107 results on '"Hatzimihalis, A"'
Search Results
2. Evaluation of pharmacogenomics and hepatic nuclear imaging–related covariates by population pharmacokinetic models of irinotecan and its metabolites
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Liu, Zheng, Martin, Jennifer H., Liauw, Winston, McLachlan, Sue-Anne, Link, Emma, Matera, Anetta, Thompson, Michael, Jefford, Michael, Hicks, Rod J., Cullinane, Carleen, Hatzimihalis, Athena, Campbell, Ian, Crowley, Simone, Beale, Phillip J., Karapetis, Christos S., Price, Timothy, Burge, Mathew E., and Michael, Michael
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- 2022
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3. Pharmacogenomics and functional imaging to predict irinotecan pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics: the predict IR study
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Michael, Michael, Liauw, Winston, McLachlan, Sue-Anne, Link, Emma, Matera, Annetta, Thompson, Michael, Jefford, Michael, Hicks, Rod J., Cullinane, Carleen, Hatzimihalis, Athena, Campbell, Ian G., Rowley, Simone, Beale, Phillip J., Karapetis, Christos S., Price, Timothy, and Burge, Mathew E.
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- 2021
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4. Detection of cell-free microbial DNA using a contaminant-controlled analysis framework
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Enrique Zozaya-Valdés, Stephen Q. Wong, Jeanette Raleigh, Athena Hatzimihalis, Sarah Ftouni, Anthony T. Papenfuss, Shahneen Sandhu, Mark A. Dawson, and Sarah-Jane Dawson
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Cell-free microbial DNA ,Plasma ,Microbiome ,Cancer ,Contamination ,16S rRNA gene ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background The human microbiome plays an important role in cancer. Accumulating evidence indicates that commensal microbiome-derived DNA may be represented in minute quantities in the cell-free DNA of human blood and could possibly be harnessed as a new cancer biomarker. However, there has been limited use of rigorous experimental controls to account for contamination, which invariably affects low-biomass microbiome studies. Results We apply a combination of 16S-rRNA-gene sequencing and droplet digital PCR to determine if the specific detection of cell-free microbial DNA (cfmDNA) is possible in metastatic melanoma patients. Compared to matched stool and saliva samples, the absolute concentration of cfmDNA is low but significantly above the levels detected from negative controls. The microbial community of plasma is strongly influenced by laboratory and reagent contaminants introduced during the DNA extraction and sequencing processes. Through the application of an in silico decontamination strategy including the filtering of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) with batch dependent abundances and those with a higher prevalence in negative controls, we identify known gut commensal bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium, Bacteroides and Ruminococcus, and also other uncharacterised ASVs. We analyse additional plasma samples, highlighting the potential of this framework to identify differences in cfmDNA between healthy and cancer patients. Conclusions Together, these observations indicate that plasma can harbour a low yet detectable level of cfmDNA. The results highlight the importance of accounting for contamination and provide an analytical decontamination framework to allow the accurate detection of cfmDNA for future biomarker studies in cancer and other diseases.
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- 2021
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5. Evolution of late-stage metastatic melanoma is dominated by aneuploidy and whole genome doubling
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Ismael A. Vergara, Christopher P. Mintoff, Shahneen Sandhu, Lachlan McIntosh, Richard J. Young, Stephen Q. Wong, Andrew Colebatch, Daniel L. Cameron, Julia Lai Kwon, Rory Wolfe, Angela Peng, Jason Ellul, Xuelin Dou, Clare Fedele, Samantha Boyle, Gisela Mir Arnau, Jeanette Raleigh, Athena Hatzimihalis, Pacman Szeto, Jennifer Mooi, Daniel S. Widmer, Phil F. Cheng, Valerie Amann, Reinhard Dummer, Nicholas Hayward, James Wilmott, Richard A. Scolyer, Raymond J. Cho, David Bowtell, Heather Thorne, Kathryn Alsop, Stephen Cordner, Noel Woodford, Jodie Leditschke, Patricia O’Brien, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Grant A. McArthur, Graham J. Mann, Mitchell P. Levesque, Anthony T. Papenfuss, and Mark Shackleton
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Science - Abstract
The genetic changes that occur in late stage metastatic melanoma are not well delineated. Here, the authors use rapid autopsy samples from metastatic melanoma patients and show that the late stage in the disease is characterised by whole genome doubling and aneuploidy.
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- 2021
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6. Detection of cell-free microbial DNA using a contaminant-controlled analysis framework
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Zozaya-Valdés, Enrique, Wong, Stephen Q., Raleigh, Jeanette, Hatzimihalis, Athena, Ftouni, Sarah, Papenfuss, Anthony T., Sandhu, Shahneen, Dawson, Mark A., and Dawson, Sarah-Jane
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- 2021
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7. Evolution of late-stage metastatic melanoma is dominated by aneuploidy and whole genome doubling
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Vergara, Ismael A., Mintoff, Christopher P., Sandhu, Shahneen, McIntosh, Lachlan, Young, Richard J., Wong, Stephen Q., Colebatch, Andrew, Cameron, Daniel L., Kwon, Julia Lai, Wolfe, Rory, Peng, Angela, Ellul, Jason, Dou, Xuelin, Fedele, Clare, Boyle, Samantha, Arnau, Gisela Mir, Raleigh, Jeanette, Hatzimihalis, Athena, Szeto, Pacman, Mooi, Jennifer, Widmer, Daniel S., Cheng, Phil F., Amann, Valerie, Dummer, Reinhard, Hayward, Nicholas, Wilmott, James, Scolyer, Richard A., Cho, Raymond J., Bowtell, David, Thorne, Heather, Alsop, Kathryn, Cordner, Stephen, Woodford, Noel, Leditschke, Jodie, O’Brien, Patricia, Dawson, Sarah-Jane, McArthur, Grant A., Mann, Graham J., Levesque, Mitchell P., Papenfuss, Anthony T., and Shackleton, Mark
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- 2021
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8. Prediction and monitoring of relapse in stage III melanoma using circulating tumor DNA
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Tan, L., Sandhu, S., Lee, R.J., Li, J., Callahan, J., Ftouni, S., Dhomen, N., Middlehurst, P., Wallace, A., Raleigh, J., Hatzimihalis, A., Henderson, M.A., Shackleton, M., Haydon, A., Mar, V., Gyorki, D.E., Oudit, D., Dawson, M.A., Hicks, R.J., Lorigan, P., McArthur, G.A., Marais, R., Wong, S.Q., and Dawson, S.-J.
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- 2019
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9. Clinical, FDG-PET and molecular markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma
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Anthony J Gill, Shahneen Sandhu, George Au-Yeung, Grant A McArthur, Alison M Weppler, Andrew Pattison, Prachi Bhave, Paolo De Ieso, Jeanette Raleigh, Athena Hatzimihalis, Shiva Balachander, Jason Callahan, Margaret Chua, Rodney J Hicks, and Richard W Tothill
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background Metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC) is an aggressive neuroendocrine malignancy of the skin with a poor prognosis. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have shown substantial efficacy and favorable safety in clinical trials.Methods Medical records of patients (pts) with mMCC treated with ICIs from August 2015 to December 2018 at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Australia were analyzed. Response was assessed with serial imaging, the majority with FDG-PET/CT scans. RNA sequencing and immunohistochemistry for PD-L1, CD3 and Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) on tumor samples was performed.Results 23 pts with mMCC were treated with ICIs. A median of 8 cycles (range 1 to 47) were administered, with treatment ongoing in 6 pts. Objective responses (OR) were observed in 14 pts (61%): 10 (44%) complete responses (CR) and 4 (17%) partial responses (PR). Median time to response was 8 weeks (range 6 to 12) and 12-month progression-free survival rate was 39%. Increased OR were seen in pts aged less than 75 (OR 80% vs 46%), no prior history of chemotherapy (OR 64% vs 50%), patients with an immune-related adverse event (OR 100% vs 43%) and in MCPyV-negative tumors (OR 69% vs 43%). Pts with a CR had lower mean metabolic tumor volume on baseline FDG-PET/CT scan (CR: 35.7 mL, no CR: 187.8 mL, p=0.05). There was no correlation between PD-L1 positivity and MCPyV status (p=0.764) or OR (p=0.245). 10 pts received radiation therapy (RT) during ICI: 4 pts started RT concurrently (OR 75%, CR 50%), 3 pts had isolated ICI-resistant lesions successfully treated with RT and 3 pts with multisite progression continued to progress despite RT. Overall, 6 pts (26%) had grade 1–2 immune-related adverse events.Conclusion ICIs showed efficacy and safety in mMCC consistent with trial data. Clinical and imaging predictors of response were identified.
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- 2020
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10. Clinical validation and implementation of droplet digital PCR for the detection of BRAF mutations from cell-free DNA
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Rainier Arnolda, Kerryn Howlett, Timmy Chan, Jeanette Raleigh, Athena Hatzimihalis, Anthony Bell, Andrew Fellowes, Shahneen Sandhu, Grant A. McArthur, Stephen B. Fox, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Chelsee Hewitt, Kate Jones, and Stephen Q. Wong
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Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Formaldehyde ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,Mutation ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Cell-Free Nucleic Acids ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Circulating Tumor DNA ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine - Abstract
Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) has been demonstrated in many research studies to be a sensitive method in the analysis of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) for identifying mutations and tracking disease. The transition of ddPCR into the diagnostic setting requires a number of critical steps including the assessment of accuracy and precision and ultimately implementation into clinical use. Here we present the clinical validation of ddPCR for the detection of BRAF mutations (V600E and V600K) from plasma. We describe the performance characteristics assessed including the limit of blank, limit of detection, ruggedness, accuracy, precision and the effect of the matrix. Overall, each assay could achieve a limit of detection of 0.5% variant allele fraction and was highly accurate, with 100% concordance of results obtained from routine diagnostic testing of formalin fixed tumour samples or reference controls (n=36 for BRAF V600E and n=30 for BRAF V600K). Inter-laboratory reproducibility across 12 plasma samples for each assay was also assessed and results were 100% concordant. Overall, we report the successful validation and translation of a ddPCR assay into clinical routine practice.
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- 2022
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11. Data from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Gherardin, Nicholas A., primary, Waldeck, Kelly, primary, Caneborg, Alex, primary, Martelotto, Luciano G., primary, Balachander, Shiva, primary, Zethoven, Magnus, primary, Petrone, Pasquale M., primary, Pattison, Andrew, primary, Wilmott, James S., primary, Quiñones-Parra, Sergio M., primary, Rossello, Fernando, primary, Posner, Atara, primary, Wong, Annie, primary, Weppler, Alison M., primary, Shannon, Kerwin F., primary, Hong, Angela, primary, Ferguson, Peter M., primary, Jakrot, Valerie, primary, Raleigh, Jeanette, primary, Hatzimihalis, Athena, primary, Neeson, Paul J., primary, Deleso, Paolo, primary, Johnston, Meredith, primary, Chua, Margaret, primary, Becker, Juergen C., primary, Sandhu, Shahneen, primary, McArthur, Grant A., primary, Gill, Anthony J., primary, Scolyer, Richard A., primary, Hicks, Rodney J., primary, Godfrey, Dale I., primary, and Tothill, Richard W., primary
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- 2023
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12. Supplementary Data from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Gherardin, Nicholas A., primary, Waldeck, Kelly, primary, Caneborg, Alex, primary, Martelotto, Luciano G., primary, Balachander, Shiva, primary, Zethoven, Magnus, primary, Petrone, Pasquale M., primary, Pattison, Andrew, primary, Wilmott, James S., primary, Quiñones-Parra, Sergio M., primary, Rossello, Fernando, primary, Posner, Atara, primary, Wong, Annie, primary, Weppler, Alison M., primary, Shannon, Kerwin F., primary, Hong, Angela, primary, Ferguson, Peter M., primary, Jakrot, Valerie, primary, Raleigh, Jeanette, primary, Hatzimihalis, Athena, primary, Neeson, Paul J., primary, Deleso, Paolo, primary, Johnston, Meredith, primary, Chua, Margaret, primary, Becker, Juergen C., primary, Sandhu, Shahneen, primary, McArthur, Grant A., primary, Gill, Anthony J., primary, Scolyer, Richard A., primary, Hicks, Rodney J., primary, Godfrey, Dale I., primary, and Tothill, Richard W., primary
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- 2023
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13. Supplementary Tables from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Gherardin, Nicholas A., primary, Waldeck, Kelly, primary, Caneborg, Alex, primary, Martelotto, Luciano G., primary, Balachander, Shiva, primary, Zethoven, Magnus, primary, Petrone, Pasquale M., primary, Pattison, Andrew, primary, Wilmott, James S., primary, Quiñones-Parra, Sergio M., primary, Rossello, Fernando, primary, Posner, Atara, primary, Wong, Annie, primary, Weppler, Alison M., primary, Shannon, Kerwin F., primary, Hong, Angela, primary, Ferguson, Peter M., primary, Jakrot, Valerie, primary, Raleigh, Jeanette, primary, Hatzimihalis, Athena, primary, Neeson, Paul J., primary, Deleso, Paolo, primary, Johnston, Meredith, primary, Chua, Margaret, primary, Becker, Juergen C., primary, Sandhu, Shahneen, primary, McArthur, Grant A., primary, Gill, Anthony J., primary, Scolyer, Richard A., primary, Hicks, Rodney J., primary, Godfrey, Dale I., primary, and Tothill, Richard W., primary
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- 2023
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14. Supplementary Figures from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Gherardin, Nicholas A., primary, Waldeck, Kelly, primary, Caneborg, Alex, primary, Martelotto, Luciano G., primary, Balachander, Shiva, primary, Zethoven, Magnus, primary, Petrone, Pasquale M., primary, Pattison, Andrew, primary, Wilmott, James S., primary, Quiñones-Parra, Sergio M., primary, Rossello, Fernando, primary, Posner, Atara, primary, Wong, Annie, primary, Weppler, Alison M., primary, Shannon, Kerwin F., primary, Hong, Angela, primary, Ferguson, Peter M., primary, Jakrot, Valerie, primary, Raleigh, Jeanette, primary, Hatzimihalis, Athena, primary, Neeson, Paul J., primary, Deleso, Paolo, primary, Johnston, Meredith, primary, Chua, Margaret, primary, Becker, Juergen C., primary, Sandhu, Shahneen, primary, McArthur, Grant A., primary, Gill, Anthony J., primary, Scolyer, Richard A., primary, Hicks, Rodney J., primary, Godfrey, Dale I., primary, and Tothill, Richard W., primary
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- 2023
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15. Supplementary Figures from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Richard W. Tothill, Dale I. Godfrey, Rodney J. Hicks, Richard A. Scolyer, Anthony J. Gill, Grant A. McArthur, Shahneen Sandhu, Juergen C. Becker, Margaret Chua, Meredith Johnston, Paolo Deleso, Paul J. Neeson, Athena Hatzimihalis, Jeanette Raleigh, Valerie Jakrot, Peter M. Ferguson, Angela Hong, Kerwin F. Shannon, Alison M. Weppler, Annie Wong, Atara Posner, Fernando Rossello, Sergio M. Quiñones-Parra, James S. Wilmott, Andrew Pattison, Pasquale M. Petrone, Magnus Zethoven, Shiva Balachander, Luciano G. Martelotto, Alex Caneborg, Kelly Waldeck, and Nicholas A. Gherardin
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Supplementary Figures
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- 2023
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16. Supplementary Tables from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Richard W. Tothill, Dale I. Godfrey, Rodney J. Hicks, Richard A. Scolyer, Anthony J. Gill, Grant A. McArthur, Shahneen Sandhu, Juergen C. Becker, Margaret Chua, Meredith Johnston, Paolo Deleso, Paul J. Neeson, Athena Hatzimihalis, Jeanette Raleigh, Valerie Jakrot, Peter M. Ferguson, Angela Hong, Kerwin F. Shannon, Alison M. Weppler, Annie Wong, Atara Posner, Fernando Rossello, Sergio M. Quiñones-Parra, James S. Wilmott, Andrew Pattison, Pasquale M. Petrone, Magnus Zethoven, Shiva Balachander, Luciano G. Martelotto, Alex Caneborg, Kelly Waldeck, and Nicholas A. Gherardin
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Supplementary Tables
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- 2023
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17. Supplementary Data from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Richard W. Tothill, Dale I. Godfrey, Rodney J. Hicks, Richard A. Scolyer, Anthony J. Gill, Grant A. McArthur, Shahneen Sandhu, Juergen C. Becker, Margaret Chua, Meredith Johnston, Paolo Deleso, Paul J. Neeson, Athena Hatzimihalis, Jeanette Raleigh, Valerie Jakrot, Peter M. Ferguson, Angela Hong, Kerwin F. Shannon, Alison M. Weppler, Annie Wong, Atara Posner, Fernando Rossello, Sergio M. Quiñones-Parra, James S. Wilmott, Andrew Pattison, Pasquale M. Petrone, Magnus Zethoven, Shiva Balachander, Luciano G. Martelotto, Alex Caneborg, Kelly Waldeck, and Nicholas A. Gherardin
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RNA-seq and scRNA-seq count data and TCR contigs
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- 2023
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18. Data from γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Richard W. Tothill, Dale I. Godfrey, Rodney J. Hicks, Richard A. Scolyer, Anthony J. Gill, Grant A. McArthur, Shahneen Sandhu, Juergen C. Becker, Margaret Chua, Meredith Johnston, Paolo Deleso, Paul J. Neeson, Athena Hatzimihalis, Jeanette Raleigh, Valerie Jakrot, Peter M. Ferguson, Angela Hong, Kerwin F. Shannon, Alison M. Weppler, Annie Wong, Atara Posner, Fernando Rossello, Sergio M. Quiñones-Parra, James S. Wilmott, Andrew Pattison, Pasquale M. Petrone, Magnus Zethoven, Shiva Balachander, Luciano G. Martelotto, Alex Caneborg, Kelly Waldeck, and Nicholas A. Gherardin
- Abstract
Merkel cell carcinomas (MCC) are immunogenic skin cancers associated with viral infection or UV mutagenesis. To study T-cell infiltrates in MCC, we analyzed 58 MCC lesions from 39 patients using multiplex-IHC/immunofluorescence (m-IHC/IF). CD4+ or CD8+ T cells comprised the majority of infiltrating T lymphocytes in most tumors. However, almost half of the tumors harbored prominent CD4/CD8 double-negative (DN) T-cell infiltrates (>20% DN T cells), and in 12% of cases, DN T cells represented the majority of T cells. Flow cytometric analysis of single-cell suspensions from fresh tumors identified DN T cells as predominantly Vδ2− γδ T cells. In the context of γδ T–cell inflammation, these cells expressed PD-1 and LAG3, which is consistent with a suppressed or exhausted phenotype, and CD103, which indicates tissue residency. Furthermore, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) identified a transcriptional profile of γδ T cells suggestive of proinflammatory potential. T-cell receptor (TCR) analysis confirmed clonal expansion of Vδ1 and Vδ3 clonotypes, and functional studies using cloned γδ TCRs demonstrated restriction of these for CD1c and MR1 antigen-presenting molecules. On the basis of a 13-gene γδ T–cell signature derived from scRNA-seq analysis, gene-set enrichment on bulk RNA-seq data showed a positive correlation between enrichment scores and DN T-cell infiltrates. An improved disease-specific survival was evident for patients with high enrichment scores, and complete responses to anti–PD-1/PD-L1 treatment were observed in three of four cases with high enrichment scores. Thus, γδ T–cell infiltration may serve as a prognostic biomarker and should be explored for therapeutic interventions.See related Spotlight on p. 600
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- 2023
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19. Evaluation of pharmacogenomics and hepatic nuclear imaging–related covariates by population pharmacokinetic models of irinotecan and its metabolites
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Emma Link, Timothy J. Price, Michael Michael, Christos S. Karapetis, Rod J. Hicks, Jennifer H. Martin, M. Burge, Phillip Beale, Winston Liauw, Athena Hatzimihalis, Carleen Cullinane, Sue-Anne McLachlan, Anetta Matera, Ian G. Campbell, Zheng Liu, Simone Crowley, Michael Jefford, and Michael Thompson
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Pharmacology ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Population ,SN-38 ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,General Medicine ,Pharmacogenomic Variants ,NONMEM ,Irinotecan ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Pharmacokinetics ,Pharmacodynamics ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,business ,education ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Body surface area (BSA)–based dosing of irinotecan (IR) does not account for its pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) variabilities. Functional hepatic nuclear imaging (HNI) and excretory/metabolic/PD pharmacogenomics have shown correlations with IR disposition and toxicity/efficacy. This study reports the development of a nonlinear mixed-effect population model to identify pharmacogenomic and HNI-related covariates that impact on IR disposition to support dosage optimization. Patients had advanced colorectal cancer treated with IR combination therapy. Baseline blood was analysed by Affymetrix DMET™ Plus Array and, for PD, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) by Sanger sequencing. For HNI, patients underwent 99mTc-IDA hepatic imaging, and data was analysed for hepatic extraction/excretion parameters. Blood was taken for IR and metabolite (SN38, SN38G) analysis on day 1 cycle 1. Population modelling utilised NONMEM version 7.2.0, with structural PK models developed for each moiety. Covariates include patient demographics, HNI parameters and pharmacogenomic variants. Analysis included (i) PK data: 32 patients; (ii) pharmacogenomic data: 31 patients: 750 DMET and 22 PD variants; and (iii) HNI data: 32 patients. On initial analysis, overall five SNPs were identified as significant covariates for CLSN38. Only UGT1A3_c.31 T > C and ABCB1_c.3435C > T were included in the final model, whereby CLSN38 reduced from 76.8 to 55.1%. The identified UGT1A3_c.31 T > C and ABCB1_c.3435C > T variants, from wild type to homozygous, were included in the final model for SN38 clearance.
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- 2021
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20. Pharmacogenomics and functional imaging to predict irinotecan pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics: the predict IR study
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Ian G. Campbell, Sue-Anne McLachlan, Timothy J. Price, Rod Hicks, M. Burge, Annetta Matera, Simone M Rowley, Michael Michael, Michael Jefford, Phillip Beale, Michael Thompson, Winston Liauw, Emma Link, Carleen Cullinane, Christos S. Karapetis, and Athena Hatzimihalis
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,CYP4F2 ,Toxicology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pharmacokinetics ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Progression-free survival ,Pharmacology ,biology ,business.industry ,Irinotecan ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Pharmacogenomics ,Pharmacodynamics ,Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase ,biology.protein ,business ,Pharmacogenetics ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Irinotecan (IR) displays significant PK/PD variability. This study evaluated functional hepatic imaging (HNI) and extensive pharmacogenomics (PGs) to explore associations with IR PK and PD (toxicity and response). Eligible patients (pts) suitable for Irinotecan-based therapy. At baseline: (i) PGs: blood analyzed by the Affymetrix-DMET™-Plus-Array (1936 variants: 1931 single nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs] and 5 copy number variants in 225 genes, including 47 phase I, 80 phase II enzymes, and membrane transporters) and Sanger sequencing (variants in HNF1A, Topo-1, XRCC1, PARP1, TDP, CDC45L, NKFB1, and MTHFR), (ii) HNI: pts given IV 250 MBq-99mTc-IDA, data derived for hepatic extraction/excretion parameters (CLHNI, T1/2-HNI, 1hRET, HEF, Td1/2). In cycle 1, blood was taken for IR analysis and PK parameters were derived by non-compartmental methods. Associations were evaluated between HNI and PGs, with IR PK, toxicity, objective response rate (ORR) and progression-free survival (PFS). N = 31 pts. The two most significant associations between PK and PD with gene variants or HNI parameters (P
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- 2021
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21. Clinical validation and implementation of droplet digital PCR for the detection of BRAF mutations from cell-free DNA
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Arnolda, R, Howlett, K, Chan, T, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Bell, A, Fellowes, A, Sandhu, S, Mcarthur, GA, Fox, SB, Dawson, S-J, Hewitt, C, Jones, K, Wong, SQ, Arnolda, R, Howlett, K, Chan, T, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Bell, A, Fellowes, A, Sandhu, S, Mcarthur, GA, Fox, SB, Dawson, S-J, Hewitt, C, Jones, K, and Wong, SQ
- Abstract
Droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) has been demonstrated in many research studies to be a sensitive method in the analysis of circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) for identifying mutations and tracking disease. The transition of ddPCR into the diagnostic setting requires a number of critical steps including the assessment of accuracy and precision and ultimately implementation into clinical use. Here we present the clinical validation of ddPCR for the detection of BRAF mutations (V600E and V600K) from plasma. We describe the performance characteristics assessed including the limit of blank, limit of detection, ruggedness, accuracy, precision and the effect of the matrix. Overall, each assay could achieve a limit of detection of 0.5% variant allele fraction and was highly accurate, with 100% concordance of results obtained from routine diagnostic testing of formalin fixed tumour samples or reference controls (n=36 for BRAF V600E and n=30 for BRAF V600K). Inter-laboratory reproducibility across 12 plasma samples for each assay was also assessed and results were 100% concordant. Overall, we report the successful validation and translation of a ddPCR assay into clinical routine practice.
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- 2022
22. Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis and Functional Imaging Provide Complementary Approaches for Comprehensive Disease Monitoring in Metastatic Melanoma
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Ken Doig, Andrew J. Colebatch, Devbarna Sinha, Christopher P. Mintoff, Grant A. McArthur, Paul Yeh, Carleen Cullinane, Maria Joao Silva, Shahneen Sandhu, David E. Gyorki, Mark Shackleton, Kathryn Alsop, Gisela Mir Arnau, Anthony T. Papenfuss, Sarah Ftouni, David D.L. Bowtell, Jason Li, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Jeanette Raleigh, Fergal C. Kelleher, Athena Hatzimihalis, Benjamin Brady, Mark A. Dawson, Stephen Q. Wong, Rodney J. Hicks, Heather Thorne, Jason Callahan, Damien Kee, Ismael A. Vergara, and Timothy Semple
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0301 basic medicine ,Neuroblastoma RAS viral oncogene homolog ,Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Metastatic melanoma ,business.industry ,Mutant ,Wild type ,Disease ,Disease monitoring ,Functional imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Digital polymerase chain reaction ,business - Abstract
Purpose Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) allows noninvasive disease monitoring across a range of malignancies. In metastatic melanoma, the extent to which ctDNA reflects changes in metabolic disease burden assessed by 18F-labeled fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) is unknown. We assessed the role of ctDNA analysis in combination with FDG-PET to monitor tumor burden and genomic heterogeneity throughout treatment. Patients and Methods We performed a comprehensive analysis of serial ctDNA and FDG-PET in 52 patients who received systemic therapy for metastatic melanoma. Next-generation sequencing and digital polymerase chain reaction were used to analyze plasma samples from the cohort. Results ctDNA levels were monitored across patients with mutant BRAF, NRAS, and BRAF/NRAS wild type disease. Mutant BRAF and NRAS ctDNA levels correlated closely with changes in metabolic disease burden throughout treatment. TERT promoter mutant ctDNA levels also paralleled changes in tumor burden, which provide an alternative marker for disease monitoring. Of note, subcutaneous and cerebral disease sites were not well represented in plasma. Early changes in ctDNA and metabolic disease burden were important indicators of treatment response. Patients with an early decrease in ctDNA post-treatment had improved progression-free survival compared with patients in whom ctDNA levels remained unchanged or increased over time (hazard ratio, 2.6; P = .05). ctDNA analysis contributed key molecular information through the identification of putative resistance mechanisms to targeted therapy. A detailed comparison of the genomic architecture of plasma and multiregional tumor biopsy specimens at autopsy revealed the ability of ctDNA to comprehensively capture genomic heterogeneity across multiple disease sites. Conclusion The findings highlight the powerful role of ctDNA in metastatic melanoma as a complementary modality to functional imaging that allows real-time monitoring of both tumor burden and genomic changes throughout therapy.
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- 2022
23. Detection of cell-free microbial DNA using a contaminant-controlled analysis framework
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Athena Hatzimihalis, Mark A. Dawson, Stephen Q. Wong, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Enrique Zozaya-Valdés, Anthony T. Papenfuss, Jeanette Raleigh, Shahneen Sandhu, and Sarah Ftouni
- Subjects
DNA, Bacterial ,Skin Neoplasms ,Microbial DNA ,QH301-705.5 ,In silico ,Computational biology ,Biology ,QH426-470 ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Plasma ,Feces ,Contamination ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Ruminococcus ,Genetics ,Bacteroides ,Humans ,Digital polymerase chain reaction ,Microbiome ,Biology (General) ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Saliva ,Symbiosis ,Melanoma ,Faecalibacterium ,Cancer ,Neoplasm Staging ,Research ,Microbiota ,Human microbiome ,Amplicon ,DNA Contamination ,DNA extraction ,Biomarker ,Cell-free microbial DNA ,16S rRNA gene ,Cell-Free Nucleic Acids - Abstract
Background The human microbiome plays an important role in cancer. Accumulating evidence indicates that commensal microbiome-derived DNA may be represented in minute quantities in the cell-free DNA of human blood and could possibly be harnessed as a new cancer biomarker. However, there has been limited use of rigorous experimental controls to account for contamination, which invariably affects low-biomass microbiome studies. Results We apply a combination of 16S-rRNA-gene sequencing and droplet digital PCR to determine if the specific detection of cell-free microbial DNA (cfmDNA) is possible in metastatic melanoma patients. Compared to matched stool and saliva samples, the absolute concentration of cfmDNA is low but significantly above the levels detected from negative controls. The microbial community of plasma is strongly influenced by laboratory and reagent contaminants introduced during the DNA extraction and sequencing processes. Through the application of an in silico decontamination strategy including the filtering of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) with batch dependent abundances and those with a higher prevalence in negative controls, we identify known gut commensal bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium, Bacteroides and Ruminococcus, and also other uncharacterised ASVs. We analyse additional plasma samples, highlighting the potential of this framework to identify differences in cfmDNA between healthy and cancer patients. Conclusions Together, these observations indicate that plasma can harbour a low yet detectable level of cfmDNA. The results highlight the importance of accounting for contamination and provide an analytical decontamination framework to allow the accurate detection of cfmDNA for future biomarker studies in cancer and other diseases.
- Published
- 2021
24. Evaluation of pharmacogenomics and hepatic nuclear imaging-related covariates by population pharmacokinetic models of irinotecan and its metabolites
- Author
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Zheng, Liu, Jennifer H, Martin, Winston, Liauw, Sue-Anne, McLachlan, Emma, Link, Anetta, Matera, Michael, Thompson, Michael, Jefford, Rod J, Hicks, Carleen, Cullinane, Athena, Hatzimihalis, Ian, Campbell, Simone, Crowley, Phillip J, Beale, Christos S, Karapetis, Timothy, Price, Mathew E, Burge, and Michael, Michael
- Subjects
ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B ,Genotype ,Pharmacogenomic Variants ,Australia ,Irinotecan ,Models, Biological ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Liver ,Pharmacogenetics ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Glucuronosyltransferase ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Topoisomerase I Inhibitors ,Colorectal Neoplasms - Abstract
Body surface area (BSA)-based dosing of irinotecan (IR) does not account for its pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) variabilities. Functional hepatic nuclear imaging (HNI) and excretory/metabolic/PD pharmacogenomics have shown correlations with IR disposition and toxicity/efficacy. This study reports the development of a nonlinear mixed-effect population model to identify pharmacogenomic and HNI-related covariates that impact on IR disposition to support dosage optimization.Patients had advanced colorectal cancer treated with IR combination therapy. Baseline blood was analysed by Affymetrix DMET™ Plus Array and, for PD, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) by Sanger sequencing. For HNI, patients underwentAnalysis included (i) PK data: 32 patients; (ii) pharmacogenomic data: 31 patients: 750 DMET and 22 PD variants; and (iii) HNI data: 32 patients. On initial analysis, overall five SNPs were identified as significant covariates for CLThe identified UGT1A3_c.31 T C and ABCB1_c.3435C T variants, from wild type to homozygous, were included in the final model for SN38 clearance.
- Published
- 2021
25. Evaluation of pharmacogenomics and hepatic nuclear imaging–related covariates by population pharmacokinetic models of irinotecan and its metabolites
- Author
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Liu, Zheng, primary, Martin, Jennifer H., additional, Liauw, Winston, additional, McLachlan, Sue-Anne, additional, Link, Emma, additional, Matera, Anetta, additional, Thompson, Michael, additional, Jefford, Michael, additional, Hicks, Rod J., additional, Cullinane, Carleen, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Campbell, Ian, additional, Crowley, Simone, additional, Beale, Phillip J., additional, Karapetis, Christos S., additional, Price, Timothy, additional, Burge, Mathew E., additional, and Michael, Michael, additional
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Evolution of late-stage metastatic melanoma is dominated by aneuploidy and whole genome doubling
- Author
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Andrew J. Colebatch, Anthony T. Papenfuss, Clare G Fedele, Nicholas K. Hayward, Pacman Szeto, Jodie Leditschke, Richard A. Scolyer, Jennifer Mooi, Raymond J. Cho, Athena Hatzimihalis, Daniel L Cameron, Heather Thorne, Jason Ellul, Mitchell P. Levesque, Stephen Cordner, Grant A. McArthur, Noel Woodford, Julia Lai Kwon, Phil F. Cheng, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Reinhard Dummer, Rory Wolfe, Kathryn Alsop, Mark Shackleton, Angela Peng, Daniel S. Widmer, Gisela Mir Arnau, Jeanette Raleigh, Richard J. Young, Valerie C Amann, Ismael A. Vergara, Lachlan McIntosh, Shahneen Sandhu, James S. Wilmott, Xuelin Dou, Stephen Q. Wong, Graham J. Mann, Patricia C. M. O’Brien, Christopher P. Mintoff, David D.L. Bowtell, and Samantha E. Boyle
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Skin Neoplasms ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Evolution ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Aneuploidy ,Biology ,Genome ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Loss of heterozygosity ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,INDEL Mutation ,Exome Sequencing ,medicine ,Humans ,Point Mutation ,Exome ,Melanoma ,Exome sequencing ,Cancer ,Multidisciplinary ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Genome, Human ,Point mutation ,General Chemistry ,medicine.disease ,Human genetics ,Computational biology and bioinformatics ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Disease Progression ,Melanocytes - Abstract
Although melanoma is initiated by acquisition of point mutations and limited focal copy number alterations in melanocytes-of-origin, the nature of genetic changes that characterise lethal metastatic disease is poorly understood. Here, we analyze the evolution of human melanoma progressing from early to late disease in 13 patients by sampling their tumours at multiple sites and times. Whole exome and genome sequencing data from 88 tumour samples reveals only limited gain of point mutations generally, with net mutational loss in some metastases. In contrast, melanoma evolution is dominated by whole genome doubling and large-scale aneuploidy, in which widespread loss of heterozygosity sculpts the burden of point mutations, neoantigens and structural variants even in treatment-naïve and primary cutaneous melanomas in some patients. These results imply that dysregulation of genomic integrity is a key driver of selective clonal advantage during melanoma progression., The genetic changes that occur in late stage metastatic melanoma are not well delineated. Here, the authors use rapid autopsy samples from metastatic melanoma patients and show that the late stage in the disease is characterised by whole genome doubling and aneuploidy.
- Published
- 2021
27. Detection of cell-free microbial DNA using a contaminant-controlled analysis framework
- Author
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Zozaya-Valdes, E, Wong, SQ, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Ftouni, S, Papenfuss, AT, Sandhu, S, Dawson, MA, Dawson, S-J, Zozaya-Valdes, E, Wong, SQ, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Ftouni, S, Papenfuss, AT, Sandhu, S, Dawson, MA, and Dawson, S-J
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The human microbiome plays an important role in cancer. Accumulating evidence indicates that commensal microbiome-derived DNA may be represented in minute quantities in the cell-free DNA of human blood and could possibly be harnessed as a new cancer biomarker. However, there has been limited use of rigorous experimental controls to account for contamination, which invariably affects low-biomass microbiome studies. RESULTS: We apply a combination of 16S-rRNA-gene sequencing and droplet digital PCR to determine if the specific detection of cell-free microbial DNA (cfmDNA) is possible in metastatic melanoma patients. Compared to matched stool and saliva samples, the absolute concentration of cfmDNA is low but significantly above the levels detected from negative controls. The microbial community of plasma is strongly influenced by laboratory and reagent contaminants introduced during the DNA extraction and sequencing processes. Through the application of an in silico decontamination strategy including the filtering of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) with batch dependent abundances and those with a higher prevalence in negative controls, we identify known gut commensal bacteria, such as Faecalibacterium, Bacteroides and Ruminococcus, and also other uncharacterised ASVs. We analyse additional plasma samples, highlighting the potential of this framework to identify differences in cfmDNA between healthy and cancer patients. CONCLUSIONS: Together, these observations indicate that plasma can harbour a low yet detectable level of cfmDNA. The results highlight the importance of accounting for contamination and provide an analytical decontamination framework to allow the accurate detection of cfmDNA for future biomarker studies in cancer and other diseases.
- Published
- 2021
28. Evolution of late-stage metastatic melanoma is dominated by aneuploidy and whole genome doubling
- Author
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Vergara, IA, Mintoff, CP, Sandhu, S, McIntosh, L, Young, RJ, Wong, SQ, Colebatch, A, Cameron, DL, Kwon, JL, Wolfe, R, Peng, A, Ellul, J, Dou, X, Fedele, C, Boyle, S, Arnau, GM, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Szeto, P, Mooi, J, Widmer, DS, Cheng, PF, Amann, V, Dummer, R, Hayward, N, Wilmott, J, Scolyer, RA, Cho, RJ, Bowtell, D, Thorne, H, Alsop, K, Cordner, S, Woodford, N, Leditschke, J, O'Brien, P, Dawson, S-J, McArthur, GA, Mann, GJ, Levesque, MP, Papenfuss, AT, Shackleton, M, Vergara, IA, Mintoff, CP, Sandhu, S, McIntosh, L, Young, RJ, Wong, SQ, Colebatch, A, Cameron, DL, Kwon, JL, Wolfe, R, Peng, A, Ellul, J, Dou, X, Fedele, C, Boyle, S, Arnau, GM, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Szeto, P, Mooi, J, Widmer, DS, Cheng, PF, Amann, V, Dummer, R, Hayward, N, Wilmott, J, Scolyer, RA, Cho, RJ, Bowtell, D, Thorne, H, Alsop, K, Cordner, S, Woodford, N, Leditschke, J, O'Brien, P, Dawson, S-J, McArthur, GA, Mann, GJ, Levesque, MP, Papenfuss, AT, and Shackleton, M
- Abstract
Although melanoma is initiated by acquisition of point mutations and limited focal copy number alterations in melanocytes-of-origin, the nature of genetic changes that characterise lethal metastatic disease is poorly understood. Here, we analyze the evolution of human melanoma progressing from early to late disease in 13 patients by sampling their tumours at multiple sites and times. Whole exome and genome sequencing data from 88 tumour samples reveals only limited gain of point mutations generally, with net mutational loss in some metastases. In contrast, melanoma evolution is dominated by whole genome doubling and large-scale aneuploidy, in which widespread loss of heterozygosity sculpts the burden of point mutations, neoantigens and structural variants even in treatment-naïve and primary cutaneous melanomas in some patients. These results imply that dysregulation of genomic integrity is a key driver of selective clonal advantage during melanoma progression.
- Published
- 2021
29. Docetaxel pharmacokinetics and its correlation with two in vivo probes for cytochrome P450 enzymes: the C14-erythromycin breath test and the antipyrine clearance test
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Michael, M., Cullinane, C., Hatzimihalis, A., O’Kane, C., Milner, A., Booth, R., Schlicht, S., Clarke, S. J., and Francis, P.
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Pharmacogenomics and functional imaging to predict irinotecan pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics: the predict IR study
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Michael, Michael, Winston, Liauw, Sue-Anne, McLachlan, Emma, Link, Annetta, Matera, Michael, Thompson, Michael, Jefford, Rod J, Hicks, Carleen, Cullinane, Athena, Hatzimihalis, Ian G, Campbell, Simone, Rowley, Phillip J, Beale, Christos S, Karapetis, Timothy, Price, and Mathew E, Burge
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Genotype ,Australia ,Middle Aged ,Irinotecan ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Progression-Free Survival ,Liver ,Pharmacogenetics ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Humans ,Female ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Aged - Abstract
Irinotecan (IR) displays significant PK/PD variability. This study evaluated functional hepatic imaging (HNI) and extensive pharmacogenomics (PGs) to explore associations with IR PK and PD (toxicity and response).Eligible patients (pts) suitable for Irinotecan-based therapy. At baseline: (i) PGs: blood analyzed by the Affymetrix-DMET™-Plus-Array (1936 variants: 1931 single nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs] and 5 copy number variants in 225 genes, including 47 phase I, 80 phase II enzymes, and membrane transporters) and Sanger sequencing (variants in HNF1A, Topo-1, XRCC1, PARP1, TDP, CDC45L, NKFB1, and MTHFR), (ii) HNI: pts given IV 250 MBq-N = 31 pts. The two most significant associations between PK and PD with gene variants or HNI parameters (P 0.05) included: (1) PK: SN38-Metabolic Ratio with CLExploratory associations were observed between Irinotecan PK/PD with hepatic functional imaging and extensive pharmacogenomics. Further work is required to confirm and validate these findings in a larger cohort of patients.ACTRN12610000897066, Date registered: 21/10/2010.
- Published
- 2020
31. γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
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Atara Posner, Richard A. Scolyer, Anthony J. Gill, Paolo Deleso, Alex Caneborg, Margaret Chua, Fernando J. Rossello, Jeanette Raleigh, Luciano G. Martelotto, Rodney J. Hicks, Kerwin F. Shannon, Magnus Zethoven, Grant A. McArthur, Paul J Neeson, Dale I. Godfrey, Nicholas A Gherardin, Pasquale Petrone, Sergio M. Quiñones-Parra, Meredith L Johnston, Valerie Jakrot, Andrew D Pattison, Shiva Balachander, Juergen C. Becker, Shahneen Sandhu, Athena Hatzimihalis, Angela Hong, Alison Weppler, Richard W. Tothill, Annie Wong, Kelly Waldeck, James S. Wilmott, and Peter M. Ferguson
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Male ,Cancer Research ,LAG3 ,Skin Neoplasms ,T-Lymphocytes ,Immunology ,Inflammation ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Immunofluorescence ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,T-cell receptor ,Computational Biology ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, gamma-delta ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Survival Analysis ,3. Good health ,Carcinoma, Merkel Cell ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Merkel cell ,CD8 ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Merkel cell carcinomas (MCC) are immunogenic skin cancers associated with viral infection or UV mutagenesis. To study T-cell infiltrates in MCC, we analyzed 58 MCC lesions from 39 patients using multiplex-IHC/immunofluorescence (m-IHC/IF). CD4+ or CD8+ T cells comprised the majority of infiltrating T lymphocytes in most tumors. However, almost half of the tumors harbored prominent CD4/CD8 double-negative (DN) T-cell infiltrates (>20% DN T cells), and in 12% of cases, DN T cells represented the majority of T cells. Flow cytometric analysis of single-cell suspensions from fresh tumors identified DN T cells as predominantly Vδ2− γδ T cells. In the context of γδ T–cell inflammation, these cells expressed PD-1 and LAG3, which is consistent with a suppressed or exhausted phenotype, and CD103, which indicates tissue residency. Furthermore, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) identified a transcriptional profile of γδ T cells suggestive of proinflammatory potential. T-cell receptor (TCR) analysis confirmed clonal expansion of Vδ1 and Vδ3 clonotypes, and functional studies using cloned γδ TCRs demonstrated restriction of these for CD1c and MR1 antigen-presenting molecules. On the basis of a 13-gene γδ T–cell signature derived from scRNA-seq analysis, gene-set enrichment on bulk RNA-seq data showed a positive correlation between enrichment scores and DN T-cell infiltrates. An improved disease-specific survival was evident for patients with high enrichment scores, and complete responses to anti–PD-1/PD-L1 treatment were observed in three of four cases with high enrichment scores. Thus, γδ T–cell infiltration may serve as a prognostic biomarker and should be explored for therapeutic interventions. See related Spotlight on p. 600
- Published
- 2020
32. Clinical, FDG-PET and molecular markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma
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Paolo De Ieso, Richard W. Tothill, Andrew D Pattison, Athena Hatzimihalis, Anthony J. Gill, Shiva Balachander, Jason Callahan, George Au-Yeung, Shahneen Sandhu, Rodney J. Hicks, Margaret Chua, Grant A. McArthur, Prachi Bhave, Jeanette Raleigh, and Alison Weppler
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Merkel cell polyomavirus ,Pembrolizumab ,Gastroenterology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Immunotherapy Biomarkers ,Immunology and Allergy ,Medicine ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors ,RC254-282 ,Aged, 80 and over ,biology ,Merkel cell carcinoma ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,Middle Aged ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,immunotherapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,skin neoplasms ,Immunology ,Malignancy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,Internal medicine ,gene expression profiling ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Survival rate ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Pharmacology ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,030104 developmental biology ,tumor biomarkers ,business - Abstract
BackgroundMetastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC) is an aggressive neuroendocrine malignancy of the skin with a poor prognosis. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have shown substantial efficacy and favorable safety in clinical trials.MethodsMedical records of patients (pts) with mMCC treated with ICIs from August 2015 to December 2018 at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Australia were analyzed. Response was assessed with serial imaging, the majority with FDG-PET/CT scans. RNA sequencing and immunohistochemistry for PD-L1, CD3 and Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) on tumor samples was performed.Results23 pts with mMCC were treated with ICIs. A median of 8 cycles (range 1 to 47) were administered, with treatment ongoing in 6 pts. Objective responses (OR) were observed in 14 pts (61%): 10 (44%) complete responses (CR) and 4 (17%) partial responses (PR). Median time to response was 8 weeks (range 6 to 12) and 12-month progression-free survival rate was 39%. Increased OR were seen in pts aged less than 75 (OR 80% vs 46%), no prior history of chemotherapy (OR 64% vs 50%), patients with an immune-related adverse event (OR 100% vs 43%) and in MCPyV-negative tumors (OR 69% vs 43%). Pts with a CR had lower mean metabolic tumor volume on baseline FDG-PET/CT scan (CR: 35.7 mL, no CR: 187.8 mL, p=0.05). There was no correlation between PD-L1 positivity and MCPyV status (p=0.764) or OR (p=0.245). 10 pts received radiation therapy (RT) during ICI: 4 pts started RT concurrently (OR 75%, CR 50%), 3 pts had isolated ICI-resistant lesions successfully treated with RT and 3 pts with multisite progression continued to progress despite RT. Overall, 6 pts (26%) had grade 1–2 immune-related adverse events.ConclusionICIs showed efficacy and safety in mMCC consistent with trial data. Clinical and imaging predictors of response were identified.
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- 2020
33. Clinical, FDG-PET and molecular markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma
- Author
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Weppler, AM, Pattison, A, Bhave, P, De Ieso, P, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Gill, AJ, Balachander, S, Callahan, J, Chua, M, Au-Yeung, G, McArthur, GA, Hicks, RJ, Tothill, RW, Sandhu, S, Weppler, AM, Pattison, A, Bhave, P, De Ieso, P, Raleigh, J, Hatzimihalis, A, Gill, AJ, Balachander, S, Callahan, J, Chua, M, Au-Yeung, G, McArthur, GA, Hicks, RJ, Tothill, RW, and Sandhu, S
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC) is an aggressive neuroendocrine malignancy of the skin with a poor prognosis. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have shown substantial efficacy and favorable safety in clinical trials. METHODS: Medical records of patients (pts) with mMCC treated with ICIs from August 2015 to December 2018 at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Australia were analyzed. Response was assessed with serial imaging, the majority with FDG-PET/CT scans. RNA sequencing and immunohistochemistry for PD-L1, CD3 and Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) on tumor samples was performed. RESULTS: 23 pts with mMCC were treated with ICIs. A median of 8 cycles (range 1 to 47) were administered, with treatment ongoing in 6 pts. Objective responses (OR) were observed in 14 pts (61%): 10 (44%) complete responses (CR) and 4 (17%) partial responses (PR). Median time to response was 8 weeks (range 6 to 12) and 12-month progression-free survival rate was 39%. Increased OR were seen in pts aged less than 75 (OR 80% vs 46%), no prior history of chemotherapy (OR 64% vs 50%), patients with an immune-related adverse event (OR 100% vs 43%) and in MCPyV-negative tumors (OR 69% vs 43%). Pts with a CR had lower mean metabolic tumor volume on baseline FDG-PET/CT scan (CR: 35.7 mL, no CR: 187.8 mL, p=0.05). There was no correlation between PD-L1 positivity and MCPyV status (p=0.764) or OR (p=0.245). 10 pts received radiation therapy (RT) during ICI: 4 pts started RT concurrently (OR 75%, CR 50%), 3 pts had isolated ICI-resistant lesions successfully treated with RT and 3 pts with multisite progression continued to progress despite RT. Overall, 6 pts (26%) had grade 1-2 immune-related adverse events. CONCLUSION: ICIs showed efficacy and safety in mMCC consistent with trial data. Clinical and imaging predictors of response were identified.
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- 2020
34. γδ T Cells in Merkel Cell Carcinomas Have a Proinflammatory Profile Prognostic of Patient Survival
- Author
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Gherardin, Nicholas A., primary, Waldeck, Kelly, additional, Caneborg, Alex, additional, Martelotto, Luciano G., additional, Balachander, Shiva, additional, Zethoven, Magnus, additional, Petrone, Pasquale M., additional, Pattison, Andrew, additional, Wilmott, James S., additional, Quiñones-Parra, Sergio M., additional, Rossello, Fernando, additional, Posner, Atara, additional, Wong, Annie, additional, Weppler, Alison M., additional, Shannon, Kerwin F., additional, Hong, Angela, additional, Ferguson, Peter M., additional, Jakrot, Valerie, additional, Raleigh, Jeanette, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Neeson, Paul J., additional, Deleso, Paolo, additional, Johnston, Meredith, additional, Chua, Margaret, additional, Becker, Juergen C., additional, Sandhu, Shahneen, additional, McArthur, Grant A., additional, Gill, Anthony J., additional, Scolyer, Richard A., additional, Hicks, Rodney J., additional, Godfrey, Dale I., additional, and Tothill, Richard W., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Clinical, FDG-PET and molecular markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma
- Author
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Weppler, Alison M, primary, Pattison, Andrew, additional, Bhave, Prachi, additional, De Ieso, Paolo, additional, Raleigh, Jeanette, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Gill, Anthony J, additional, Balachander, Shiva, additional, Callahan, Jason, additional, Chua, Margaret, additional, Au-Yeung, George, additional, McArthur, Grant A, additional, Hicks, Rodney J, additional, Tothill, Richard W, additional, and Sandhu, Shahneen, additional
- Published
- 2020
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36. Prediction and monitoring of relapse in stage III melanoma using circulating tumor DNA
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Jeanette Raleigh, Richard Marais, Jason Li, Jason Callahan, Athena Hatzimihalis, Nathalie Dhomen, Rodney J. Hicks, D. Oudit, Mark A. Dawson, Stephen Q. Wong, Sarah Ftouni, Mark Shackleton, David E. Gyorki, Grant A. McArthur, Victoria Mar, Shahneen Sandhu, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Andrew Haydon, Andrew L. Wallace, Lavinia Tan, Philippa Middlehurst, Rebecca Lee, Michael A. Henderson, and Paul Lorigan
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Adult ,Male ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,Circulating Tumor DNA ,GTP Phosphohydrolases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Median follow-up ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Adjuvant therapy ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Survival rate ,Melanoma ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Aged, 80 and over ,Manchester Cancer Research Centre ,business.industry ,ResearchInstitutes_Networks_Beacons/mcrc ,Hazard ratio ,Cancer ,Membrane Proteins ,Dabrafenib ,Hematology ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Survival Rate ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Mutation ,Female ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The advent of effective adjuvant therapies for patients with resected melanoma has highlighted the need to stratify patients based on risk of relapse given the cost and toxicities associated with treatment. Here we assessed circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) to predict and monitor relapse in resected stage III melanoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Somatic mutations were identified in 99/133 (74%) patients through tumor tissue sequencing. Personalized droplet digital PCR (ddPCR) assays were used to detect known mutations in 315 prospectively collected plasma samples from mutation-positive patients. External validation was performed in a prospective independent cohort (n = 29). RESULTS: ctDNA was detected in 37 of 99 (37%) individuals. In 81 patients who did not receive adjuvant therapy, 90% of patients with ctDNA detected at baseline and 100% of patients with ctDNA detected at the postoperative timepoint relapsed at a median follow up of 20 months. ctDNA detection predicted patients at high risk of relapse at baseline [relapse-free survival (RFS) hazard ratio (HR) 2.9; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.5–5.6; P = 0.002] and postoperatively (HR 10; 95% CI 4.3–24; P
- Published
- 2019
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37. Genomic Analysis of Circulating Tumor DNA Using a Melanoma-Specific UltraSEEK Oncogene Panel
- Author
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Elin S. Gray, Alexander Dobrovic, Stephen Q. Wong, Jonathan Cebon, Grant A. McArthur, Darryl Irwin, Melanie Ziman, Muhammad A. Khattak, Michelle R. Pereira, Michael Millward, Tom Witkowski, Athena Hatzimihalis, Shahneen Sandhu, Brett Chapman, Leslie Calapre, Karl Herron, and Jeanette Raleigh
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins B-raf ,Concordance ,medicine.disease_cause ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Circulating Tumor DNA ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Digital polymerase chain reaction ,Genotyping ,Gene ,Melanoma ,Mutation ,Oncogene ,business.industry ,Genomics ,Oncogenes ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Molecular Medicine ,business ,DNA - Abstract
The analysis of circulating tumor DNA provides a minimally invasive molecular interrogation that has the potential to guide treatment selection and disease monitoring. Here, the authors evaluated a custom UltraSEEK melanoma panel for the MassARRAY system, probing for 61 mutations over 13 genes. The analytical sensitivity and clinical accuracy of the UltraSEEK melanoma panel was compared with droplet digital PCR. The blinded analysis of 68 mutations detected in 48 plasma samples from stage IV melanoma patients revealed a concordance of 88% between the two platforms. Further comparison of both methods for the detection of BRAF V600E mutations in 77 plasma samples demonstrated a Cohen's κ of 0.826 (bias-corrected and accelerated 95% CI, 0.669–0.946). These results indicate that the UltraSEEK melanoma panel is as sensitive as droplet digital PCR for the detection of circulating tumor DNA in this cohort of patients but highlight the need for detected variants to be confirmed orthogonally to mitigate any false-positive results. The MassARRAY system enables rapid and sensitive genotyping for the detection of multiple melanoma–associated mutations in plasma.
- Published
- 2018
38. Clinical and FDG-PET markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC)
- Author
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Weppler, A.M., primary, Bhave, P., additional, De Ieso, P., additional, Chua, M., additional, Raleigh, J., additional, Hatzimihalis, A., additional, Gill, A., additional, Balachander, S., additional, Callahan, J., additional, Pattison, A., additional, Caneborg, A., additional, Au Yeung, G., additional, McArthur, G., additional, Hicks, R.J., additional, Tothill, R., additional, and Sandhu, S.K., additional
- Published
- 2019
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39. Clinical and FDG-PET markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC).
