7 research outputs found
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Association between serum levels of soluble tumor necrosis factor receptors/CA 125 and disease progression in patients with epithelial ovarian malignancy: a gynecologic oncology group study.
BackgroundA prospective study was undertaken within the Gynecologic Oncology Group to determine whether serum levels of soluble tumor necrosis factor receptors I (sTNFR-I) and II (sTNFR-II), alone or in combination with CA 125, were associated with clinicopathologic characteristics or outcome in patients with epithelial ovarian malignancies.MethodsQuantitative immunoassays were performed on valid pretreatment serum specimens obtained from patients with epithelial ovarian malignancies to assess levels of sTNFR-I, sTNFR-II, and CA 125. The authors then analyzed the results of these immunoassays for potential correlations with clinicopathologic characteristics and outcome.ResultsThe median age of the 139 women evaluated was 59 years. Seventy-eight percent had Stage III or IV disease, and 58% had serous carcinomas. sTNFR-II was associated with age (P = 0.013), and CA 125 was associated with histologic subtype (P = 0.0009). In addition, sTNFR-I (P = 0.037) and CA 125 (P < 0.0001) were associated with extent of disease. After adjusting for patient age, histologic subtype, and extent of disease, all three biomarkers were predictive of progression-free survival, but not overall survival, when the combination was included in the model. The authors observed a 51% reduction (hazard ratio [HR], 0.49; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.24-0.99), a 2.9-fold increase (HR, 2.87; 95% CI, 1.15-7.20), and a 22% increase (HR, 1.22; 95% CI, 0.99-1.51) in the risk of progression for each unit increase in the log-transformed levels of sTNFR-I, sTNFR-II, and CA 125, respectively.ConclusionsThe observations made in the current study-that among patients with low or high CA 125 levels, those with high sTNFR-I levels and low sTNFR-II levels had the lowest risk, that patients with low-low or high-high sTNFR-I and sTNFR-II levels, respectively, had an intermediate risk, and that patients with low sTNFR-I levels and high sTNFR-II levels had the highest risk of progression-suggested the potential value of simultaneous assessment of all three biomarkers in patients with epithelial ovarian malignancies
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Randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of primary maintenance vigil immunotherapy (VITAL study) in stage III/IV ovarian cancer: Efficacy assessment in BRCA1/2-wt patients
6017 Background: Vigil is an autologous tumor cell vaccine constructed from autologous harvested tumor tissue transfected with a DNA plasmid encoding GMCSF and bi-shRNA-furin thereby creating TGFβ expression control. Methods: A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of Vigil vs. placebo was performed in advanced stage frontline OC patients. Relapse-free survival (RFS) and safety were endpoints. Patients who achieved complete clinical response were randomized [1:1 to placebo (control group, CG) or Vigil (Vigil group, VG)] after completion of frontline surgery and chemotherapy. All patients received 1 x 10e7 cells/ml of Vigil or placebo intradermally once a month for up to 12 doses. Results: Ninety-two patients were randomized with 91 patients in the per-protocol population (PP), (VG n=46; CG n=45). 62 patients were tested for BRCA1/2 status. VG showed no added overall toxicity compared to CG and no grade 4/5 toxicities were observed. Grade 2/3 toxic events were observed in 18% of CG patients (most common bone pain, fatigue) compared to 8% of VG patients (most common nausea, musculoskeletal pain). From time of randomization median RFS for all 91 patients was favorable in the VG (HR 0.69, one-sided p 0.088).Stratified by BRCA status, an advantage in RFS was seen in the BRCA1/2-wt patients in VG (19.4 mo) compared to CG (8 mo) (HR 0.51, 90% CI 0.26 – 1.01, one-sided p 0.050) from time of randomization and HR of 0.49 (90% CI 0.25 – 0.97, one-sided p 0.038) from time of surgery. Median time from surgery to randomization was 208.5 days (6.9 mo) in VG vs. 200 days (6.6 mo) in CG. 37.5% BRCA1/2-wt Vigil treated patients relapsed compared to 71% of placebo at time of data snap for analysis (HR 0.51, one-sided p 0.05), (median follow-up of 34.3 mo for all n=91 subjects). Germline and somatic BRCA1/2 molecular testing via central third party is underway on all 91 patients under continued blinded conditions to validate activity in BRCA1/2-wt. Conclusions: Vigil immunotherapy as frontline maintenance in Stage III/IV ovarian cancer is well tolerated and showed RFS clinical benefit, particularly in BRCA1/2-wt disease. Clinical trial information: NCT02346747. [Table: see text
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Gemogenovatucel-T (Vigil) immunotherapy as maintenance in frontline stage III/IV ovarian cancer (VITAL): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2b trial.
