654 results on '"Eric D. Hsi"'
Search Results
2. Mature B, T and NK-cell, plasma cell and histiocytic/dendritic cell neoplasms: classification according to the World Health Organization and International Consensus Classification
- Author
-
Judith A. Ferry, Brian Hill, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract In 2022, two updated classification systems for lymphoid neoplasms were published by the World Health Organization (WHO Classification of Haematolymphoid Tumours, 5th edition, referred to hereafter as WHO-HAEM5) and the International Consensus Conference (ICC) (Alaggio et al. in Leukemia 36(7):1720–1748, 2022; Campo et al. in Blood 140(11):1229–1253, 2022). Both classifications were conceived by both pathologists and clinicians with expertise in the field. The reasons for this have been reviewed previously (Arber et al. in Virchows Arch 482(1):1–9, 2023; Cree in Leukemia 36(7):1701–1702, 2022, Leukemia 36(11):2750, 2022). Given that both groups were using data-driven processes and consensus and used the revised 4th edition of the WHO Classification of Haematolymphoid Tumours (WHO-HAEM4R) as a starting point, it is not entirely surprising that the resulting classifications are quite similar. However, they are not identical and reflect preferences or approaches for certain unsettled areas as well as preferred terminology. In this review, we will compare nomenclature of the WHO-HAEM5 and ICC classifications, focusing on lymphoid neoplasms and lymphoproliferative disorders (LPDs).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. DNA mismatch repair defect and intratumor heterogeneous deficiency differently impact immune responses in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
- Author
-
Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Cancan Luo, Li Yu, Yong Li, Govind Bhagat, Alexandar Tzankov, Carlo Visco, Xiangshan Fan, Karen Dybkaer, Ali Sakhdari, Nicholas T. Wang, Alyssa F. Yuan, April Chiu, Wayne Tam, Youli Zu, Eric D. Hsi, Anamarija M. Perry, Wenting Song, Dennis O’Malley, Qingyan Au, Harry Nunns, Heounjeong Go, Michael B. Møller, Benjamin M. Parsons, Santiago Montes-Moreno, Maurilio Ponzoni, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Aliyah R. Sohani, Jeremy S. Abramson, Bing Xu, and Ken H. Young
- Subjects
DNA mismatch repair ,dMMR ,PD-1 ,DLBCL ,immune ,MSH6 ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Deficient (d) DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is a biomarker predictive of better response to PD-1 blockade immunotherapy in solid tumors. dMMR can be caused by mutations in MMR genes or by protein inactivation, which can be detected by sequencing and immunohistochemistry, respectively. To investigate the role of dMMR in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), MMR gene mutations and expression of MSH6, MSH2, MLH1, and PMS2 proteins were evaluated by targeted next-generation sequencing and immunohistochemistry in a large cohort of DLBCL patients treated with standard chemoimmunotherapy, and correlated with the tumor immune microenvironment characteristics quantified by fluorescent multiplex immunohistochemistry and gene-expression profiling. The results showed that genetic dMMR was infrequent in DLBCL and was significantly associated with increased cancer gene mutations and favorable immune microenvironment, but not prognostic impact. Phenotypic dMMR was also infrequent, and MMR proteins were commonly expressed in DLBCL. However, intratumor heterogeneity existed, and increased DLBCL cells with phenotypic dMMR correlated with significantly increased T cells and PD-1+ T cells, higher average nearest neighbor distance between T cells and PAX5+ cells, upregulated immune gene signatures, LE4 and LE7 ecotypes and their underlying Ecotyper-defined cell states, suggesting the possibility that increased T cells targeted only tumor cell subsets with dMMR. Only in patients with MYC¯ DLBCL, high MSH6/PMS2 expression showed significant adverse prognostic effects. This study shows the immunologic and prognostic effects of genetic/phenotypic dMMR in DLBCL, and raises a question on whether DLBCL-infiltrating PD-1+ T cells target only tumor subclones, relevant for the efficacy of PD-1 blockade immunotherapy in DLBCL.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Pathologist-trained machine learning classifiers developed to quantitate celiac disease features differentiate endoscopic biopsies according to modified marsh score and dietary intervention response
- Author
-
Aaron M. Gruver, Haiyan Lu, Xiaoxian Zhao, Angie D. Fulford, Michael D. Soper, Darryl Ballard, Jeffrey C. Hanson, Andrew E. Schade, Eric D. Hsi, Klaus Gottlieb, and Kelly M. Credille
- Subjects
Celiac disease ,Marsh classification ,Machine learning ,Artificial intelligence ,Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Abstract Background Histologic evaluation of the mucosal changes associated with celiac disease is important for establishing an accurate diagnosis and monitoring the impact of investigational therapies. While the Marsh-Oberhuber classification has been used to categorize the histologic findings into discrete stages (i.e., Type 0-3c), significant variability has been documented between observers using this ordinal scoring system. Therefore, we evaluated whether pathologist-trained machine learning classifiers can be developed to objectively quantitate the pathological changes of villus blunting, intraepithelial lymphocytosis, and crypt hyperplasia in small intestine endoscopic biopsies. Methods A convolutional neural network (CNN) was trained and combined with a secondary algorithm to quantitate intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) with 5 classes on CD3 immunohistochemistry whole slide images (WSI) and used to correlate feature outputs with ground truth modified Marsh scores in a total of 116 small intestine biopsies. Results Across all samples, median %CD3 counts (positive cells/enterocytes) from villous epithelium (VE) increased with higher Marsh scores (Type 0%CD3 VE = 13.4; Type 1–3%CD3 VE = 41.9, p
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Biallelic TET2 mutations and canonical ASXL1 mutations are frequent and cooccur in Blastic Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cell Neoplasm (BPDCN): An institutional experience and review of literature
- Author
-
Xi Zhang, Eric D. Hsi, Genevieve M. Crane, and Yu‐Wei Cheng
- Subjects
acute leukemia ,dendritic cells ,molecular genetics ,Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Abstract Blastic plasmacytoid dendritic cell neoplasm (BPDCN) is recurrently mutated in epigenetic pathway genes. We studied the myeloid‐related genetic mutations in a cohort of five patients with BPDCN and one paired relapse case at our institution and identified a high frequency of biallelic TET2 and canonical ASXL1 (c.1934dupG) mutations. The number of cases is small, but the variant allele fraction (VAF) sums of the TET2 mutations, as well as the persistence of TET2 mutations in a case of relapsed BPDCN, suggest an ancestral/founder nature of TET2 clones in the cases. Further literature review shows a high frequency of biallelic TET2 mutations in reported cases of BPDCN.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Determining clinical course of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma using targeted transcriptome and machine learning algorithms
- Author
-
Maher Albitar, Hong Zhang, Andre Goy, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Govind Bhagat, Carlo Visco, Alexandar Tzankov, Xiaosheng Fang, Feng Zhu, Karen Dybkaer, April Chiu, Wayne Tam, Youli Zu, Eric D. Hsi, Fredrick B. Hagemeister, Jooryung Huh, Maurilio Ponzoni, Andrés J. M. Ferreri, Michael B. Møller, Benjamin M. Parsons, J. Han van Krieken, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Yong Li, Bing Xu, and Ken H. Young
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Multiple studies have demonstrated that diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) can be divided into subgroups based on their biology; however, these biological subgroups overlap clinically. Using machine learning, we developed an approach to stratify patients with DLBCL into four subgroups based on survival characteristics. This approach uses data from the targeted transcriptome to predict these survival subgroups. Using the expression levels of 180 genes, our model reliably predicted the four survival subgroups and was validated using independent groups of patients. Multivariate analysis showed that this patient stratification strategy encompasses various biological characteristics of DLBCL, and only TP53 mutations remained an independent prognostic biomarker. This novel approach for stratifying patients with DLBCL, based on the clinical outcome of rituximab, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone therapy, can be used to identify patients who may not respond well to these types of therapy, but would otherwise benefit from alternative therapy and clinical trials.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. XPO1 expression worsens the prognosis of unfavorable DLBCL that can be effectively targeted by selinexor in the absence of mutant p53
- Author
-
Manman Deng, Mingzhi Zhang, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Lan V. Pham, Alexandar Tzankov, Carlo Visco, Xiaosheng Fang, Govind Bhagat, Feng Zhu, Karen Dybkaer, April Chiu, Wayne Tam, Youli Zu, Eric D. Hsi, William W. L. Choi, Jooryung Huh, Maurilio Ponzoni, Andrés J. M. Ferreri, Michael B. Møller, Benjamin M. Parsons, J. Han van Krieken, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Fredrick Hagemeister, Lapo Alinari, Yong Li, Michael Andreeff, Bing Xu, and Ken H. Young
- Subjects
XPO1 ,DLBCL ,HGBCL ,TP53 mutation ,Selinexor ,MYC ,Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract The XPO1 inhibitor selinexor was recently approved in relapsed/refractory DLBCL patients but only demonstrated modest anti-DLBCL efficacy, prompting us to investigate the prognostic effect of XPO1 in DLBCL patients and the rational combination therapies in high-risk DLBCL. High XPO1 expression (XPO1high) showed significant adverse prognostic impact in 544 studied DLBCL patients, especially in those with BCL2 overexpression. Therapeutic study in 30 DLBCL cell lines with various molecular and genetic background found robust cytotoxicity of selinexor, especially in cells with BCL2-rearranged (BCL2-R+) DLBCL or high-grade B-cell lymphoma with MYC/BCL2 double-hit (HGBCL-DH). However, expression of mutant (Mut) p53 significantly reduced the cytotoxicity of selinexor in overall cell lines and the BCL2-R and HGBCL-DH subsets, consistent with the favorable impact of XPO1high observed in Mut-p53-expressing patients. The therapeutic effect of selinexor in HGBCL-DH cells was significantly enhanced when combined with a BET inhibitor INCB057643, overcoming the drug resistance in Mut-p53-expressing cells. Collectively, these data suggest that XPO1 worsens the survival of DLBCL patients with unfavorable prognostic factors such as BCL2 overexpression and double-hit, in line with the higher efficacy of selinexor demonstrated in BCL2-R+ DLBCL and HGBCL-DH cell lines. Expression of Mut-p53 confers resistance to selinexor treatment, which can be overcome by combined INCB057643 treatment in HGBCL-DH cells. This study provides insight into the XPO1 significance and selinexor efficacy in DLBCL, important for developing combination therapy for relapsed/refractory DLBCL and HGBCL-DH.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Inhibition of cyclin‐dependent kinase 9 synergistically enhances venetoclax activity in mantle cell lymphoma
