153 research outputs found

    Origin of congenital coronary arterio-ventricular fistulae from anomalous epicardial and myocardial development.

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    Coronary Artery Fistulae (CAFs) are cardiac congenital anomalies consisting of an abnormal communication of a coronary artery with either a cardiac chamber or another cardiac vessel. In humans, these congenital anomalies can lead to complications such as myocardial hypertrophy, endocarditis, heart dilatation, and failure. Unfortunately, despite their clinical relevance, the aetiology of CAFs remains unknown. In this work, we have used two different species (mouse and avian embryos) to experimentally model CAFs morphogenesis. Both conditional Itga4 (alpha 4 integrin) epicardial deletion in mice and cryocauterisation of chick embryonic hearts disrupted epicardial development and ventricular wall growth, two essential events in coronary embryogenesis. Our results suggest that myocardial discontinuities in the embryonic ventricular wall promote the early contact of the endocardium with epicardial-derived coronary progenitors at the cardiac surface, leading to ventricular endocardial extrusion, precocious differentiation of coronary smooth muscle cells, and the formation of pouch-like aberrant coronary-like structures in direct connection with the ventricular lumen. The structure of these CAF-like anomalies was compared with histopathological data from a human CAF. Our results provide relevant information for the early diagnosis of these congenital anomalies and the molecular mechanisms that regulate their embryogenesis.The authors thank Dr. A. Rojas (CABIMER, Sevilla, Spain) and Prof. Thalia Papayannopoulou (University of Washington, WA, USA) for sharing with us the G2- Gata4-Cre and Itga4-floxed mouse lines, respectively. We also thank Vanessa Benhamo (Institut Imagine) for her expert support with HREM. Finally, we thank all members of “DeCA” laboratory (University of Málaga, Málaga, Spain), and the “Heart Morphogenesis” laboratory (Institut Imagine and Institut Pasteur, Paris, France) for their help and fruitful discussions on this paper. This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science, R+D+i National Programme [grants RTI2018-095410-RBI00 and PID2021-122626-OB-I00], Spanish Ministry of Science-ISCIII [grant number RD16/0011/0030], and University of Málaga [grant number UMA18-FEDERJA-146] to [JMPP]; Consejería de Salud y Familias, Junta de Andalucía [grant number PIER-0084- 2019] to [JAGD]; University of Málaga [grant number I Plan Propio-UMA-A.4] to [ARV]; Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities (MCIU) (CIBER CV) [grant numbers PID2019-104776RB-I00 and CB16/11/00399] to [JLDLP].S

    Outcomes of special histotypes of breast cancer after adjuvant endocrine therapy with letrozole or tamoxifen in the monotherapy cohort of the BIG 1-98 trial

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    In the BIG 1-98 clinical trial of 4922 postmenopausal women treated with 5 years of letrozole or tamoxifen for endocrine-responsive breast cancer, 183 had the rare histotypes mucinous or tubular/cribriform. These women had better outcomes than those with other histotypes. The magnitude of the letrozole advantage compared with tamoxifen may not be as large in patients with these rare histotype

    Pathological complete response after neoadjuvant chemotherapy is an independent predictive factor irrespective of simplified breast cancer intrinsic subtypes: a landmark and two-step approach analyses from the EORTC 10994/BIG 1-00 phase III trial

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    The present analysis, carried out in the context of a randomized phase III trial, confirms superior outcomes for breast cancer patients for whom chemotherapy induces pathological complete response (pCR) after adjusting for other important prognostic factors. In contrast, when tumours do not achieve pCR, patients have a higher risk of relapse. This effect is observed in all intrinsic subtypes and justifies the current interest in post-neoadjuvant trial

    De novo erythroleukemia chromosome features include multiple rearrangements, with special involvement of chromosomes 11 and 19

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    Erythroid leukemia (ERL or AML-M6) is an uncommon subtype of acute myeloid leukemia, the clinical, morphological, and genetic behavior of which needs further characterization. We analyzed a homogeneous group of 23 de novo AML-M6 patients whose bone marrow cells showed complex karyotypes. We also analyzed eight leukemia cell lines with erythroid phenotype, performing detailed molecular cytogenetic analyses, including spectral karyotyping (SKY) in all samples. The main features are: (1) A majority of patients (56%) had hypodiploidy. Loss of genetic material was the most common genetic change, especially monosomies of chromosome 7 or 18, and deletions of chromosome arm 5q. Taken together, 87% of the cases displayed aberrations involving chromosome 5 or 8. (2) We describe a novel, cryptic, and recurrent translocation, t(11;19)(p11.2;q13.1). Another translocation, t(12;21)(p11.2;q11.2), was found to be recurrent in a patient with ERL and in the K562 cell line. (3) MLL gene rearrangements were detected in 20% of cases (three translocations and three amplifications) and, overall, we defined 52 rearrangements (excluding deletions) with a mean of 2.3 translocations per patient. (4) Of the structural aberrations, 21% involved chromosomes 11 and 19. Most of the rearrangements were unbalanced; only 13 reciprocal translocations were observed. The general picture of chromosomal aberrations in cell lines did not reflect what occurred in patient samples. However, both primary samples and cell lines shared three common breakpoints at 19q13.1, 20q11.2, and 21q11.2. This is the first molecular cytogenetic description of the karyotype abnormalities present in patients with ERL. It should assist in the identification of genes involved in erythroleukemogenesis

    The effects of adding zoledronic acid to neoadjuvant chemotherapy on tumour response: exploratory evidence for direct anti-tumour activity in breast cancer

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    Background: Pre-clinical studies have demonstrated synergistic anti-tumour effects of chemotherapy (CT) and zoledronic acid (ZOL). Within the AZURE trial, designed to determine whether the addition of ZOL to neoadjuvant therapy improves disease outcomes, a subgroup received neoadjuvant CT. We report a retrospective evaluation comparing pathological response in the primary tumour between treatment groups. Methods: In total, 205 patients received neoadjuvant CT±ZOL (CT+ZOL, n=102; CT, n=103). The primary end point was pathologically assessed residual invasive tumour size (RITS) at surgery. Secondary end points were pathological complete response (pCR) rate and axillary nodal involvement. Following review of surgical pathology reports (n=195), outcome differences between groups were assessed adjusting for potential response modifiers. Results: Baseline characteristics and CT treatments were similar. In multivariate analysis, allowing for biological and clinical factors known to influence tumour response, the adjusted mean RITS in CT and CT+ZOL groups were 27.4 and 15.5 mm, respectively, giving a difference in means of 12 mm (95% confidence interval: 3.5–20.4 mm; P=0.006). The pCR rate was 6.9% in the CT group and 11.7% in the CT+ZOL group (P=0.146). There was no difference in axillary nodal involvement (P=0.6315). Conclusion: These data suggest a possible direct anti-tumour effect of ZOL in combination with CT, warranting formal evaluation in prospective studies

    Endothelial Jag1-RBPJ signalling promotes inflammatory leucocyte recruitment and atherosclerosis

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    Aim To determine the role of NOTCH during the arterial injury response and the subsequent chronic arterial-wall inflammation underlying atherosclerosis. Methods and results We have generated a mouse model of endothelial-specific (Cdh5-driven) depletion of the Notch effector recombination signal binding protein for immunoglobulin kappa J region (RBPJ) [(ApoE−/−^{−/−}); homozygous RBPJk conditional mice (RBPJflox/flox^{flox/flox}); Cadherin 5-CreERT^{ERT}, tamoxifen inducible driver mice (Cdh5-CreERT^{ERT})]. Endothelial-specific deletion of RBPJ or systemic deletion of Notch1 in athero-susceptible ApoE−/−^{−/−} mice fed a high-cholesterol diet for 6 weeks resulted in reduced atherosclerosis in the aortic arch and sinus. Intravital microscopy revealed decreased leucocyte rolling on the endothelium of ApoE−/−^{−/−}; RBPJflox/flox^{flox/flox}; Cdh5-CreERT^{ERT} mice, correlating with a lowered content of leucocytes and macrophages in the vascular wall. Transcriptome analysis revealed down-regulation of proinflammatory and endothelial activation pathways in atherosclerotic tissue of RBPJ-mutant mice. During normal Notch activation, Jagged1 signalling up-regulation in endothelial cells promotes nuclear translocation of the Notch1 intracellular domain (N1ICD) and its physical interaction with nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-ÎșB). This N1ICD–NF-ÎșB interaction is required for reciprocal transactivation of target genes, including vascular cell adhesion molecule-1. Conclusions Notch signalling pathway inactivation decreases leucocyte rolling, thereby preventing endothelial dysfunction and vascular inflammation. Attenuation of Notch signalling might provide a treatment strategy for atherosclerosis.This study was funded by grants SAF2013-45543R, RD12/0042/0005 (RIC) and RD12/0019/0003 (TERCEL) from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) to J.L.dlP, RD12/0042/0028 (RIC) to V.A. and RD12/0042/0053 (RIC) and SAF2012-40127 to J.M.G. M.N. held a Sara Borrell post-doctoral contract (CD09/00452) and D.M. holds a post-doctoral contract associated with grant RD12/0042/0005, both awarded by The Instituto de Salud Carlos III; B.M.P. holds a Juan de la Cierva post-doctoral contract (JCI-2010-06343). The CNIC is supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) and the Pro CNIC Foundation, and is a ‘Severo Ochoa’ Center of Excellence (MINECO award SEV-2015-0505).This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvw19

