81 research outputs found

    Randomized trial of neoadjuvant vaccination with tumor-cell lysate induces T cell response in low-grade gliomas

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    BACKGROUND. Long-term prognosis of WHO grade II low-grade gliomas (LGGs) is poor, with a high risk of recurrence and malignant transformation into high-grade gliomas. Given the relatively intact immune system of patients with LGGs and the slow tumor growth rate, vaccines are an attractive treatment strategy. METHODS. We conducted a pilot study to evaluate the safety and immunological effects of vaccination with GBM6-AD, lysate of an allogeneic glioblastoma stem cell line, with poly-ICLC in patients with LGGs. Patients were randomized to receive the vaccines before surgery (arm 1) or not (arm 2) and all patients received adjuvant vaccines. Coprimary outcomes were to evaluate safety and immune response in the tumor. RESULTS. A total of 17 eligible patients were enrolled — 9 in arm 1 and 8 in arm 2. This regimen was well tolerated with no regimen-limiting toxicity. Neoadjuvant vaccination induced upregulation of type-1 cytokines and chemokines and increased activated CD8+ T cells in peripheral blood. Single-cell RNA/T cell receptor sequencing detected CD8+ T cell clones that expanded with effector phenotype and migrated into the tumor microenvironment (TME) in response to neoadjuvant vaccination. Mass cytometric analyses detected increased tissue resident–like CD8+ T cells with effector memory phenotype in the TME after the neoadjuvant vaccination. CONCLUSION. The regimen induced effector CD8+ T cell response in peripheral blood and enabled vaccine-reactive CD8+ T cells to migrate into the TME. Further refinements of the regimen may have to be integrated into future strategies

    Targeted Gene Expression Profiling Predicts Meningioma Outcomes and Radiotherapy Responses

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    Surgery is the mainstay of treatment for meningioma, the most common primary intracranial tumor, but improvements in meningioma risk stratification are needed and indications for postoperative radiotherapy are controversial. Here we develop a targeted gene expression biomarker that predicts meningioma outcomes and radiotherapy responses. Using a discovery cohort of 173 meningiomas, we developed a 34-gene expression risk score and performed clinical and analytical validation of this biomarker on independent meningiomas from 12 institutions across 3 continents (N = 1,856), including 103 meningiomas from a prospective clinical trial. The gene expression biomarker improved discrimination of outcomes compared with all other systems tested (N = 9) in the clinical validation cohort for local recurrence (5-year area under the curve (AUC) 0.81) and overall survival (5-year AUC 0.80). The increase in AUC compared with the standard of care, World Health Organization 2021 grade, was 0.11 for local recurrence (95% confidence interval 0.07 to 0.17, P \u3c 0.001). The gene expression biomarker identified meningiomas benefiting from postoperative radiotherapy (hazard ratio 0.54, 95% confidence interval 0.37 to 0.78, P = 0.0001) and suggested postoperative management could be refined for 29.8% of patients. In sum, our results identify a targeted gene expression biomarker that improves discrimination of meningioma outcomes, including prediction of postoperative radiotherapy responses

    The Functional organization of astrocytes in normal and epileptic brain

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. School of Medicine & Dentistry. Interdepartmental Graduate Program in Neuroscience, 2008.A key for understanding the physiology and pathology of the human nervous system is knowledge of its structural and functional organization. In this thesis work, I hypothesize that the human brain is characterized by increased diversity and complexity of its astrocytes compared to our common rodent models. I describe several unique characteristics of human astrocytic structure and identify a novel subclass of human astrocytes in cortex: the varicose projection astrocytes. Some features are conserved through evolution; human protoplasmic astrocytes, like rodent, are organized into spatially non-overlapping domains that encompass both neurons and vasculature. Functionally, human astrocytes behave like our common models in that they transiently increase cytosolic Ca2+ in response to glutamatergic and purinergic receptor agonists, and can support calcium waves, albeit at significantly greater velocities than in rodent. In the second part of my thesis, I demonstrate that reactive astrocytes associated with seizures have structural and functional changes that may contribute to the underlying pathology of epilepsy. Using the technique of diolistic labeling, I demonstrate that in three mouse models of epilepsy: post-traumatic injury, genetic susceptibility, and systemic kainate exposure, reactive astrocytes had a chronic loss in domain organization. The loss of the domain organization was not a universal property of gliosis in that reactive astrocytes associated with neurodegeneration maintained the domain organization. There was an increase in spine density of cortical excitatory neurons in concert with loss of the domain organization suggesting that changes in both neurons and astrocytes may form the structural basis for recurrent excitation in the epileptic brain. Functionally, reactive astrocytes near and within the seizure foci had chronic decreased expression of glutamate transporter 1 and glutamine synthetase as well as intracellular glutamate accumulation. Additionally, reactive astrocytes had increased spontaneous calcium oscillations that were independent of neuronal activity. These reactive changes of astrocytes may play a role in the pathogenesis of epilepsy. Overall, this thesis highlights the importance of interspecies differences in the structure, organization, and function of astrocytes and how reactive changes in astrocytes may contribute to epilepsy
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