- Author
-
Xiaoxian Zhao, Juraj Bodo, Ruoying Chen, Lisa Durkin, Andrew J. Souers, Darren C. Phillips, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
CDK9 inhibitor ,mantle cell lymphoma ,MCL‐1 ,venetoclax ,Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Abstract Mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is an aggressive and largely incurable subtype of non‐Hodgkin's lymphoma. Venetoclax has demonstrated efficacy in MCL patients with relapsed or refractory disease, however response is variable and less durable than CLL. This may be the result of co‐expression of other anti‐apoptotic proteins such as MCL‐1, which is associated with both intrinsic and acquired resistance to venetoclax in B‐cell malignancies. One strategy for neutralizing MCL‐1 and other short‐lived survival factors is to inhibit CDK9, which plays a key role in transcription. Here, we report the response of MCL cell lines and primary patient samples to the combination of venetoclax and novel CDK9 inhibitors. Primary samples represented de novo patients and relapsed disease, including relapse after ibrutinib failure. Despite the diverse responses to each single agent, possibly due to variable expression of the BCL‐2 family members, venetoclax plus CDK9 inhibitors synergistically induced apoptosis in MCL cells. The synergistic effect was also confirmed via venetoclax plus a direct MCL‐1 inhibitor. Murine xenograft studies demonstrated potent in vivo efficacy of venetoclax plus CDK9 inhibitor that was superior to each agent alone. Together, this study supports clinical investigation of this combination in MCL, including in patients who have progressed on ibrutinib.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Immunoglobulin somatic hypermutation has clinical impact in DLBCL and potential implications for immune checkpoint blockade and neoantigen-based immunotherapies
- Author
-
Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Jianyong Li, Yi Xia, Beryl Crossley, Robert D. Bremel, Yi Miao, Min Xiao, Thomas Snyder, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Xiaohong Tan, Hongwei Zhang, Carlo Visco, Alexandar Tzankov, Karen Dybkaer, Govind Bhagat, Wayne Tam, Hua You, Eric D. Hsi, J. Han van Krieken, Jooryung Huh, Maurilio Ponzoni, Andrés J. M. Ferreri, Michael B. Møller, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Jeffrey T. Medeiros, Bing Xu, Yong Li, Ilan Kirsch, and Ken H. Young
- Subjects
Immunoglobulin ,SHM ,Neoantigen ,PD-1 ,MHC ,HLA ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) harbors somatic hypermutation (SHM) in the immunoglobulin heavy chain and light chain variable region genes, IGHV and IGK/LV. Recent studies have revealed that IGV SHM creates neoantigens that activate T-cell responses against B-cell lymphoma. Methods To determine the clinical relevance of IGV SHM in DLBCL treated with standard immunochemotherapy, we performed next-generation sequencing of the immunoglobulin variable regions and complementarity determining region 3 (CDR3) for 378 patients with de novo DLBCL. The prognostic effects of IGV SHM and ongoing SHM or intra-clonal heterogeneity were analyzed in the training (192 patients), validation (186 patients), and overall DLBCL cohorts. To gain mechanistic insight, we analyzed the predicted IG-derived neoantigens’ immunogenicity potential, determined by the major histocompatibility complex-binding affinity and the frequency-of-occurrence of T cell-exposed motifs (TCEMs) in a TCEM repertoire derived from human proteome, microbiome, and pathogen databases. Furthermore, IGV SHM was correlated with molecular characteristics of DLBCL and PD-1/L1 expression in the tumor microenvironment assessed by fluorescent multiplex immunohistochemistry. Results SHM was commonly found in IGHV and less frequently in IGK/LV. High levels of clonal IGHV SHM (SHMhigh) were associated with prolonged overall survival in DLBCL patients, particularly those without BCL2 or MYC translocation. In contrast, long heavy chain CDR3 length, the presence of IGHV ongoing SHM in DLBCL, and high clonal IGK/LV SHM in germinal center B-cell–like (GCB)-DLBCL were associated with poor prognosis. These prognostic effects were significant in both the training and validation sets. By prediction, the SHMhigh groups harbored more potentially immune-stimulatory neoantigens with high binding affinity and rare TCEMs. PD-1/L1 expression in CD8+ T cells was significantly lower in IGHV SHMhigh than in SHMlow patients with activated B-cell–like DLBCL, whereas PD-1 expression in CD4+ T cells and PD-L1 expression in natural killer cells were higher in IGK/LV SHMhigh than in SHMlow patients with GCB-DLBCL. PD-L1/L2 (9p24.1) amplification was associated with high IGHV SHM and ongoing SHM. Conclusions These results show for the first time that IGV SHMhigh and ongoing SHM have prognostic effects in DLBCL and potential implications for PD-1/PD-L1 blockade and neoantigen-based immunotherapies.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Genomic complexity is associated with epigenetic regulator mutations and poor prognosis in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma
- Author
-
Hua You, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Li Wei, Harry Nunns, Máté L. Nagy, Govind Bhagat, Xiaosheng Fang, Feng Zhu, Carlo Visco, Alexandar Tzankov, Karen Dybkaer, April Chiu, Wayne Tam, Youli Zu, Eric D. Hsi, Fredrick B. Hagemeister, Jooryung Huh, Maurilio Ponzoni, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Michael B. Møller, Benjamin M. Parsons, J. Han Van Krieken, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Yong Li, Qingyan Au, Bing Xu, Maher Albitar, and Ken H. Young
- Subjects
tumor mutation burden ,kmt2d ,genomic instability ,tumor microenvironment ,pd-1 ,pd-l1 ,tp53 ,epigenetic ,dlbcl ,indel ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the most common type of lymphoma with high mutation burdens but a low response rate to immune checkpoint inhibitors. In this study, we performed targeted next-generation sequencing and fluorescent multiplex immunohistochemistry, and investigated the clinical significance and immunological effect of mutation numbers in 424 DLBCL patients treated with standard immunochemotherapy. We found that KMT2D and TP53 nonsynonymous mutations (MUT) were significantly associated with increased nonsynonymous mutation numbers, and that high mutation numbers (MUThigh) were associated with significantly poorer clinical outcome in germinal center B-cell-like DLBCL with wild-type TP53. To understand the underlying mechanisms, we identified a gene-expression profiling signature and the association of MUThigh with decreased T cells in DLBCL patients with wild-type TP53. On the other hand, in overall cohort, MUThigh was associated with lower PD-1 expression in T cells and PD-L1 expression in macrophages, suggesting a positive role of MUThigh in immune responses. Analysis in a whole-exome sequencing dataset of 304 patients deposited by Chapuy et al. validated the correlation of MUT-KMT2D with genomic complexity and the significantly poorer survival associated with higher numbers of genomic single nucleotide variants in activated B-cell–like DLBCL with wild-type TP53. Together, these results suggest that KMT2D inactivation or epigenetic dysregulation has a role in driving DLBCL genomic instability, and that genomic complexity has adverse impact on clinical outcome in DLBCL patients with wild-type TP53 treated with standard immunochemotherapy. The oncoimmune data in this study have important implications for biomarker and therapeutic studies in DLBCL.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Lack of activation-induced cytidine deaminase expression in in situ follicular neoplasia
- Author
-
Tanu Goyal, Sarah L. Ondrejka, Juraj Bodo, Lisa Durkin, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Genetic and phenotypic characterization of indolent T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders of the gastrointestinal tract
- Author
-
Craig R. Soderquist, Nupam Patel, Vundavalli V. Murty, Shane Betman, Nidhi Aggarwal, Ken H. Young, Luc Xerri, Rebecca Leeman-Neill, Suzanne K. Lewis, Peter H. Green, Susan Hsiao, Mahesh M. Mansukhani, Eric D. Hsi, Laurence de Leval, Bachir Alobeid, and Govind Bhagat
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Indolent T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders of the gastrointestinal tract are rare clonal T-cell diseases that more commonly occur in the intestines and have a protracted clinical course. Different immunophenotypic subsets have been described, but the molecular pathogenesis and cell of origin of these lymphocytic proliferations is poorly understood. Hence, we performed targeted next-generation sequencing and comprehensive immunophenotypic analysis of ten indolent T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, which comprised CD4+ (n=4), CD8+ (n=4), CD4+/CD8+ (n=1) and CD4−/CD8− (n=1) cases. Genetic alterations, including recurrent mutations and novel rearrangements, were identified in 8/10 (80%) of these lymphoproliferative disorders. The CD4+, CD4+/CD8+, and CD4−/CD8− cases harbored frequent alterations of JAK-STAT pathway genes (5/6, 82%); STAT3 mutations (n=3), SOCS1 deletion (n=1) and STAT3-JAK2 rearrangement (n=1), and 4/6 (67%) had concomitant mutations in epigenetic modifier genes (TET2, DNMT3A, KMT2D). Conversely, 2/4 (50%) of the CD8+ cases exhibited structural alterations involving the 3′ untranslated region of the IL2 gene. Longitudinal genetic analysis revealed stable mutational profiles in 4/5 (80%) cases and acquisition of mutations in one case was a harbinger of disease transformation. The CD4+ and CD4+/CD8+ lymphoproliferative disorders displayed heterogeneous Th1 (T-bet+), Th2 (GATA3+) or hybrid Th1/Th2 (T-bet+/GATA3+) profiles, while the majority of CD8+ disorders and the CD4−/CD8− disease showed a type-2 polarized (GATA3+) effector T-cell (Tc2) phenotype. Additionally, CD103 expression was noted in 2/4 CD8+ cases. Our findings provide insights into the pathogenetic bases of indolent T-cell lymphoproliferative disorders of the gastrointestinal tract and confirm the heterogeneous nature of these diseases. Detection of shared and distinct genetic alterations of the JAK-STAT pathway in certain immunophenotypic subsets warrants further mechanistic studies to determine whether therapeutic targeting of this signaling cascade is efficacious for a proportion of patients with these recalcitrant diseases.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. CLT030, a leukemic stem cell–targeting CLL1 antibody-drug conjugate for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia
- Author
-
Ying-Ping Jiang, Bob Y. Liu, Quan Zheng, Swapna Panuganti, Ruoying Chen, Jianyu Zhu, Madhavi Mishra, Jianqing Huang, Trang Dao-Pick, Sharmili Roy, XiaoXian Zhao, Jeffrey Lin, Gautam Banik, Eric D. Hsi, Ramkumar Mandalam, and Jagath R. Junutula
- Subjects
Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Abstract: The current standard of care for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is largely ineffective with very high relapse rates and low survival rates, mostly due to the inability to eliminate a rare population of leukemic stem cells (LSCs) that initiate tumor growth and are resistant to standard chemotherapy. RNA-sequencing analysis on isolated LSCs confirmed C-type lectin domain family 12 member A (CLL1, also known as CLEC12A) to be highly expressed on LSCs but not on normal hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) or other healthy organ tissues. Expression of CLL1 was consistent across different types of AML. We developed CLT030 (CLL1-ADC), an antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) based on a humanized anti-CLL1 antibody with 2 engineered cysteine residues linked covalently via a cleavable linker to a highly potent DNA-binding payload, thus resulting in a site-specific and homogenous ADC product. The ADC is designed to be stable in the bloodstream and to release its DNA-binding payload only after the ADC binds to CLL1-expressing tumor cells, is internalized, and the linker is cleaved in the lysosomal compartment. CLL1-ADC inhibits in vitro LSC colony formation and demonstrates robust in vivo efficacy in AML cell tumor models and tumor growth inhibition in the AML patient-derived xenograft model. CLL1-ADC demonstrated a reduced effect on differentiation of healthy normal human CD34+ cells to various lineages as observed in an in vitro colony formation assay and in an in vivo xenotransplantation model as compared with CD33-ADC. These results demonstrate that CLL1-ADC could be an effective ADC therapeutic for the treatment of AML.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Clinical Significance of PTEN Deletion, Mutation, and Loss of PTEN Expression in De Novo Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Xiaoxiao Wang, Xin Cao, Ruifang Sun, Charlene Tang, Alexandar Tzankov, Jun Zhang, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Min Xiao, Yi Miao, Kausar Jabbar, Xiaohong Tan, Yuyang Pang, Carlo Visco, Yan Xie, Karen Dybkaer, April Chiu, Attilio Orazi, Youli Zu, Govind Bhagat, Kristy L. Richards, Eric D. Hsi, William W.L. Choi, J. Han van Krieken, Jooryung Huh, Maurilio Ponzoni, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Michael B. Møller, Ben M. Parsons, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, Shaoying Li, Roberto N. Miranda, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Yong Li, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, and Ken H. Young
- Subjects
Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
PTEN loss has been associated with poorer prognosis in many solid tumors. However, such investigation in lymphomas is limited. In this study, PTEN cytoplasmic and nuclear expression, PTEN gene deletion, and PTEN mutations were evaluated in two independent cohorts of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). Cytoplasmic PTEN expression was found in approximately 67% of total 747 DLBCL cases, more frequently in the activated B-cell–like subtype. Nuclear PTEN expression was less frequent and at lower levels, which significantly correlated with higher PTEN mRNA expression. Remarkably, loss of PTEN protein expression was associated with poorer survival only in DLBCL with AKT hyperactivation. In contrast, high PTEN expression was associated with Myc expression and poorer survival in cases without abnormal AKT activation. Genetic and epigenetic mechanisms for loss of PTEN expression were investigated. PTEN deletions (mostly heterozygous) were detected in 11.3% of DLBCL, and showed opposite prognostic effects in patients with AKT hyperactivation and in MYC rearranged DLBCL patients. PTEN mutations, detected in 10.6% of patients, were associated with upregulation of genes involved in central nervous system function, metabolism, and AKT/mTOR signaling regulation. Loss of PTEN cytoplasmic expression was also associated with TP53 mutations, higher PTEN-targeting microRNA expression, and lower PD-L1 expression. Remarkably, low PTEN mRNA expression was associated with down-regulation of a group of genes involved in immune responses and B-cell development/differentiation, and poorer survival in DLBCL independent of AKT activation. Collectively, multi-levels of PTEN abnormalities and dysregulation may play important roles in PTEN expression and loss, and that loss of PTEN tumor-suppressor function contributes to the poor survival of DLBCL patients with AKT hyperactivation.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Bone marrow morphology is a strong discriminator between chronic eosinophilic leukemia, not otherwise specified and reactive idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome
- Author
-
Sa A. Wang, Robert P. Hasserjian, Wayne Tam, Albert G. Tsai, Julia T. Geyer, Tracy I. George, Kathryn Foucar, Heesun J. Rogers, Eric D. Hsi, Bryan A. Rea, Adam Bagg, Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos, Daniel A. Arber, Srdan Verstovsek, and Attilio Orazi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Chronic eosinophilic leukemia, not otherwise specified can be difficult to distinguish from idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome according to the current World Health Organization guideline. To examine whether the morphological features of bone marrow might aid in the differential diagnosis of these two entities, we studied a total of 139 patients with a diagnosis of chronic eosinophilic leukemia, not otherwise specified (n=17) or idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome (n=122). As a group, abnormal bone marrow morphological features, resembling myelodysplastic syndromes, myeloproliferative neoplasm or myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasm, were identified in 40/139 (27%) patients: 16 (94%) of those with chronic eosinophilic leukemia and 24 (20%) of those with hypereosinophilic syndrome. Abnormal bone marrow correlated with older age (P
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. PDGFRB-rearranged T-lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma occurring with myeloid neoplasms: the missing link supporting a stem cell origin
- Author
-
Sarah L. Ondrejka, Armin G. Jegalian, Annette S. Kim, Devon S. Chabot-Richards, Jennifer Giltnane, David R. Czuchlewski, Shashirekha Shetty, Mikkael A Sekeres, Ashwini Yenamandra, David Head, Madan Jagasia, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Complex or monosomal karyotype and not blast percentage is associated with poor survival in acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome patients with inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2): a Bone Marrow Pathology Group study
- Author
-
Heesun J. Rogers, James W. Vardiman, John Anastasi, Gordana Raca, Natasha M. Savage, Athena M. Cherry, Daniel Arber, Erika Moore, Jennifer JD. Morrissette, Adam Bagg, Yen-Chun Liu, Susan Mathew, Attilio Orazi, Pei Lin, Sa A. Wang, Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos, Kathryn Foucar, Robert P. Hasserjian, Ramon V. Tiu, Matthew Karafa, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic syndrome with inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2) have a poor prognosis. Indeed, the inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2) has been recognized as a poor risk karyotype in the revised International Prognostic Scoring System. However, inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2) is not among the cytogenetic abnormalities pathognomonic for diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia irrespective of blast percentage in the 2008 WHO classification. This multicenter study evaluated the clinico-pathological features of acute myeloid leukemia/myelodysplastic syndrome patients with inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2) and applied the revised International Prognostic Scoring System to myelodysplastic syndrome patients with inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2). A total of 103 inv(3)(q21q26.2)/t(3;3)(q21;q26.2) patients were reviewed and had a median bone marrow blast count of 4% in myelodysplastic syndrome (n=40) and 52% in acute myeloid leukemia (n=63) (P
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Mycobacterium avium Complex-Associated Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis in a Sickle Cell Patient: An Unusual Fatal Association
- Author
-
Mohammed A. R. Chamsi-Pasha, M. Chadi Alraies, Abdul Hamid Alraiyes, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a rare hyperinflammatory syndrome, characterized clinically by fever, splenomegaly, cytopenia, and high ferritin. Infectious causes have been associated with secondary HLH, with viruses being the most common. We report a case of Mycobacterium avium complex-associated HLH in a sickle cell anemia patient. To the best of our knowledge, this association has never been reported in sickle cell anemia.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A Cancer and Leukemia Group B multi-center study of DA-EPOCH-rituximab in untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma with analysis of outcome by molecular subtype
- Author
-
Wyndham H. Wilson, Sin-Ho Jung, Pierluigi Porcu, David Hurd, Jeffrey Johnson, S. Eric Martin, Myron Czuczman, Raymond Lai, Jonathan Said, Amy Chadburn, Dan Jones, Kieron Dunleavy, George Canellos, Andrew D. Zelenetz, Bruce D. Cheson, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Background A phase II trial of dose-adjusted etoposide, prednisone, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin and rituximab (DA-EPOCH-R) from the National Cancer Institute showed promising activity in untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The Cancer and Leukemia Group B conducted a study to determine if these results could be reproduced in a multi-institutional setting.Design and Methods The study included 69 patients with untreated diffuse large B-cell lymphoma at least 18 years of age and at least stage II. Radiaton therapy was not permitted on study. Median age was 58 years (range 23–83) and 40% had high-intermediate or high International Prognostic Index risk. Immunohistochemical biomarkers for cell of origin and proliferation were performed.Results With a median follow up of 62 months, time to progression and overall survival were 81% and 84%, respectively, and time to progression was 87%, 92% and 54% for low/low-intermediate, high-intermediate and high International Prognostic Index risk groups, respectively, at 5-years and beyond. The time to progression and event-free survival of germinal center B-cell lymphoma were 100% and 94%, respectively, and non-germinal center B-cell GCB diffuse large B-cell lymphoma were 67% and 58%, respectively, at 62 months (germinal center vs. non-germinal center B cell P=0.008). DA-EPOCH-R was tolerated without significant grade 4 non-hematologic toxicities.Conclusions These results provide the first confirmation by a multi-institutional group that DA-EPOCH-R provides high durable remissions in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and is effective in both germinal center and non-germinal center B-cell subtypes. The trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.Gov (NCT00032019).
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Detection of minimal residual disease following induction immunochemotherapy predicts progression free survival in mantle cell lymphoma: final results of CALGB 59909
- Author
-
Hongtao Liu, Jeffrey L. Johnson, Greg Koval, Greg Malnassy, Dorie Sher, Lloyd E. Damon, Eric D. Hsi, Donna Marie Bucci, Charles A. Linker, Bruce D. Cheson, and Wendy Stock
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Background In the present study, the prognostic impact of minimal residual disease during treatment on time to progression and overall survival was analyzed prospectively in patients with mantle cell lymphoma treated on the Cancer and Leukemia Group B 59909 clinical trial.Design and Methods Peripheral blood and bone marrow samples were collected during different phases of the Cancer and Leukemia Group B 59909 study for minimal residual disease analysis. Minimal residual disease status was determined by quantitative polymerase chain reaction of IgH and/or BCL-1/JH gene rearrangement. Correlation of minimal residual disease status with time to progression and overall survival was determined. In multivariable analysis, minimal residual disease, and other risk factors were correlated with time to progression.Results Thirty-nine patients had evaluable, sequential peripheral blood and bone marrow samples for minimal residual disease analysis. Using peripheral blood monitoring, 18 of 39 (46%) achieved molecular remission following induction therapy. The molecular remission rate increased from 46 to 74% after one course of intensification therapy. Twelve of 21 minimal residual disease positive patients (57%) progressed within three years of follow up compared to 4 of 18 (22%) molecular remission patients (P=0.049). Detection of minimal residual disease following induction therapy predicted disease progression with a hazard ratio of 3.7 (P=0.016). The 3-year probability of time to progression among those who were in molecular remission after induction chemotherapy was 82% compared to 48% in patients with detectable minimal residual disease. The prediction of time to progression by post-induction minimal residual disease was independent of other prognostic factors in multivariable analysis.Conclusions Detection of minimal residual disease following induction immunochemotherapy was an independent predictor of time to progression following immunochemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation for mantle cell lymphoma. The clinical trial was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00020943.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Indolent mantle cell leukemia: a clinicopathological variant characterized by isolated lymphocytosis, interstitial bone marrow involvement, kappa light chain restriction, and good prognosis
- Author
-
Sarah L. Ondrejka, Raymond Lai, Stephen D. Smith, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Background Cases of mantle cell lymphoma with indolent behavior have been reported, but are poorly identified by current clinical risk models. Early studies found peripheral blood involvement to be an adverse prognostic factor; however, cases of a seemingly indolent variant of mantle cell lymphoma, characterized by peripheral blood involvement and minimal nodal disease, have been incompletely described, particularly with regard to bone marrow findings. We report a series of leukemic phase mantle cell lymphomas with a non-progressive or slowly progressive course.Design and Methods Cases presenting with mantle cell lymphoma limited to the peripheral blood/bone marrow from 2000–2010 were identified. Diagnoses were established by morphology, flow cytometric analysis and requisite evidence of IGH-CCND1@ by fluorescence in-situ hybridization or t(11;14)(q13;q32) by cytogenetics. Patients with lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly and gastrointestinal symptomatology were excluded.Results Patients (n=8, median age 60.5 years) were asymptomatic with mild lymphocytosis (8.7×109/L; range, 4.5–14.2×109/L) and cytology typical of mantle cell lymphoma. Flow cytometric analysis showed that all expressed CD5, CD19, CD20, variable CD23, and a striking kappa immunoglobulin light chain restriction (7/8 cases). Bone marrow biopsy at diagnosis showed interstitial single or small lymphoid aggregates with similar patterns of CD20 and cyclin D1 immunostaining which were not readily discernable by hematoxylin and eosin stain. SOX11 was negative (4/5) or only weakly expressed (1/5). The median follow-up was 27 months (range, 5–109 months) and all patients, but one, are alive with no clinical evidence of disease. The prevalence of indolent mantle cell lymphoma presenting only with lymphocytosis, among all mantle cell lymphomas diagnosed during the same period, was 3%.Conclusions Leukemic mantle cell lymphoma limited to blood and bone marrow is an indolent variant characterized by mild-moderate lymphocytosis, interstitial low-level bone marrow involvement, simple karyotype, kappa light chain expression, cyclin D1 expression with lack of SOX11, and slow or absent clinical progression. Some cases may represent a mantle cell lymphoma counterpart to chronic lymphocytic leukemia – phenotype monoclonal B-cell lymphocytosis. Recognition of this variant could inform treatment decisions and possibly avoid unnecessary treatment.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Targeting C-type lectin-like molecule-1 for antibody-mediated immunotherapy in acute myeloid leukemia
- Author
-
Xiaoxian Zhao, Shweta Singh, Cecile Pardoux, Jingsong Zhao, Eric D. Hsi, Arie Abo, and Wouter Korver
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Background C-type lectin-like molecule-1 is a transmembrane receptor expressed on myeloid cells, acute myeloid leukemia blasts and leukemic stem cells. To validate the potential of this receptor as a therapeutic target in acute myeloid leukemia, we generated a series of monoclonal antibodies against the extracellular domain of C-type lectin-like molecule-1 and used them to extend the expression profile analysis of acute myeloid leukemia cells and to select cytotoxic monoclonal antibodies against acute myeloid leukemia cells in preclinical models.Design and Methods C-type lectin-like molecule-1 expression was analyzed in acute myeloid leukemia cell lines, and in myeloid derived cells from patients with acute myeloid leukemia and healthy donors. Anti-C-type lectin-like molecule-1 antibody-mediated in vitro cytotoxic activity against acute myeloid leukemia blasts/cell lines and in vivo anti-cancer activity in a mouse xenograft model were assessed. Internalization of C-type lectin-like molecule-1 monoclonal antibodies upon receptor ligation was also investigated.Results C-type lectin-like molecule-1 was expressed in 86.5% (45/52) of cases of acute myeloid leukemia, in 54.5% (12/22) of acute myeloid leukemia CD34+/CD38− stem cells, but not in acute lymphoblastic leukemia blasts (n=5). Selected anti-C-type lectin-like molecule-1 monoclonal antibodies mediated dose-dependent complement-dependent cytotoxicity and antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity specifically against acute myeloid leukemia-derived cell lines. Exogenous expression of the transmembrane receptor in HEK293 cells rendered the cells susceptible to antibody-mediated killing by monoclonal antibodies to the receptor. Furthermore, these monoclonal antibodies demonstrated strong complement-dependent cytotoxicity against freshly isolated acute myeloid leukemia blasts (15/16 cases; 94%). The monoclonal antibodies were efficiently internalized upon binding to C-type lectin-like molecule-1 in HL-60 cells. Moreover, a lead chimeric C-type lectin-like molecule-1 monoclonal antibody reduced the tumor size in xenograft mice implanted with HL-60 cells.Conclusions Our results demonstrate that targeting C-type lectin-like molecule-1 with specific cytotoxic monoclonal antibodies is an attractive approach which could lead to novel therapies for acute myeloid leukemia.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Differential diagnosis of cyclin D2+ mantle cell lymphoma based on fluorescence in situ hybridization and quantitative real-time-PCR
- Author
-
Leticia Quintanilla-Martinez, Julia Slotta-Huspenina, Ina Koch, Margit Klier, Eric D. Hsi, Laurence de Leval, Wolfram Klapper, Stefan Gesk, Reiner Siebert, and Falko Fend
- Subjects
Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
Mantle cell lymphoma is characterized by the t(11;14) chromosomal translocation, resulting in the overexpression of cyclin D1 (CycD1). Recently, cases of mantle cell lymphoma negative for cycD1 but positive for cycD2 or cycD3 were identified by gene expression profiling and confirmed by immunohistochemistry. We analyzed 4 cases of cycD2+ mantle cell lymphoma with a translocation involving the CCND2 locus, and its differential diagnosis from 35 mature B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas based on immunohistochemistry, quantitative RT-PCR and FISH analysis. Bona fide cycD2+ mantle cell lymphoma carried translocations involving the CCND2 gene, and IGH and IGK loci were identified as partners. As a result of this translocation, cycD2 mRNA was highly over-expressed when compared with normal lymphoid tissue and other B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas, including chronic lymphocytic leukemia, making this technique ideally suited to identify cycD2+mantle cell lymphoma. In contrast, positive immunostaining for cycD2 was found in most B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphomas, and therefore, it is not specific for a diagnosis of cycD2+mantle cell lymphoma.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Impact of diagnosis to treatment interval in patients with newly diagnosed mantle cell lymphoma
- Author
-
Narendranath, Epperla, Jeffrey M, Switchenko, Veronika, Bachanova, James N, Gerson, Stefan K, Barta, Max J, Gordon, Alexey V, Danilov, Natalie Sophia, Grover, Stephanie P, Mathews, Madelyn, Burkart, Reem, Karmali, Yazeed, Sawalha, Brian T, Hill, Nilanjan, Ghosh, Steven I, Park, David A, Bond, Mehdi, Hamadani, Timothy S, Fenske, Peter, Martin, Jin, Guo, Mary-Kate, Malecek, Brad S, Kahl, Christopher R, Flowers, Brian K, Link, Lawrence D, Kaplan, David J, Inwards, Andrew, Feldman, Eric D, Hsi, Kami, Maddocks, Kristie, Blum, Namcy L, Bartlett, James R, Cerhan, John P, Leonard, Thomas M, Habermann, Matthew J, Maurer, and Jonathon B, Cohen
- Subjects
Hematology - Abstract
The prognostic relevance of diagnosis to treatment interval (DTI) in patients with newly diagnosed mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) is unknown. Hence, we sought to evaluate the impact of DTI on outcomes in MCL using 3 large datasets (1) the University of Iowa/Mayo Clinic Specialized Program of Research Excellence Molecular Epidemiology Resource, (2) patients enrolled in the ALL Age Asthma Cohort/CALGB 50403, and (3) a multisitecohort of patients with MCL. Patients were a priori divided into 2 groups, 0 to 14 days (short DTI) and 15 to 60 days (long DTI). The patients in whom observation was deemed appropriate were excluded. One thousand ninety-seven patients newly diagnosed with MCL and available DTI were included in the study. The majority (73%) had long DTI (n=797). Patients with short DTI had worse eastern cooperative oncology group performance status (ECOG PS ≥2), higher lactate dehydrogenase, bone marrow involvement, more frequent B symptoms, higher MCL International Prognostic Index (MIPI ≥6.2), and were less likely to receive intensive induction therapy than long DTI group. The median progression-free survival (2.5 years vs 4.8 years, p
- Published
- 2023
25. Ki67 proliferation index in follicular lymphoma is associated with favorable outcome in patients treated with R-CHOP
- Author
-
Meredith M. Nichols, Sarah L. Ondrejka, Sujata Patil, Lisa Durkin, Brian T. Hill, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology ,Hematology - Published
- 2023
26. Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma and mantle cell lymphoma: from early lesions to transformation
- Author
-
Birgitta Sander, Elias Campo, and Eric D. Hsi
- Subjects
Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Abstract
The International Clinical Advisory Committee reviewed advances in our understanding of the clinicopathologic and biologic features of chronic lymphocytic leukaemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma, B-cell prolymphocytic leukaemia, and mantle cell lymphoma since the revised 4th edition of the WHO Classification of Tumours of the Haematopoietic and Lymphoid Tissues. Discussions amongst pathologists, clinicians, and molecular geneticists around these diseases focussed on incorporating new knowledge into the next classification system. In this manuscript, we review these disease entities and incorporate results of these deliberations, including advances in our understanding of early lesions and transformation.