BACKGROUND: Gemogenovatucel-T is an autologous tumour cell vaccine manufactured from harvested tumour tissue, which specifically reduces expression of furin and downstream TGF-β1 and TGF-β2. The aim of this study was to determine the safety and efficacy of gemogenovatucel-T in front-line ovarian cancer maintenance.
METHODS: This randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2b trial involved 25 hospitals in the USA. Women aged 18 years and older with stage III/IV high-grade serous, endometrioid, or clear cell ovarian cancer in clinical complete response after a combination of surgery and five to eight cycles of chemotherapy involving carboplatin and paclitaxel, and an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group status of 0 or 1 were eligible for inclusion in the study. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1) to gemogenovatucel-T or placebo by an independent third party interactive response system after successful screening using randomly permuted block sizes of two and four and stratified by extent of surgical cytoreduction and neoadjuvant versus adjuvant chemotherapy. Gemogenovatucel-T (1 × 10
FINDINGS: Between Feb 11, 2015, and March 2, 2017, 310 patients consented to the study at 22 sites. 217 were excluded. 91 patients received gemogenovatucel-T (n=47) or placebo (n=44) and were analysed for safety and efficacy. The median follow-up from first dose of gemogenovatucel-T was 40·0 months (IQR 35·0-44·8) and from first dose of placebo was 39·8 months (35·5-44·6). Recurrence-free survival was 11·5 months (95% CI 7·5-not reached) for patients assigned to gemogenovatucel-T versus 8·4 months (7·9-15·5) for patients assigned to placebo (HR 0·69, 90% CI 0·44-1·07; one-sided p=0·078). Gemogenovatucel-T resulted in no grade 3 or 4 toxic effects. Two patients in the placebo group had five grade 3 toxic events, including arthralgia, bone pain, generalised muscle weakness, syncope, and dyspnea. Seven patients (four in the placebo group and three in the gemogenovatucel-T group) had 11 serious adverse events. No treatment-related deaths were reported in either of the groups.
INTERPRETATION: Front-line use of gemogenovatucel-T immunotherapy as maintenance was well tolerated but the primary endpoint was not met. Further investigation of gemogenovatucel-T in patients stratified by BRCA mutation status is warranted.
FUNDING: Gradalis
A genome-wide association study of cleft lip with and without cleft palate identifies risk variants near MAFB and ABCA4
Case-parent trios were used in a genome-wide association study of cleft lip with and without cleft palate. SNPs near two genes not previously associated with cleft lip with and without cleft palate (MAFB, most significant SNP rs13041247, with odds ratio (OR) per minor allele = 0.704, 95% CI 0.635-0.778, P = 1.44 × 10-11; and ABCA4, most significant SNP rs560426, with OR = 1.432, 95% CI 1.292-1.587, P = 5.01 × 10-12) and two previously identified regions (at chromosome 8q24 and IRF6) attained genome-wide significance. Stratifying trios into European and Asian ancestry groups revealed differences in statistical significance, although estimated effect sizes remained similar. Replication studies from several populations showed confirming evidence, with families of European ancestry giving stronger evidence for markers in 8q24, whereas Asian families showed stronger evidence for association with MAFB and ABCA4. Expression studies support a role for MAFB in palatal development. © 2010 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved