310 research outputs found
Efficacy and safety of rucaparib in previously treated, locally advanced or metastatic urothelial carcinoma from a phase 2, open-label trial (ATLAS)
Cà ncer de bufeta; Rucaparib; Carcinoma urotelialCáncer de vejiga; Rucaparib; Carcinoma urotelialBladder cancer; Rucaparib; Urothelial carcinomaBackground
ATLAS evaluated the efficacy and safety of the PARP inhibitor rucaparib in patients with previously treated locally advanced/unresectable or metastatic urothelial carcinoma (UC).
Methods
Patients with UC were enrolled independent of tumor homologous recombination deficiency (HRD) status and received rucaparib 600 mg BID. The primary endpoint was investigator-assessed objective response rate (RECIST v1.1) in the intent-to-treat and HRD-positive (loss of genome-wide heterozygosity ≥10%) populations. Key secondary endpoints were progression-free survival (PFS) and safety. Disease control rate (DCR) was defined post-hoc as the proportion of patients with a confirmed complete or partial response (PR), or stable disease lasting ≥16 weeks.
Results
Of 97 enrolled patients, 20 (20.6%) were HRD-positive, 30 (30.9%) HRD-negative, and 47 (48.5%) HRD-indeterminate. Among 95 evaluable patients, there were no confirmed responses. However, reductions in the sum of target lesions were observed, including 6 (6.3%) patients with unconfirmed PR. DCR was 11.6%; median PFS was 1.8 months (95% CI, 1.6–1.9). No relationship was observed between HRD status and efficacy endpoints. Median treatment duration was 1.8 months (range, 0.1–10.1). Most frequent any-grade treatment-emergent adverse events were asthenia/fatigue (57.7%), nausea (42.3%), and anemia (36.1%). Of 64 patients with data from tumor tissue samples, 10 (15.6%) had a deleterious alteration in a DNA damage repair pathway gene, including four with a deleterious BRCA1 or BRCA2 alteration.
Conclusions
Rucaparib did not show significant activity in unselected patients with advanced UC regardless of HRD status. The safety profile was consistent with that observed in patients with ovarian or prostate cancer.The work was supported by Clovis Oncology (no grant number) and was designed by the sponsor, P. Grivas, and S. Chowdhury
Higher-order Kerr terms allow ionization-free filamentation in gases
We show that higher-order nonlinear indices (, , , )
provide the main defocusing contribution to self-channeling of ultrashort laser
pulses in air and Argon at 800 nm, in contrast with the previously accepted
mechanism of filamentation where plasma was considered as the dominant
defocusing process. Their consideration allows to reproduce experimentally
observed intensities and plasma densities in self-guided filaments.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures (11 panels
Spectral dependence of purely-Kerr driven filamentation in air and argon
Based on numerical simulations, we show that higher-order nonlinear indices
(up to and , respectively) of air and argon have a dominant
contribution to both focusing and defocusing in the self-guiding of ultrashort
laser pulses over most of the spectrum. Plasma generation and filamentation are
therefore decoupled. As a consequence, ultraviolet wavelength may not be the
optimal wavelengths for applications requiring to maximize ionization.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures (14 panels
On negative higher-order Kerr effect and filamentation
As a contribution to the ongoing controversy about the role of higher-order
Kerr effect (HOKE) in laser filamentation, we first provide thorough details
about the protocol that has been employed to infer the HOKE indices from the
experiment. Next, we discuss potential sources of artifact in the experimental
measurements of these terms and show that neither the value of the observed
birefringence, nor its inversion, nor the intensity at which it is observed,
appear to be flawed. Furthermore, we argue that, independently on our values,
the principle of including HOKE is straightforward. Due to the different
temporal and spectral dynamics, the respective efficiency of defocusing by the
plasma and by the HOKE is expected to depend substantially on both incident
wavelength and pulse duration. The discussion should therefore focus on
defining the conditions where each filamentation regime dominates.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to Laser physics as proceedings of
the Laser Physics 2010 conferenc
Identification of IMDC intermediate-risk subgroups in patients with metastatic clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC).
e16577Background: Majority of patients (pts) with ccRCC at first line (1L) treatment are classified in the IR subgroup according to International Metastatic Renal Cell Carcinoma Database Consortium..
New Prognostic factors for second-line targeted therapy (TT) in metastatic renal cell carcinoma (mRCC).
No abstract availabl
Phase-ordering dynamics of the Gay-Berne nematic liquid crystal
Phase-ordering dynamics in nematic liquid crystals has been the subject of
much active investigation in recent years in theory, experiments and
simulations. With a rapid quench from the isotropic to nematic phase a large
number of topological defects are formed and dominate the subsequent
equilibration process. We present here the results of a molecular dynamics
simulation of the Gay-Berne model of liquid crystals after such a quench in a
system with 65536 molecules. Twist disclination lines as well as type-1 lines
and monopoles were observed. Evidence of dynamical scaling was found in the
behavior of the spatial correlation function and the density of disclination
lines. However, the behavior of the structure factor provides a more sensitive
measure of scaling, and we observed a crossover from a defect dominated regime
at small values of the wavevector to a thermal fluctuation dominated regime at
large wavevector.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, animations available at
http://www.physics.brown.edu/Users/faculty/pelcovits/lc/coarsening.htm
Abiraterone Alone or in Combination With Enzalutamide in Metastatic Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer With Rising Prostate-Specific Antigen During Enzalutamide Treatment
Purpose
Enzalutamide resistance could result from raised androgens and be overcome by combination with
abiraterone acetate. PLATO (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01995513) interrogated this hypothesis
using a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled design.
Patients and Methods
In period one, men with chemotherapy-na¨ıve metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer received
open-label enzalutamide 160 mg daily. Men with no prostate-specific antigen (PSA) increase
at weeks 13 and 21 were treated until PSA progression ( 2 ng/mL above
nadir), then randomly assigned at a one-to-one ratio in period two to abiraterone acetate 1,000 mg
daily and prednisone 5 mg twice daily with either enzalutamide or placebo (combination or control
group, respectively) until disease progression as defined by the primary end point: progression-free
survival (radiographic or unequivocal clinical progression or death during study). Secondary end
points included time to PSA progression and PSA response in period two.
Results
Of 509 patients enrolled in period one, 251 were randomly assigned in period two. Median
progression-free survival was 5.7 months in the combination group and 5.6 months in the control
group (hazard ratio, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.61 to 1.12; P = .22). There was no difference in the secondary
end points. Grade 3 hypertension (10% v 2%) and increased ALT (6% v 2%) or AST (2% v 0%) were
more frequent in the combination than the control group.
Conclusion
Combining enzalutamide with abiraterone acetate and prednisone is not indicated after PSA progression
during treatment with enzalutamide alone; hypertension and elevated liver enzymes are
more frequent with combination therapy
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