- Published
- 2022
27. Mutations of ATM Confer a Risk of Inferior Survival in Patients with TP53-wild Type Mantle Cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Jean L. Koff, Rachel Kositsky, David L Jaye, Michael C. Churnetski, Katelin Baird, Colin B. O'Leary, Christopher R. Flowers, Sirpa Leppa, Marja-Liisa Karjalainen-Lindsberg, Shaoying Li, Jie Xu, Mette Ø Pedersen, Anne Ortved Gang, Kikkeri N Naresh, Rebecca J Leeman-Neill, Kwok Him Rex Au Yeung, Hina Naushad Qureishi, Javeed Iqbal, Jennifer R Chapman-Fredricks, Chad M. McCall, Michael Crump, Amy Chadburn, Erin C. Mulvey, Izidore S. Lossos, Sandra L. Ondrejka, Eric D. Hsi, Abner Louissaint, Haley Martin, Eric Tse, Cassandra Love, Tushar Dave, Clay Parker, Choon Kiat Ong, Andrew G Evans, Amir Behdad, Lixin Yang, Nishitha Reddy, Mary Ann Arildsen, Ridas Juskevicius, Jiong Yan, Magdalena Czader, Andrew M. Evens, Dina Sameh Soliman, Yuri Fedoriw, Sandeep S. Dave, and Jonathon B. Cohen
- Subjects
Immunology ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
28. Diagnostic approaches and future directions in Burkitt lymphoma and high-grade B-cell lymphoma
- Author
-
Rebecca L. King, Eric D. Hsi, Wing C. Chan, Miguel A. Piris, James R. Cook, David W. Scott, and Steven H. Swerdlow
- Subjects
Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Molecular Biology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Published
- 2022
29. The clinicopathologic significance of <scp> NPM1 </scp> mutation and ability to detect mutated <scp>NPM1</scp> by immunohistochemistry in <scp>non‐AML</scp> myeloid neoplasms
- Author
-
Hatem Kaseb, Valeria Visconte, Daniel S. Socha, Genevieve M. Crane, Lisa Durkin, James R. Cook, Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski, Eric D. Hsi, and Heesun J. Rogers
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Genetics - Published
- 2023
30. Data from Immune Profiling and Quantitative Analysis Decipher the Clinical Role of Immune-Checkpoint Expression in the Tumor Immune Microenvironment of DLBCL
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Gordon J. Freeman, Yong Li, George Z. Rassidakis, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Lan V. Pham, Jason R. Westin, Jane N. Winter, J. Han van Krieken, Miguel A. Piris, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Eric D. Hsi, Govind Bhagat, Hua You, Wayne Tam, Karen Dybkær, Jing Wang, Alexandar Tzankov, Hongwei Zhang, Xiaohong Tan, Yi Miao, Carlo Visco, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Raul Torres-Ruiz, Sandra Rodríguez-Perales, Nicholas Hoe, Bing Xu, Raghav Padmanabhan, Qingyan Au, Min Xiao, and Ziju Y. Xu-Monette
- Abstract
PD-1/L1 and CTLA-4 blockade immunotherapies have been approved for 13 types of cancers and are being studied in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the most common aggressive B-cell lymphoma. However, whether both PD-1 and CTLA-4 checkpoints are active and clinically significant in DLBCL is unknown. Whether PD-1 ligands expressed by tumor cells or by the microenvironment of DLBCL are critical for the PD-1 immune checkpoint is unclear. We performed immunophenotypic profiling for 405 patients with de novo DLBCL using a MultiOmyx immunofluorescence platform and simultaneously quantitated expression/coexpression of 13 immune markers to identify prognostic determinants. In both training and validation cohorts, results demonstrated a central role of the tumor immune microenvironment, and when its functionality was impaired by deficiency in tumor-infiltrating T cells and/or natural killer cells, high PD-1 expression (but not CTLA-4) on CD8+ T cells, or PD-L1 expression on T cells and macrophages, patients had significantly poorer survival after rituximab–CHOP (cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone) immunochemotherapy. In contrast, tumor-cell PD-L2 expression was associated with superior survival, as well as PD-L1+CD20+ cells proximal (indicates interaction) to PD-1+CD8+ T cells in patients with low PD-1+ percentage of CD8+ T cells. Gene-expression profiling results suggested the reversibility of T-cell exhaustion in PD-1+/PD-L1+ patients with unfavorable prognosis and implication of LILRA/B, IDO1, CHI3L1, and SOD2 upregulation in the microenvironment dysfunction with PD-L1 expression. This study comprehensively characterized the DLBCL immune landscape, deciphered the differential roles of various checkpoint components in rituximab–CHOP resistance in DLBCL patients, and suggests targets for PD-1/PD-L1 blockade and combination immunotherapies.
- Published
- 2023
31. Supplementary Tables S1 - S10 from The Genetic Basis of Hepatosplenic T-cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Sandeep S. Davé, David B. Dunson, Jyotishka Datta, Yuan Zhuang, Shawn Levy, Cassandra Love, Anupama Reddy, Deepthi Rajagopalan, Jenny Zhang, Guojie Li, Nicholas S. Davis, Randy D. Gascoyne, Sandra Basic-Kinda, Igor Aurer, John R. Goodlad, William W. L. Choi, Gopesh Srivastava, Rex K.H. Au-Yeung, Amy Chadburn, Andrew M. Evens, Monika Pilichowska, Pierre Sujobert, Anne Moreau, Marie Parrens, Lucile Baseggio, Mayur Parihar, Anne W. Beaven, Christopher R. Flowers, Leon Bernal-Mizrachi, Steven Horwitz, Neha Mehta-Shah, Wing C. Chan, Dennis Weisenburger, Lawrence Low, Eric D. Hsi, Sarah L. Ondrejka, Yuri Fedoriw, Kristy L. Richards, Jennifer R. Chapman-Fredricks, Izidore S. Lossos, Magdalena B. Czader, Virginie Fataccioli, Marie Helene Delfau-Larue, Karim Belhadj, Javeed Iqbal, Tayla Heavican, Liqiang Xi, Stefania Pittaluga, Elaine S. Jaffe, Mark Raffeld, Alina Nicolae, Laurence De Leval, Marion Travert, Philippe Gaulard, Andrea B. Moffitt, and Matthew McKinney
- Abstract
Supplementary Table S1. Sanger validated variants. Supplementary Table S2. Mutations in HSTL driver genes. Supplementary Table S3. Other mutations identified by exome sequencing. Supplementary Table S4. Copy number of HSTL patients and cell lines. Supplementary Table S5. Clinical and pathological characteristics of HSTL patients. Supplementary Tables S6, S7. Comparison to HSTL clinical data in the literature. Supplementary Table S8. Mutational frequencies in other lymphomas. Supplementary Table S9. HSTL mutations in other lymphoma driver genes. Supplementary Table S10. Gene set enrichment analysis of DERL2 SETD2 shRNA.
- Published
- 2023
32. Data from Aggressive B-cell Lymphoma with MYC/TP53 Dual Alterations Displays Distinct Clinicopathobiological Features and Response to Novel Targeted Agents
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Phillip Liu, Bing Xu, Yong Li, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, J. Han van Krieken, Fredrick Hagemeister, Benjamin M. Parsons, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Jooryung Huh, Hua You, Eric D. Hsi, Youli Zu, Wayne Tam, April Chiu, Karen Dybkaer, Govind Bhagat, Carlo Visco, Feng Zhu, Xiaosheng Fang, Alexandar Tzankov, Xudong Wang, Lan V. Pham, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, and Manman Deng
- Abstract
Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is the major type of aggressive B-cell lymphoma. High-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBCL) with MYC/BCL2 double-hit (DH) represents a distinct entity with dismal prognosis after standard immunochemotherapy in the current WHO lymphoma classification. However, whether TP53 mutation synergizes with MYC abnormalities (MYC rearrangement and/or Myc protein overexpression) contributing to HGBCL-like biology and prognosis is not well investigated. In this study, patients with DLBCL with MYC/TP53 abnormalities demonstrated poor clinical outcome, high-grade morphology, and distinct gene expression signatures. To identify more effective therapies for this distinctive DLBCL subset, novel MYC/TP53/BCL-2–targeted agents were investigated in DLBCL cells with MYC/TP53 dual alterations or HGBCL-MYC/BCL2-DH. A BET inhibitor INCB057643 effectively inhibited cell viability and induced apoptosis in DLBCL/HGBCL cells regardless of MYC/BCL2/TP53 status. Combining INCB057643 with a MDM2-p53 inhibitor DS3032b significantly enhanced the cytotoxic effects in HGBCL-DH without TP53 mutation, while combining with the BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax displayed potent therapeutic synergy in DLBCL/HGBCL cells with and without concurrent TP53 mutation. Reverse-phase protein arrays revealed the synergistic molecular actions by INCB057643, DS3032b and venetoclax to induce cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis and to inhibit AKT/MEK/ERK/mTOR pathways, as well as potential drug resistance mechanisms mediated by upregulation of Mcl-1 and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK pathways. In summary, these findings support subclassification of DLBCL/HGBCL with dual MYC/TP53 alterations, which demonstrates distinct pathobiologic features and dismal survival with standard therapy, therefore requiring additional targeted therapies.Implications:The clinical and pharmacologic studies suggest recognizing DLBCL with concomitant TP53 mutation and MYC abnormalities as a distinctive entity necessary for precision oncology practice.Visual Overview:http://mcr.aacrjournals.org/content/molcanres/19/2/249/F1.large.jpg.
- Published
- 2023
33. Supplementary Tables 1-5 and Supplementary Figures 1-8 from Aggressive B-cell Lymphoma with MYC/TP53 Dual Alterations Displays Distinct Clinicopathobiological Features and Response to Novel Targeted Agents
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Phillip Liu, Bing Xu, Yong Li, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, J. Han van Krieken, Fredrick Hagemeister, Benjamin M. Parsons, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Jooryung Huh, Hua You, Eric D. Hsi, Youli Zu, Wayne Tam, April Chiu, Karen Dybkaer, Govind Bhagat, Carlo Visco, Feng Zhu, Xiaosheng Fang, Alexandar Tzankov, Xudong Wang, Lan V. Pham, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, and Manman Deng
- Abstract
Supplementary Table S1. Clinicopathologic characteristics of patients with de novo DLBCL with dual MYC/TP53 aberrations Supplementary Table S2. Frequency of single or dual abnormal Myc protein, p53 protein, BCL2 protein, MYC gene, and TP53 gene in the studied patients with DLBCL treated with R-CHOP Supplementary Table S3. Prognostic factors by univariate analysis and multivariate analysis in DLBCL Supplementary Table S4. Gene expression signatures identified by comparing DLBCL patients with concurrent MYC-R Mut-TP53 or Mychigh Mut-TP53 alterations (double-positive) with DLBCL patients withSupplementary Table S5. Molecular, genetic and phenotypic status of 8 DLBCL/HGBCL cell lines by targeted next-generation sequencing, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and immunohistochemistry analysis none or the alterations (double-negative) Supplementary Figure S1. Morphologic and immunophenotypic features of DLBCL with MYC rearrangement (MYC-R) and TP53 mutation (Mut-TP53) dual-alterations and highgrade B-cell lymphoma (HGBCL) with MYC/BCL2 double-hit (DH) in representative patients. Supplementary Figure S2. Prognostic impact of p53 and Myc protein overexpression as single or double abnormalities in overall DLBCL and GCB/ABC subtypes. Supplementary Figure S3. Heatmap for gene expression signatures of MYC/TP53 dual alterations. Supplementary Figure S4. Representative figures of flow cytometric analysis indicating G2/M phase-cell cycle arrest by NCB057643 treatment for 24 hours in cells with MYC-R or Myc overexpression with Wt-TP53 (OCI-LY19) or Mut-TP53 (GR and TMD8). Supplementary Figure S5. Heatmap for significantly up- or downregulated proteins after INCB057643 treatment (5µM, 24 hours) in OCI-LY19 cells. Supplementary Figure S6. A MDM2 inhibitor DS3032b shows cytotoxic effects selectively in high-grade B-cell lymphoma (HGBCL) with MYC/BCL2 double-hit (DH) and wild-type (Wt) TP53. Supplementary Figure S7. Combined DS3032b and INCB057643 treatment has no synergistic cytotoxicity in DLBCL cell lines with MYC aberrations and TP53 mutation (MutTP53). Supplementary Figure S8. INCB057643 treatment (1.25 µM) alone or in combination with ABT-199 (venetoclax, 6.25 mM) for 24 hours induced p21 expression in TMD8 cells, whereas had no effect on p53 (mutant) expression levels.
- Published
- 2023
34. Supplementary Figures 1-3 from Immune Profiling and Quantitative Analysis Decipher the Clinical Role of Immune-Checkpoint Expression in the Tumor Immune Microenvironment of DLBCL
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Gordon J. Freeman, Yong Li, George Z. Rassidakis, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Lan V. Pham, Jason R. Westin, Jane N. Winter, J. Han van Krieken, Miguel A. Piris, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Eric D. Hsi, Govind Bhagat, Hua You, Wayne Tam, Karen Dybkær, Jing Wang, Alexandar Tzankov, Hongwei Zhang, Xiaohong Tan, Yi Miao, Carlo Visco, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Raul Torres-Ruiz, Sandra Rodríguez-Perales, Nicholas Hoe, Bing Xu, Raghav Padmanabhan, Qingyan Au, Min Xiao, and Ziju Y. Xu-Monette
- Abstract
Supplementary Figures S1 to S3
- Published
- 2023
35. Supplementary Methods, Figures S1 - S9 from The Genetic Basis of Hepatosplenic T-cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Sandeep S. Davé, David B. Dunson, Jyotishka Datta, Yuan Zhuang, Shawn Levy, Cassandra Love, Anupama Reddy, Deepthi Rajagopalan, Jenny Zhang, Guojie Li, Nicholas S. Davis, Randy D. Gascoyne, Sandra Basic-Kinda, Igor Aurer, John R. Goodlad, William W. L. Choi, Gopesh Srivastava, Rex K.H. Au-Yeung, Amy Chadburn, Andrew M. Evens, Monika Pilichowska, Pierre Sujobert, Anne Moreau, Marie Parrens, Lucile Baseggio, Mayur Parihar, Anne W. Beaven, Christopher R. Flowers, Leon Bernal-Mizrachi, Steven Horwitz, Neha Mehta-Shah, Wing C. Chan, Dennis Weisenburger, Lawrence Low, Eric D. Hsi, Sarah L. Ondrejka, Yuri Fedoriw, Kristy L. Richards, Jennifer R. Chapman-Fredricks, Izidore S. Lossos, Magdalena B. Czader, Virginie Fataccioli, Marie Helene Delfau-Larue, Karim Belhadj, Javeed Iqbal, Tayla Heavican, Liqiang Xi, Stefania Pittaluga, Elaine S. Jaffe, Mark Raffeld, Alina Nicolae, Laurence De Leval, Marion Travert, Philippe Gaulard, Andrea B. Moffitt, and Matthew McKinney
- Abstract
Supplementary Figure S1. Sanger sequencing chromatograms. Supplementary Figure S2. Cancer cell fraction for driver genes. Supplementary Figure S3. Ideogram with chromosome 7 alterations. Supplementary Figure S4. Examples of Exome Copy Number. Supplementary Figure S5. Exploratory Kaplan-Meier plots for clinical covariates. Supplementary Figure S6. Exploratory Kaplan-Meier plots for molecular covariates. Supplementary Figure S7. Sanger and exome sequencing validation of SETD2 biallelic mutation in one HSTL case. Supplementary Figure S8. SETD2 expression in mutant vs. wildtype cases. Supplementary Figure S9. Mutual exclusivity of STAT5B, PIK3CD, and STAT3 mutations.
- Published
- 2023
36. Table S1 from LRRC15 Is a Novel Mesenchymal Protein and Stromal Target for Antibody–Drug Conjugates
- Author
-
Debra T. Chao, Eric D. Hsi, Susan E. Morgan-Lappe, Kurt Gish, Diane Hollenbaugh, Sasmita Mishra, Joann P. Palma, Dong Zhang, Josue Samayoa, Subashri Kumar, Thomas McGonigal, Kelly Foster, Rick Powers, Tamar Uziel, Lisa Durkin, Mien Sho, Melvin Fox, Jonathan Hickson, Sonia G. Tanlimco, and James W. Purcell
- Abstract
Cross species binding and tolerability of ABBV-085.
- Published
- 2023
37. Supplementary Figures S1-S7 from LRRC15 Is a Novel Mesenchymal Protein and Stromal Target for Antibody–Drug Conjugates
- Author
-
Debra T. Chao, Eric D. Hsi, Susan E. Morgan-Lappe, Kurt Gish, Diane Hollenbaugh, Sasmita Mishra, Joann P. Palma, Dong Zhang, Josue Samayoa, Subashri Kumar, Thomas McGonigal, Kelly Foster, Rick Powers, Tamar Uziel, Lisa Durkin, Mien Sho, Melvin Fox, Jonathan Hickson, Sonia G. Tanlimco, and James W. Purcell
- Abstract
Figures S1-S7 show LRRC15 RNA and protein expression in cancer, and demonstrate the anti-tumor efficacy of the LRRC15-targeted ADC ABBV-085 in vitro and in vivo as a monotherapy and in combination with standard-of-care therapies.
- Published
- 2023
38. Supplementary Table 1 from Prevalence and Clinical Implications of Epstein–Barr Virus Infection in De Novo Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma in Western Countries
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Roberto N. Miranda, Carlo E. Bueso-Ramos, Michael B. Møller, John P. Farnen, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Weiyun Ai, Jooryung Huh, J. Han van Krieken, William W. L. Choi, Eric D. Hsi, Kristy L. Richards, Jiayu Chen, Govind Bhagat, Youli Zu, Attilio Orazi, April Chiu, Karen Dybaer, Santiago Montes-Moreno, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Alexander Tzankov, Carlo Visco, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Ling Li, and Chi Young Ok
- Abstract
PDF file - 57KB, Supplemental Table 1. Genes differently expressed in EBV+ DLBCL vs. EBV-negative DLBCL. A. Genes upregulated in EBV+ DLBCL; B. Genes downregulated in EBV+ DLBCL
- Published
- 2023
39. Supplementary Figure 1 from Prevalence and Clinical Implications of Epstein–Barr Virus Infection in De Novo Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma in Western Countries
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Roberto N. Miranda, Carlo E. Bueso-Ramos, Michael B. Møller, John P. Farnen, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Weiyun Ai, Jooryung Huh, J. Han van Krieken, William W. L. Choi, Eric D. Hsi, Kristy L. Richards, Jiayu Chen, Govind Bhagat, Youli Zu, Attilio Orazi, April Chiu, Karen Dybaer, Santiago Montes-Moreno, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Alexander Tzankov, Carlo Visco, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Ling Li, and Chi Young Ok
- Abstract
PDF file - 3781KB, Supplemental Figure 1. Morphologic subtypes of EBV+ DLBCL. A, E, I, and M. The monomorphic subtype is composed of monotonous sheets of large transformed B-cells. B, F, J and N. The polymorphic subtype, canonical large B-cell neoplasm variant contains high density of large neoplastic cells and scattered cells with HRS-like features. C, G, K and O. The polymorphic subtype, Hodgkin-like variant shows lower density of neoplastic cells with HRS-like features. D, H, L and P. The polymorphic subtype, lymphoproliferative disorder-like variant has low density of neoplastic cells without Hodgkin lymphoma-like features. By immunohistochemistry, the monomorphic variant had a GCB phenotype, but all 3 polymorphic variants showed non-GCB phenotype.
- Published
- 2023
40. Supplementary Data from Antibodies to TWEAK Receptor Inhibit Human Tumor Growth through Dual Mechanisms
- Author
-
Robert Dubridge, Vanitha Ramakrishnan, David B. Powers, Debra T. Chao, Eric D. Hsi, Marjorie James, Marie Cardenas, Jennifer Grove, Ferdinand Evangelista, Melanie H.L. Wong, Roxanne Steinle, Mien Sho, Mian Su, Suzanne E. Ybarra, Pui Seto, Johnny Yin, Yongke Zhang, Donghee Choi, and Patricia A. Culp
- Abstract
Supplementary Data from Antibodies to TWEAK Receptor Inhibit Human Tumor Growth through Dual Mechanisms
- Published
- 2023
41. Supplemental Table 1 from MYD88 L265P Mutation in Lymphoid Malignancies
- Author
-
Yong Li, Mingzhi Zhang, Ken H. Young, Eric D. Hsi, Ling Li, Qipan Deng, Wei Li, and Xinfang Yu
- Abstract
Supplemental Table 1 shows detailed MYD88 L265P mutation frequency in B cell neoplasms. Data are summarized from all publications in PUBMED containing "MYD88 L265P".
- Published
- 2023
42. Data from Antibodies to TWEAK Receptor Inhibit Human Tumor Growth through Dual Mechanisms
- Author
-
Robert Dubridge, Vanitha Ramakrishnan, David B. Powers, Debra T. Chao, Eric D. Hsi, Marjorie James, Marie Cardenas, Jennifer Grove, Ferdinand Evangelista, Melanie H.L. Wong, Roxanne Steinle, Mien Sho, Mian Su, Suzanne E. Ybarra, Pui Seto, Johnny Yin, Yongke Zhang, Donghee Choi, and Patricia A. Culp
- Abstract
Purpose: Targeted therapeutics have significantly changed the outcome for patients diagnosed with cancer. Still, effective therapeutic intervention does not exist for many cancers and much remains to be done. The objective of this study was to identify novel genes that potentially regulate tumor growth, to target these gene products with monoclonal antibodies, and to examine the therapeutic potential of these antibodies.Experimental Design: Using cDNA microarray analysis, we identified genes overexpressed in several solid malignancies. We generated a mouse monoclonal antibody, 19.2.1, and its humanized counterpart, PDL192, to one such target, TweakR (TWEAK receptor, Fn14, TNFRSF12A, CD266), and characterized the antitumor activities in vitro and in mouse xenograft models.Results: Both 19.2.1 (mouse IgG2a) and PDL192 (human IgG1), like TWEAK, the natural ligand of TweakR, inhibited the growth of several TweakR-expressing cancer cell lines in anchorage-dependent and anchorage-independent assays in vitro. Both antibodies showed significant antitumor activity in multiple mouse xenograft models. PDL192 and 19.2.1 also induced antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) of cancer cell lines in vitro. A chimeric version of 19.2.1 containing the mouse IgG1 Fc region (19.2.1×G1) exhibited significantly less ADCC than 19.2.1. However, 19.2.1×G1 showed differential activity in vivo, with activity equivalent to 19.2.1 in one model, but significantly less efficacy than 19.2.1 in a second model. These results indicate that PDL192 and 19.2.1 mediate their antitumor effects by signaling through TweakR, resulting in reduced tumor cell proliferation, and by ADCC. Clin Cancer Res; 16(2); 497–508
- Published
- 2023
43. Data from Prevalence and Clinical Implications of Epstein–Barr Virus Infection in De Novo Diffuse Large B-Cell Lymphoma in Western Countries
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Miguel A. Piris, Jane N. Winter, Roberto N. Miranda, Carlo E. Bueso-Ramos, Michael B. Møller, John P. Farnen, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Weiyun Ai, Jooryung Huh, J. Han van Krieken, William W. L. Choi, Eric D. Hsi, Kristy L. Richards, Jiayu Chen, Govind Bhagat, Youli Zu, Attilio Orazi, April Chiu, Karen Dybaer, Santiago Montes-Moreno, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Alexander Tzankov, Carlo Visco, Zijun Y. Xu-Monette, Ling Li, and Chi Young Ok
- Abstract
Purpose: Epstein–Barr virus–positive (EBV+) diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) of the elderly is a variant of DLBCL with worse outcome that occurs most often in East-Asian countries and is uncommon in the Western hemisphere. We studied the largest cohort of EBV+ DLBCL, independent of age, treated with rituximab combined with CHOP (R-CHOP) in developed Western countries.Experimental design: A large cohort (n = 732) of patients with DLBCL treated with R-CHOP chemotherapy is included from the multicenter consortium. This study group has been studied for expression of different biomarkers by immunohistochemistry, genetic abnormalities by FISH and mutation analysis, genomic information by gene expression profiling (GEP), and gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA).Results: Twenty-eight patients (4.0%) were positive for EBV with a median age of 60.5 years. No clinical characteristics distinguished patients with EBV+ DLBCL from patients with EBV-negative (EBV−) DLBCL. Genetic aberrations were rarely seen. NF-κB p50, phosphorylated STAT-3, and CD30 were more commonly expressed in EBV+ DLBCLs (P < 0.05). Significant differences in survival were not observed in patients with EBV+ DLBCL versus EBV− DLBCL. However, CD30 expression combined with EBV conferred an inferior outcome. GEP showed a unique expression signature in EBV+ DLBCL. GSEA revealed enhanced activity of the NF-κB and JAK/STAT pathways independent of molecular subtype.Conclusions: The clinical characteristics of patients with EBV+ versus EBV− DLBCL are similar and EBV infection does not predict a worse outcome. EBV+ DLBCL, however, has a unique genetic signature. CD30 expression is more common in EBV+ DLBCL and, consistent CD30 and EBV is associated with an adverse outcome. Clin Cancer Res; 20(9); 2338–49. ©2014 AACR.
- Published
- 2023
44. Supplmentary Documents including Methods, Tables, and Legends for Supplementary Figures, and Supplementary Figure S1-S5 from Clinical and Biologic Significance of MYC Genetic Mutations in De Novo Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Yong Li, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, Roberto N. Miranda, Sa A. Wang, Michael B. Møller, Ben M. Parsons, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Jooryung Huh, J. Han van Krieken, William W.L. Choi, Eric D. Hsi, Kristy L. Richards, Govind Bhagat, Youli Zu, Attilio Orazi, April Chiu, Santiago Montes-Moreno, Han Liang, Li Zhang, Jun Li, Karen Dybkær, Carlo Visco, Dehui Zou, Xiao-xiao Wang, Yi Xia, Ling Li, Alexander Tzankov, Ganiraju C. Manyam, Qipan Deng, and Zijun Y. Xu-Monette
- Abstract
The supplementary documents include: (1) Supplementary methods for detection of MYC mutations and rearrangements, assessment of Myc expression, and functional studies. (2) Supplementary Tables S1-S8. Supplementary Table S1. Numbers of MYC mutation present in the coding sequence and the untranslated regions. Supplementary Table S2. Clinical and molecular characteristics of the DLBCL cohort with wild-type or mutated Myc or N11S single nucleotide polymorphism. Supplementary Table S3. List of Myc mutations and corresponding patient survival. Supplementary Table S4. Multivariate survival analysis. Supplementary Table S5. Molecular characteristics of patients with wild-type or mutated MYC untranslated regions. Supplementary Table S6. List of MYC 3Ã,'UTR mutations and corresponding patient survival. Supplementary Table S7. Gene profiling comparisons between wild-type and mutated MYC. Supplementary Table S8. Brief summary of major findings by this study. (3) Legends for Supplementary Figures S1-S5. Supplementary Figure S1. Survival analysis for MYC mutations in DLBCL respective to GCB/ABC subtypes, homo/heterozygosity, and MYC translocations. Supplementary Figure S2. Comparison of Myc levels and gene expression profiles between DLBCL groups. Supplementary Figure S3. Differential expression of genes between the WT-Myc and MUT-Myc groups. Supplementary Figure S4. Comparison of gene expression between the WT-Myc and MUT-Myc groups. Supplementary Figure S5. Differential expression of proteins between the WT-Myc and MUT-Myc groups.