    Oestrogen receptor status, pathological complete response and prognosis in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy for early breast cancer

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    The aim of this study was to ascertain if oestrogen receptor ( ER) status predicts for pathological complete response (pCR) to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in operable breast cancer, and the effects of pCR on survival. Using a single-institution database, 435 patients were identified, who received neoadjuvant chemotherapy for operable breast cancer and were eligible for the analysis. Patients whose tumours were ER negative were more likely to achieve a pCR than patients who were ER positive (21.6 vs 8.1%,

    Separate and combined analysis of successive dependent outcomes after breast-conservation surgery: recurrence, metastases, second cancer and death

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In the setting of recurrent events, research studies commonly count only the first occurrence of an outcome in a subject. However this approach does not correctly reflect the natural history of the disease. The objective is to jointly identify prognostic factors associated with locoregional recurrences (LRR), contralateral breast cancer, distant metastases (DM), other primary cancer than breast and breast cancer death and to evaluate the correlation between these events.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Patients (n = 919) with a primary invasive breast cancer and treated in a cancer center in South-Western France with breast-conserving surgery from 1990 to 1994 and followed up to January 2006 were included. Several types of non-independent events could be observed for the same patient: a LRR, a contralateral breast cancer, DM, other primary cancer than breast and breast cancer death. Data were analyzed separately and together using a random-effects survival model.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>LRR represent the most frequent type of first failure (14.6%). The risk of any event is higher for young women (less than 40 years old) and in the first 10 years of follow-up after the surgery. In the combined analysis histological tumor size, grade, number of positive nodes, progesterone receptor status and treatment combination are prognostic factors of any event. The results show a significant dependence between these events with a successively increasing risk of a new event after the first and second event. The risk of developing a new failure is greatly increased (RR = 4.25; 95%CI: 2.51-7.21) after developing a LRR, but also after developing DM (RR = 3.94; 95%CI: 2.23-6.96) as compared to patients who did not develop a first event.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We illustrated that the random effects survival model is a more satisfactory method to evaluate the natural history of a disease with multiple type of events.</p

    Mise Ă  jour 2014 des recommandations du GEFPICS pour l’évaluation du statut HER2 dans les cancers du sein en France

