21 research outputs found
Data_Sheet_1_Disease Control With FOLFIRI Plus Ziv-aflibercept (zFOLFIRI) Beyond FOLFIRI Plus Bevacizumab: Case Series in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer (mCRC).docx
Background: The prognosis of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) is poor, especially after failure of initial systemic therapy. The VELOUR study showed modestly prolonged overall survival (OS) with ziv-aflibercept plus 5-fluorouracil, leucovorin, and irinotecan (zFOLFIRI) vs. placebo+FOLFIRI after progression on 5-fluoruracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) ± bevacizumab. The utility of zFOLFIRI after bevacizumab+FOLFIRI is unknown and not recommended in NCCN guidelines. We explored whether zFOLFIRI may be active beyond progression on bevacizumab+FOLFIRI.Methods: We undertook a retrospective analysis of patients treated in routine clinical practice. A chart review was conducted for a cohort (N = 19) of advanced cancer patients (18 mCRC) who received zFOLFIRI from 2014 to 2018 at Fox Chase Cancer Center (FCCC). Analysis included time on zFOLFIRI, PFS, OS, CEA trends and adverse events. A second mCRC cohort (N = 26) from the Flatiron Health EHR-derived database treated with zFOLFIRI after prior bevacizumab+FOLFOX and bevacizumab+FOLFIRI was analyzed for time-on-treatment and overall survival.Results: Median age of mCRC cohort at zFOLFIRI treatment was 54 (FCCC; N = 18) and 62 (Flatiron Health-cohort; N = 26). Of 18 FCCC mCRC patients, 1 patient had prior bevacizumab+FOLFOX and ramucirumab+irinotecan prior to zFOLFIRI for 8.5 months. Of 17 FCCC mCRC patients with prior bevacizumab+FOLFIRI who received zFOLFIRI, 13 had mutant-KRAS, 3 WT-KRAS, and one BRAF-V600E. The patient with BRAF-V600E mutation achieved stable disease on zFOLFIRI after multiple BRAF-targeted therapies. One patient (WT-KRAS mCRC) remained on zFOLFIRI for 14 months. Of 14 patients with mutated-KRAS, 8 remained on zFOLFIRI for >5 months including 3 for >15 months. The rate-of-change in CEA measures on zFOLFIRI was significantly different (p = 0.004) between rapid progressors and those with PFS>4 months. For mCRC patients treated with zFOLFIRI in the 3rd line or greater (N = 18), median PFS was 7.1 months (214 days) and median OS was 13.8 months (416 days). Median time-on-treatment with zFOLFIRI in the Flatiron Health cohort was 4.4 months, median OS was 7.8 months, and longest time-on-treatment with zFOLFIRI was 266 days.Conclusions: In these small real-world cohorts, clinical meaningful stable disease and overall survival on zFOLFIRI beyond progression on bevacizumab+FOLFIRI was observed in patients with mCRC. Further exploration of this approach is warranted.</p
Data_Sheet_2_Disease Control With FOLFIRI Plus Ziv-aflibercept (zFOLFIRI) Beyond FOLFIRI Plus Bevacizumab: Case Series in Metastatic Colorectal Cancer (mCRC).xlsx
Background: The prognosis of patients with metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) is poor, especially after failure of initial systemic therapy. The VELOUR study showed modestly prolonged overall survival (OS) with ziv-aflibercept plus 5-fluorouracil, leucovorin, and irinotecan (zFOLFIRI) vs. placebo+FOLFIRI after progression on 5-fluoruracil, leucovorin, and oxaliplatin (FOLFOX) ± bevacizumab. The utility of zFOLFIRI after bevacizumab+FOLFIRI is unknown and not recommended in NCCN guidelines. We explored whether zFOLFIRI may be active beyond progression on bevacizumab+FOLFIRI.Methods: We undertook a retrospective analysis of patients treated in routine clinical practice. A chart review was conducted for a cohort (N = 19) of advanced cancer patients (18 mCRC) who received zFOLFIRI from 2014 to 2018 at Fox Chase Cancer Center (FCCC). Analysis included time on zFOLFIRI, PFS, OS, CEA trends and adverse events. A second mCRC cohort (N = 26) from the Flatiron Health EHR-derived database treated with zFOLFIRI after prior bevacizumab+FOLFOX and bevacizumab+FOLFIRI was analyzed for time-on-treatment and overall survival.Results: Median