- Published
- 2023
45. Data from Expression of p21 Protein Predicts Clinical Outcome in DLBCL Patients Older than 60 Years Treated with R-CHOP but not CHOP: A Prospective ECOG and Southwest Oncology Group Correlative Study on E4494
- Author
-
Randy D. Gascoyne, Sandra J. Horning, John C. Reed, Ari Melnick, Edie A. Weller, James K. Weick, L. Jeffrey Medeiros, Eric D. Hsi, Raymond E. Felgar, Mukesh Chhanabhai, William R. Macon, Richard I. Fisher, Thomas M. Habermann, Lijun Zhang, Maryla Krajewska, Beverly Nelson, Daina Variakojis, Vikas Aurora, Shuli Li, and Jane N. Winter
- Abstract
Purpose: To prospectively investigate the prognostic significance of p21 and p53 expression in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in the context of the U.S. Intergroup trial comparing conventional cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP) chemotherapy to rituximab-CHOP (R-CHOP) induction, with or without maintenance rituximab.Experimental Design: Immunohistochemical staining of 197 paraffin-embedded biopsy specimens was scored by an independent panel of experts.Results: The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p21, was expressed in 55% of cases examined. In a multivariable analysis adjusting for International Prognostic Index score and BCL2 status, p21 expression was a significant, independent, favorable predictive factor for failure-free survival (relative risk, 0.3; P = 0.001) and overall survival (relative risk, 0.3; P = 0.003) for patients treated with R-CHOP. Expression of p21 was not predictive of outcome for CHOP-treated patients.Only p21-positive cases benefited from the addition of rituximab to CHOP. Among p21-positive patients, treatment with R-CHOP was associated with a higher failure-free survival rate at 5 years compared with CHOP (61% versus 24%; P = 0.01). In contrast, no significant differences were detected in failure-free survival according to treatment arm for p21-negative patients. Expression of p53, alone or in combination with p21, did not predict for outcome in univariable or multivariable analyses.Conclusions: In this study, p21 protein expression emerged as an important independent predictor of a favorable clinical outcome when rituximab was added to CHOP therapy. These data suggest that rituximab-related effects on lymphoma survival pathways may be functionally linked to p21 activity. Clin Cancer Res; 16(8); 2435–42. ©2010 AACR.
- Published
- 2023
46. Data from Genetic Subtyping and Phenotypic Characterization of the Immune Microenvironment and MYC/BCL2 Double Expression Reveal Heterogeneity in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Hua You, Maher Albitar, Bing Xu, Yong Li, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, J. Han van Krieken, Benjamin M. Parsons, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Heounjeong Go, Xin Han, Xiaoping Sun, Fredrick B. Hagemeister, Eric D. Hsi, Youli Zu, Wayne Tam, April Chiu, Karen Dybkaer, Govind Bhagat, Carlo Visco, Feng Zhu, Alexandar Tzankov, Máté Nagy, Harry Nunns, Qingyan Au, Xiaosheng Fang, Li Wei, and Zijun Y. Xu-Monette
- Abstract
Purpose:Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is molecularly and clinically heterogeneous, and can be subtyped according to genetic alterations, cell-of-origin, or microenvironmental signatures using high-throughput genomic data at the DNA or RNA level. Although high-throughput proteomic profiling has not been available for DLBCL subtyping, MYC/BCL2 protein double expression (DE) is an established prognostic biomarker in DLBCL. The purpose of this study is to reveal the relative prognostic roles of DLBCL genetic, phenotypic, and microenvironmental biomarkers.Experimental Design:We performed targeted next-generation sequencing; IHC for MYC, BCL2, and FN1; and fluorescent multiplex IHC for microenvironmental markers in a large cohort of DLBCL. We performed correlative and prognostic analyses within and across DLBCL genetic subtypes and MYC/BCL2 double expressors.Results:We found that MYC/BCL2 double-high-expression (DhE) had significant adverse prognostic impact within the EZB genetic subtype and LymphGen-unclassified DLBCL cases but not within MCD and ST2 genetic subtypes. Conversely, KMT2D mutations significantly stratified DhE but not non-DhE DLBCL. T-cell infiltration showed favorable prognostic effects within BN2, MCD, and DhE but unfavorable effects within ST2 and LymphGen-unclassified cases. FN1 and PD-1–high expression had significant adverse prognostic effects within multiple DLBCL genetic/phenotypic subgroups. The prognostic effects of DhE and immune biomarkers within DLBCL genetic subtypes were independent although DhE and high Ki-67 were significantly associated with lower T-cell infiltration in LymphGen-unclassified cases.Conclusions:Together, these results demonstrated independent and additive prognostic effects of phenotypic MYC/BCL2 and microenvironment biomarkers and genetic subtyping in DLBCL prognostication, important for improving DLBCL classification and identifying prognostic determinants and therapeutic targets.
- Published
- 2023
47. Supplementary Figure from Genetic Subtyping and Phenotypic Characterization of the Immune Microenvironment and MYC/BCL2 Double Expression Reveal Heterogeneity in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Hua You, Maher Albitar, Bing Xu, Yong Li, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, J. Han van Krieken, Benjamin M. Parsons, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Heounjeong Go, Xin Han, Xiaoping Sun, Fredrick B. Hagemeister, Eric D. Hsi, Youli Zu, Wayne Tam, April Chiu, Karen Dybkaer, Govind Bhagat, Carlo Visco, Feng Zhu, Alexandar Tzankov, Máté Nagy, Harry Nunns, Qingyan Au, Xiaosheng Fang, Li Wei, and Zijun Y. Xu-Monette
- Abstract
Supplementary Figure from Genetic Subtyping and Phenotypic Characterization of the Immune Microenvironment and MYC/BCL2 Double Expression Reveal Heterogeneity in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
- Published
- 2023
48. Supplementary Figure Legends from LRRC15 Is a Novel Mesenchymal Protein and Stromal Target for Antibody–Drug Conjugates
- Author
-
Debra T. Chao, Eric D. Hsi, Susan E. Morgan-Lappe, Kurt Gish, Diane Hollenbaugh, Sasmita Mishra, Joann P. Palma, Dong Zhang, Josue Samayoa, Subashri Kumar, Thomas McGonigal, Kelly Foster, Rick Powers, Tamar Uziel, Lisa Durkin, Mien Sho, Melvin Fox, Jonathan Hickson, Sonia G. Tanlimco, and James W. Purcell
- Abstract
Supplementary Figure Legends
- Published
- 2023
49. Supplementary Data from Genetic Subtyping and Phenotypic Characterization of the Immune Microenvironment and MYC/BCL2 Double Expression Reveal Heterogeneity in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
- Author
-
Ken H. Young, Hua You, Maher Albitar, Bing Xu, Yong Li, Jane N. Winter, Miguel A. Piris, J. Han van Krieken, Benjamin M. Parsons, Michael B. Møller, Andrés J.M. Ferreri, Maurilio Ponzoni, Heounjeong Go, Xin Han, Xiaoping Sun, Fredrick B. Hagemeister, Eric D. Hsi, Youli Zu, Wayne Tam, April Chiu, Karen Dybkaer, Govind Bhagat, Carlo Visco, Feng Zhu, Alexandar Tzankov, Máté Nagy, Harry Nunns, Qingyan Au, Xiaosheng Fang, Li Wei, and Zijun Y. Xu-Monette
- Abstract
Supplementary Data from Genetic Subtyping and Phenotypic Characterization of the Immune Microenvironment and MYC/BCL2 Double Expression Reveal Heterogeneity in Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma
- Published
- 2023
50. Data from MYD88 L265P Mutation in Lymphoid Malignancies
- Author
-
Yong Li, Mingzhi Zhang, Ken H. Young, Eric D. Hsi, Ling Li, Qipan Deng, Wei Li, and Xinfang Yu
- Abstract
Next-generation sequencing has revealed cancer genomic landscapes, in which over 100 driver genes that, when altered by intragenic mutations, can promote oncogenesis. MYD88 is a driver gene found in hematologic B-cell malignancies. A missense mutation (L265P) changing leucine at position 265 to proline in MYD88 is found in ∼90% of Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM) cases and in significant portions of activated B-cell diffuse large B-cell lymphomas and IgM monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. Few cancers such as WM have a single amino acid substitution in one gene like MYD88 L265P that occurs in ∼90% of cases, making WM paradigmatic for study of a single causative mutation in oncogenesis. In this review, we summarize the frequency and cancer spectrum of MYD88 L265P and its downstream effects in lymphoid cancers. Malignant B cells with MYD88 L265P are likely transformed from IgM-producing B cells either in response to T-cell–independent antigens or in response to protein antigens before class switching. We also discuss therapeutic strategies that include targeting Bruton tyrosine kinase and other kinases, interfering with the assembly of MYD88 and its interacting partners, and MYD88 L265P-specific peptide-based immunotherapy. Cancer Res; 78(10); 2457–62. ©2018 AACR.
- Published
- 2023
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.