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    De nouvelles recommandations internationales pour l’évaluation du statut HER2 dans les cancers du sein, basĂ©es sur plus de dix ans d’expĂ©rience et sur les rĂ©sultats d’études cliniques et de concordance entre les diffĂ©rentes techniques de dĂ©tection, viennent tout juste de voir le jour. Le prĂ©sent article a pour objet de faire le point sur ces nouvelles recommandations, Ă  la lumiĂšre de la publication rĂ©cente du groupe de travail de l’American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) et du CollĂšge des pathologistes amĂ©ricains (CAP), adaptĂ©es Ă  la pratique de la pathologie en France et revues par le groupe GEFPICS. À l’ùre de la mĂ©decine personnalisĂ©e, la dĂ©termination du statut HER2 reste un Ă©lĂ©ment phare dans le panel des biomarqueurs thĂ©ranostiques des cancers du sein. Si l’interprĂ©tation du statut HER2 dans les cancers du sein est aisĂ©e dans la majoritĂ© des cas, un certain nombre de situations anatomocliniques est d’interprĂ©tation plus dĂ©licate, telles que la possibilitĂ© rare mais rĂ©elle de l’hĂ©tĂ©rogĂ©nĂ©itĂ© intra-tumorale du statut de HER2, les formes Ă  diffĂ©renciation micropapillaire ou la rĂ©-Ă©valuation du statut des biomarqueurs lors de la rechute mĂ©tastatique. Ces nouvelles recommandations abordent ces diffĂ©rentes questions, reprĂ©cisent les conditions prĂ©-analytiques optimales et les critĂšres d’interprĂ©tation (notamment des cas 2+), afin de rĂ©duire au maximum le risque de faux nĂ©gatifs. Plus que jamais, la mobilisation de la spĂ©cialitĂ© d’anatomo-cytopathologie autour de la qualitĂ© des tests thĂ©ranostiques tĂ©moigne de son implication dans la chaĂźne des soins en cancĂ©rologie., Summary International guidelines on HER2 determination in breast cancer have just been updated by the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and College of American Pathologists (CAP), on the basis of more than ten-year practice, results of clinical trials and concordance studies. The GEFPICS group, composed of expert pathologists in breast cancer, herein presents these recommendations, adapted to the French routine practice. These guidelines highlight the possible diagnosis difficulties with regards to HER2 status determination, such as intra-tumor heterogeneity, special histological subtypes and biomarker re-evaluation during metastatic relapse. Pre-analytical issues and updated scoring criteria (especially for equivocal cases) are detailed, in order to decrease the occurrence of false negative cases. In the era of personalized medicine, pathologists are more than ever involved in the quality of oncotheranostic biomarker evaluation.

    Recommandations du GEFPICS concernant la phase prĂ©-analytique pour l’évaluation de HER2 et des rĂ©cepteurs hormonaux dans le cancer du sein : mise Ă  jour 2014

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    Les tumeurs fixĂ©es et incluses en paraffine sont quotidiennement utilisĂ©es pour l’évaluation des biomarqueurs nĂ©cessaires au traitement des patientes atteintes d’un cancer du sein invasif. Les nouvelles recommandations internationales sur la phase prĂ©-analytique ont Ă©tĂ© rĂ©cemment revues, confirmant l’importance de la prise en charge optimale des prĂ©lĂšvements pour garantir des tests d’immunohistochimie ou d’hybridation in situ de qualitĂ©, quel que soit le biomarqueur envisagĂ©. Incluant les procĂ©dĂ©s de fixation et de prĂ©paration des tissus, toutes les procĂ©dures prĂ©-analytiques doivent ĂȘtre validĂ©es, standardisĂ©es et tracĂ©es. Elles nĂ©cessitent la collaboration et la formation de toutes les personnes impliquĂ©es dans le circuit du prĂ©lĂšvement, du prĂ©leveur jusqu’au technicien de pathologie et au pathologiste en passant par l’infirmiĂšre, ou le coursier. La prise en charge initiale optimale des piĂšces et une fixation de qualitĂ© sont des Ă©tapes majeures Ă  maĂźtriser dans la phase prĂ©-analytique. Cette mise Ă  jour des recommandations du groupe d’étude des facteurs pronostiques immunohistochimiques dans le cancer du sein (GEFPICS) dĂ©taille et commente les diffĂ©rentes Ă©tapes prĂ©-analytiques. L’observation de ces rĂšgles de bonne pratique, l’utilisation rigoureuse de tĂ©moins internes et externes et la participation rĂ©guliĂšre Ă  des programmes d’assurance qualitĂ© sont autant de garanties pour une Ă©valuation correcte et pĂ©renne des biomarqueurs oncothĂ©ranostiques., Summary Biomarker assessment of breast cancer tumor samples is part of the routine workflow of pathology laboratories. International guidelines have recently been updated, with special regards to the pre-analytical steps that are critical for the quality of immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization procedures, whatever the biomarker analyzed. Fixation and specimen handling protocols must be standardized, validated and carefully tracked. Cooperation and training of the personnel involved in the specimen workflow (e.g. radiologists, surgeons, nurses, technicians and pathologists) are of paramount importance. The GEFPICS’ update of the recommendations herein details and comments the different steps of the pre-analytical process. Application of these guidelines and participation to quality insurance programs are mandatory to ensure the correct evaluation of oncotheranostic biomarkers
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