age of mCRC cohort at zFOLFIRI treatment was 54 (FCCC; N = 18) and 62 (Flatiron Health-cohort; N = 26). Of 18 FCCC mCRC patients, 1 patient had prior bevacizumab+FOLFOX and ramucirumab+irinotecan prior to zFOLFIRI for 8.5 months. Of 17 FCCC mCRC patients with prior bevacizumab+FOLFIRI who received zFOLFIRI, 13 had mutant-KRAS, 3 WT-KRAS, and one BRAF-V600E. The patient with BRAF-V600E mutation achieved stable disease on zFOLFIRI after multiple BRAF-targeted therapies. One patient (WT-KRAS mCRC) remained on zFOLFIRI for 14 months. Of 14 patients with mutated-KRAS, 8 remained on zFOLFIRI for >5 months including 3 for >15 months. The rate-of-change in CEA measures on zFOLFIRI was significantly different (p = 0.004) between rapid progressors and those with PFS>4 months. For mCRC patients treated with zFOLFIRI in the 3rd line or greater (N = 18), median PFS was 7.1 months (214 days) and median OS was 13.8 months (416 days). Median time-on-treatment with zFOLFIRI in the Flatiron Health cohort was 4.4 months, median OS was 7.8 months, and longest time-on-treatment with zFOLFIRI was 266 days.Conclusions: In these small real-world cohorts, clinical meaningful stable disease and overall survival on zFOLFIRI beyond progression on bevacizumab+FOLFIRI was observed in patients with mCRC. Further exploration of this approach is warranted.</p
Table_1_Clinical Utilization Pattern of Liquid Biopsies (LB) to Detect Actionable Driver Mutations, Guide Treatment Decisions and Monitor Disease Burden During Treatment of 33 Metastatic Colorectal Cancer (mCRC) Patients (pts) at a Fox Chase Cancer Center GI Oncology Subspecialty Clinic.XLSX
Background: Liquid biopsy (LB) captures dynamic genomic alterations (alts) across metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) therapy and may complement tissue biopsy (TB). We sought to describe the utility of LB and better understand mCRC biology during therapy.Methods: Thirty-three patients (pts) with mCRC underwent LB. We used permutation-based t-tests to assess associations between alts, and clinical variables and used Kendall's tau to measure correlations.Results: Of 33 pts, 15 were women; 22 had colon, and the rest rectal cancer. Pts received a median of two lines of therapy before LB. Nineteen pts had limited testing on TB (RAS/RAF/TP53/APC), 11 extended NGS, and 3 no TB. Maxpct and alts correlated with CEA (p Conclusions: LB across mCRC therapy detects driver mutations, monitors disease burden, and identifies sub-clonal alts that reflect drug resistance, tumor evolution, and heterogeneity. Interpretation of LB results is impacted by clinical context.</p
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
Searchable High-Resolution 2D Gel Proteome of the Human Colon Crypt
We seek alterations in protein patterns at the earliest possible step on the path to cancer, namely, in
cells of the target tissue from normal persons versus the corresponding normally appearing cells from
persons who are heterozygous for mutation in a tumor suppressor gene that predisposes strongly to
carcinoma in that tissue. To begin a systematic comparison of the proteomes of cells from normal and
from neoplastic colons, we have undertaken the isolation of human colon crypts that are derived from
the normal-appearing mucosa of left (descending) colon of patients with sporadic colorectal cancer.
Two-dimensional (2D) gel electrophoresis is a proteomic approach that excels in the resolution of protein
isoforms. Here, we document the practicality of this approach with human samples using gels of three
overlapping pH ranges. For the first time, about 800 nonredundant proteins and 900 isoforms from
purified human colonic crypts were identified, permitting an assessment of the contributions of protein
isoforms. These interactive, searchable, hyperlink-enabled proteome maps and gene ontology analyses
will facilitate future studies to discover the earliest markers and intervention targets during progression
to colon cancer.
Keywords: proteomics • colonic crypts • morphologically norma
