49 research outputs found
Alternative lengthening of telomeres, ATRX loss and H3â K27M mutations in histologically defined pilocytic astrocytoma with anaplasia
Anaplasia may be identified in a subset of tumors with a presumed pilocytic astrocytoma (PA) component or piloid features, which may be associated with aggressive behavior, but the biologic basis of this change remains unclear. Fiftyâ seven resections from 36 patients (23 M, 13 F, mean age 32 years, range 3â 75) were included. A clinical diagnosis of NF1 was present in 8 (22%). Alternative lengthening of telomeres (ALT) was assessed by telomereâ specific FISH and/or CISH. A combination of immunohistochemistry, DNA sequencing and FISH were used to study BRAF, ATRX, CDKN2A/p16, mutant IDH1 p.R132H and H3â K27M proteins. ALT was present in 25 (69%) cases and ATRX loss in 20 (57%), mostly in the expected association of ALT+/ATRXâ (20/24, 83%) or ALTâ /ATRX+ (11/11, 100%). BRAF duplication was present in 8 (of 26) (31%). H3â K27M was present in 5 of 32 (16%) cases, all with concurrent ATRX loss and ALT. ALT was also present in 9 (of 11) cases in the benign PA precursor, 7 of which also had ATRX loss in both the precursor and the anaplastic tumor. In a single pediatric case, ALT and ATRX loss developed in the anaplastic component only, and in another adult case, ALT was present in the PAâ A component only, but ATRX was not tested. Features associated with worse prognosis included subtotal resection, adult vs. pediatric, presence of a PA precursor preceding a diagnosis of anaplasia, necrosis, presence of ALT and ATRX expression loss. ALT and ATRX loss, as well as alterations involving the MAPK pathway, are frequent in PA with anaplasia at the time of development of anaplasia or in their precursors. Additionally, a small subset of PA with anaplasia have H3â K27M mutations. These findings further support the concept that PA with anaplasia is a neoplasm with heterogeneous genetic features and alterations typical of both PA and diffuse gliomas.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147190/1/bpa12646_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147190/2/bpa12646.pd
Dissection of quantitative blackleg resistance reveals novel variants of resistance gene Rlm9 in elite Brassica napus
Blackleg is one of the major fungal diseases in oilseed rape/canola worldwide. Most
commercial cultivars carry R gene-mediated qualitative resistances that confer a high
level of race-specific protection against Leptosphaeria maculans, the causal fungus of
blackleg disease. However, monogenic resistances of this kind can potentially be rapidly
overcome by mutations in the pathogen’s avirulence genes. To counteract pathogen
adaptation in this evolutionary arms race, there is a tremendous demand for quantitative
background resistance to enhance durability and efficacy of blackleg resistance in
oilseed rape. In this study, we characterized genomic regions contributing to quantitative
L. maculans resistance by genome-wide association studies in a multiparental mapping
population derived from six parental elite varieties exhibiting quantitative resistance,
which were all crossed to one common susceptible parental elite variety. Resistance
was screened using a fungal isolate with no corresponding avirulence (AvrLm) to
major R genes present in the parents of the mapping population. Genome-wide
association studies revealed eight significantly associated quantitative trait loci (QTL)
on chromosomes A07 and A09, with small effects explaining 3–6% of the phenotypic
variance. Unexpectedly, the qualitative blackleg resistance gene Rlm9 was found to be
located within a resistance-associated haploblock on chromosome A07. Furthermore,
long-range sequence data spanning this haploblock revealed high levels of singlenucleotide
and structural variants within the Rlm9 coding sequence among the parents
of the mapping population. The results suggest that novel variants of Rlm9 could play a
previously unknown role in expression of quantitative disease resistance in oilseed rape
The Identification of CELSR3 and Other Potential Cell Surface Targets in Neuroendocrine Prostate Cancer.
UNLABELLED
Although recent efforts have led to the development of highly effective androgen receptor (AR)-directed therapies for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer, a significant subset of patients will progress with resistant disease including AR-negative tumors that display neuroendocrine features [neuroendocrine prostate cancer (NEPC)]. On the basis of RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) data from a clinical cohort of tissue from benign prostate, locally advanced prostate cancer, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer and NEPC, we developed a multi-step bioinformatics pipeline to identify NEPC-specific, overexpressed gene transcripts that encode cell surface proteins. This included the identification of known NEPC surface protein CEACAM5 as well as other potentially targetable proteins (e.g., HMMR and CESLR3). We further showed that cadherin EGF LAG seven-pass G-type receptor 3 (CELSR3) knockdown results in reduced NEPC tumor cell proliferation and migration in vitro. We provide in vivo data including laser capture microdissection followed by RNA-seq data supporting a causal role of CELSR3 in the development and/or maintenance of the phenotype associated with NEPC. Finally, we provide initial data that suggests CELSR3 is a target for T-cell redirection therapeutics. Further work is now needed to fully evaluate the utility of targeting CELSR3 with T-cell redirection or other similar therapeutics as a potential new strategy for patients with NEPC.
SIGNIFICANCE
The development of effective treatment for patients with NEPC remains an unmet clinical need. We have identified specific surface proteins, including CELSR3, that may serve as novel biomarkers or therapeutic targets for NEPC
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Achieving opioid-free discharge following robotic thoracic surgery: A single institution experience
Enhanced recovery after thoracic surgery (ERATS) protocols use a combination of analgesics for pain control and have been associated with decreased opioid requirements. We investigated the impact of continual ERATS refinement on the incidence of opioid free discharge.
We retrospectively analyzed our prospectively maintained institutional database for elective, opioid-naïve robotic thoracoscopic procedures. Demographics, operative outcomes, postoperative opioid dispensed (morphine milligram equivalent – MME), opioid discharge status were collected. Our primary outcome of interest was factors associated with opioid free discharge; our secondary objective was to determine the incidence of new persistent opioid users.
466 patients from our optimized ERATS protocol were included,309 (66%) were discharged without opioids. However, 157(11%) of patients discharged without opioids required a prescription post discharge. Conversely, 7/157 patients (11%), never filled their opioid prescriptions given at discharges. Factors associated with opioid-free discharges were non-anatomic resections, mediastinal procedures, minimal pain and lack of opioid usage on the day of discharge. More importantly, 3.2% of opioid-free discharge patients became new persistent opioid users versus 10.8% of patients filling opioid prescriptions after discharges (p=0.0013). Finally, only 2.3% of opioid-naïve patients of the entire cohort became chronic opioid users, there was no difference in the incidence of chronic use by opioid discharge status.
Optimized opioid sparing ERATS protocols are highly effective in reducing opioid prescription on the day of discharge. We observed a very low rate of new persistent or chronic opioid use in our cohort, further highlighting the role ERATS protocols in combating the opioid epidemic
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The essential role of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in pain control following robotic thoracoscopic lung resections
Background: Enhanced recovery after thoracic surgery (ERATS) protocols use a combination of analgesics for pain control. We investigated the effect of non-steroidal analgesic drugs (NSAIDs) on pain control by comparing patient levels and opioid requirements after robotic pulmonary resections.Methods: We retrospectively analyzed our prospectively maintained institutional database for elective, opioid-naive robotic thoracoscopic pulmonary resections. All patients received postoperative NSAIDs unless contraindicated or at the discretion of the attending surgeons. Our original protocol (ERATS-V1) was modified to optimize opioid-sparing effect without affecting pain control (ERATS-V2). Demographics, operative outcomes, and postoperative opioid dispensed [morphine milligram equivalent (MME)] were collected.Results: A total of 491 patients (147 ERATS-V1; 344 ERATS-V2) were included in this study. There was no difference in patient characteristics or operative outcomes between ERATS cohorts. Protocol optimization was associated with a 2-to 10-fold reduction of postoperative opioid use without compromising pain control. In ERATS-V1 cohort, there was no difference in pain levels and opioid requirements with NSAID usage. In ERATS-V2 cohort, while pain levels were similar, higher in-hospital opioid consumption was observed in no-NSAID subgroup [MME: 20.5 (IQR, 4.8-40.5) vs. 12.0 (IQR, 2.0-32.2), P=0.0096, schedule II: 14.2 (IQR, 3.0-36.4) vs. 6.8 (IQR, 1.4-24.0), P=0.012] as well as total postoperative schedule II opioid requirement [17.8 (IQR, 3.0-43.5) vs. 8.8 (IQR, 1.5-30), P=0.032].Conclusions: The opioid-sparing effect of NSAIDs was observed only in optimized ERATS patients. Modifications of our pre-existing ERATS was associated with a significant reduction of opioid consumption without affecting pain levels. This revealed the role of NSAIDs in postoperative pain management otherwise masked by excessive opioids use