohort) …


Improving Sexual Health In Men With Prostate Cancer: Randomised Controlled Trial Of Exercise And Psychosexual Therapies, Prue Cormie, Suzanne K. Chambers, Robert U. Newton, Robert A. Gardiner, Nigel Spry, Dennis R. Taaffe, David Joseph, M Akhlil Hamid, Peter Chong, David Hughes, Kyra Hamilton, Daniel A. Galvão Jan 2014

Improving Sexual Health In Men With Prostate Cancer: Randomised Controlled Trial Of Exercise And Psychosexual Therapies, Prue Cormie, Suzanne K. Chambers, Robert U. Newton, Robert A. Gardiner, Nigel Spry, Dennis R. Taaffe, David Joseph, M Akhlil Hamid, Peter Chong, David Hughes, Kyra Hamilton, Daniel A. Galvão

Research outputs 2014 to 2021

Background: Despite being a critical survivorship care issue, there is a clear gap in current knowledge of the optimal treatment of sexual dysfunction in men with prostate cancer. There is sound theoretical rationale and emerging evidence that exercise may be an innovative therapy to counteract sexual dysfunction in men with prostate cancer. Furthermore, despite the multidimensional aetiology of sexual dysfunction, there is a paucity of research investigating the efficacy of integrated treatment models. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to: 1) examine the efficacy of exercise as a therapy to aid in the management of sexual dysfunction in men …


E5501: Phase Ii Study Of Topotecan Sequenced With Etoposide/Cisplatin, And Irinotecan/Cisplatin Sequenced With Etoposide For Extensive-Stage Small-Cell Lung Cancer., Taofeek K. Owonikoko, Joseph Aisner, Xin Victoria Wang, Suzanne E. Dahlberg, Eric H. Rubin, Suresh S. Ramalingam, Murugesan Gounder, Paul Gregory Rausch, Rita S. Axelrod, Md, Joan H. Schiller Jan 2014

E5501: Phase Ii Study Of Topotecan Sequenced With Etoposide/Cisplatin, And Irinotecan/Cisplatin Sequenced With Etoposide For Extensive-Stage Small-Cell Lung Cancer., Taofeek K. Owonikoko, Joseph Aisner, Xin Victoria Wang, Suzanne E. Dahlberg, Eric H. Rubin, Suresh S. Ramalingam, Murugesan Gounder, Paul Gregory Rausch, Rita S. Axelrod, Md, Joan H. Schiller

Department of Medical Oncology Faculty Papers

PURPOSE: Sequence-dependent improved efficacy of topoisomerase I followed by topoisomerase 2 inhibitors was assessed in a randomized phase II study in extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer (SCLC).

METHODS: Patients with previously untreated extensive-stage SCLC with measurable disease, ECOG performance status of 0-3 and stable brain metastases were eligible. Arm A consisted of topotecan (0.75 mg/m(2)) on days 1, 2 and 3, etoposide (70 mg/m(2)) and cisplatin (20 mg/m(2)) (PET) on days 8, 9 and 10 in a 3-week cycle. Arm B consisted of irinotecan (50 mg/m(2)) and cisplatin (20 mg/m(2)) on days 1 and 8 followed by etoposide (85 mg/m(2) PO …