- Author
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Weppler, Alison, primary, Bhave, Prachi, additional, De Ieso, Paolo, additional, Raleigh, Jeanette, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Gill, Anthony J., additional, Balachander, Shiva, additional, Callahan, Jason, additional, Pattison, Andrew, additional, Chua, Margaret, additional, Au-Yeung, George, additional, McArthur, Grant A., additional, Hicks, Rodney J., additional, Tothill, Richard, additional, and Sandhu, Shahneen Kaur, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Genomic Analysis of Circulating Tumor DNA Using a Melanoma-Specific UltraSEEK Oncogene Panel
- Author
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Gray, Elin S., primary, Witkowski, Tom, additional, Pereira, Michelle, additional, Calapre, Leslie, additional, Herron, Karl, additional, Irwin, Darryl, additional, Chapman, Brett, additional, Khattak, Muhammad A., additional, Raleigh, Jeanette, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Cebon, Jonathan, additional, Sandhu, Shahneen, additional, McArthur, Grant A., additional, Millward, Michael, additional, Ziman, Melanie, additional, Dobrovic, Alexander, additional, and Wong, Stephen Q., additional
- Published
- 2019
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41. Clinical and FDG-PET markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC)
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Alison Weppler, Andrew D Pattison, J. Raleigh, Shahneen Sandhu, Richard W. Tothill, Rodney J. Hicks, A. Caneborg, Jason Callahan, P. De Ieso, G. Au Yeung, Shiva Balachander, A. Hatzimihalis, Anthony J. Gill, Margaret Chua, Grant A. McArthur, and Prachi Bhave
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Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,biology ,Merkel cell carcinoma ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Merkel cell polyomavirus ,Immunosuppression ,Hematology ,Pembrolizumab ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Clinical trial ,Avelumab ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Adverse effect ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background mMCC is a rare, highly aggressive neuroendocrine cancer of the skin with a poor prognosis. ICIs have favourable efficacy and safety in clinical trials. We outline single centre experience utilising ICIs in mMCC. Methods Medical records of patients (pts) with mMCC treated with ICIs from Aug 2015 to Dec 2018 at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Australia were retrospectively analysed. RNA sequencing and immunohistochemistry for PD-L1, CD3 and Merkel cell polyomavirus (MCPyV) on tumor samples were performed. Baseline tumor volumes and responses were assessed with FDG-PET scans using the Hicks criteria. Results 23 pts with mMCC were treated with ICIs. Pt characteristics are summarised in the table. A median of 8 cycles (range 1 to 47) were administered, with treatment ongoing in 6 pts. Objective responses (OR) were observed in 14 pts (61%); 10 (44%) complete metabolic responses (CMR) and 4 (17%) partial metabolic responses (PMR). Median time to response was 8 weeks (range 6 to 12) and 12-month progression-free survival (PFS) rate was 39%. Increased OR were seen in pts aged less than 75 (OR 8/10, 80% vs 46%), pts with normal baseline LDH (OR 5/7, 71% vs 50%), pts with an immune-related adverse event (irAE) (OR 6/6, 100% vs 47%) and in MCPyV negative pts (OR 11/16, 69% vs 43%). Pts with a CMR had lower mean-tumor volume on baseline FDG-PET scan (CMR: 35.7mL, no CMR: 187.8mL, p = 0.05). No correlation was seen between tumor PD-L1 positivity and response to ICI (p = 0.25) or MCPyV status (p = 0.76). Similarly, no association was seen between OR and CD3 staining within the tumor (p = 0.07). 10 pts received radiation (RT) during ICI: 4 pts started RT concurrently (OR 75%, CMR 50%), 3 pts had isolated ICI-resistant lesions successfully treated with RT and 3 pts with multisite progression continued to progress despite RT. 6 pts (26%) had a Grade 1-2 irAE. Table . 341O Baseline characteristics Patient Characteristics n = 23 Age (years) Median (range) 75 (64 to 91) Gender Male Female 18 5 ECOG 0 12 3 8 12 3 ICI Avelumab Pembrolizumab Other (BGB-A317) 15 5 3 MCPyV status Positive Negative 7 16 Visceral disease 17 Prior chemotherapy 10 History of autoimmune disease 2 Previous immunosuppression 2 Conclusions ICIs showed efficacy and safety consistent with trial data. Younger age, negative MCPyV status, normal LDH, lower baseline FDG-PET tumor volume and irAEs are potentially associated with enhanced response. Legal entity responsible for the study The authors. Funding Has not received any funding. Disclosure R.J. Hicks: Shareholder / Stockholder / Stock options: Telix Pharmaceuticals; Travel / Accommodation / Expenses: Endocyte; Travel / Accommodation / Expenses: GE Medical Systems. R. Tothill: Honoraria (self), Travel / Accommodation / Expenses: Merck Serono. All other authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
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- 2019
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42. Circulating tumour DNA analysis predicts relapse following resection in stage II and III melanoma
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Tan, L., primary, Sandhu, S.K., additional, Lee, R., additional, Li, J., additional, Callahan, J., additional, Raleigh, J., additional, Hatzimihalis, A., additional, Middlehurst, P., additional, Henderson, M., additional, Shackleton, M., additional, Haydon, A., additional, Gyorki, D., additional, Oudit, D., additional, Hicks, R.J., additional, Lorigan, P., additional, McArthur, G.A., additional, Marais, R., additional, Wong, S.Q., additional, and Dawson, S.-J., additional
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- 2018
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43. Multivariate data analysis of key pollutants in sewage samples: a case study
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Pantsar-Kallio, Mari, Mujunen, Satu-Pia, Hatzimihalis, George, Koutoufides, Paul, Minkkinen, Pentti, Wilkie, Philip J, and Connor, Michael A
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- 1999
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44. Circulating tumour DNA analysis predicts relapse following resection in stage II and III melanoma
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D. Oudit, Jason Li, Richard Marais, David E. Gyorki, Grant A. McArthur, Andrew Haydon, Rebecca Lee, Michael A. Henderson, Philippa Middlehurst, Jeanette Raleigh, Mark Shackleton, Rodney J. Hicks, Lavinia Tan, Sarah-Jane Dawson, Shahneen Sandhu, Stephen Q. Wong, Paul Lorigan, Athena Hatzimihalis, and Jason Callahan
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Melanoma ,Hematology ,Stage ii ,medicine.disease ,Resection ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,DNA - Published
- 2018
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45. Circulating Tumor DNA Analysis and Functional Imaging Provide Complementary Approaches for Comprehensive Disease Monitoring in Metastatic Melanoma
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Wong, Stephen Q., primary, Raleigh, Jeanette M., additional, Callahan, Jason, additional, Vergara, Ismael A., additional, Ftouni, Sarah, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Colebatch, Andrew J., additional, Li, Jason, additional, Semple, Timothy, additional, Doig, Kenneth, additional, Mintoff, Christopher, additional, Sinha, Devbarna, additional, Yeh, Paul, additional, Silva, Maria Joao, additional, Alsop, Kathryn, additional, Thorne, Heather, additional, Bowtell, David D., additional, Gyorki, David E., additional, Arnau, Gisela Mir, additional, Cullinane, Carleen, additional, Kee, Damien, additional, Brady, Benjamin, additional, Kelleher, Fergal, additional, Dawson, Mark A., additional, Papenfuss, Anthony T., additional, Shackleton, Mark, additional, Hicks, Rodney J., additional, McArthur, Grant A., additional, Sandhu, Shahneen, additional, and Dawson, Sarah-Jane, additional
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- 2017
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46. GERIATRIC ASSESSMENT TOOLS AND OUTCOME PREDICTION IN TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT
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Kwan, Clara, primary, Hecht, Melvyn, additional, Olatunde, Sunday, additional, Hatzimihalis, Antigone, additional, Homel, Peter, additional, Saunders, Paul, additional, Crooke, Gregory, additional, Ribakove, Greg, additional, Frankel, Robert, additional, and Shani, Jacob, additional
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- 2017
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47. 341O - Clinical and FDG-PET markers of immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) response in patients with metastatic Merkel cell carcinoma (mMCC)
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Weppler, A.M., Bhave, P., De Ieso, P., Chua, M., Raleigh, J., Hatzimihalis, A., Gill, A., Balachander, S., Callahan, J., Pattison, A., Caneborg, A., Au Yeung, G., McArthur, G., Hicks, R.J., Tothill, R., and Sandhu, S.K.
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- 2019
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48. GERIATRIC ASSESSMENT TOOLS AND OUTCOME PREDICTION IN TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT
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Jacob Shani, Paul Saunders, Greg H. Ribakove, Robert Frankel, Antigone Hatzimihalis, Gregory Crooke, Melvyn Hecht, Peter Homel, Clara Kwan, and Sunday Olatunde
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcatheter aortic ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Geriatric assessment ,EuroSCORE ,social sciences ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Surgery ,Stenosis ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Valve replacement ,Internal medicine ,cardiovascular system ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Heart valve ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Outcome prediction ,business - Abstract
Background: Aortic stenosis (AS) is a common heart valve disease in the elderly. The selection for transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is difficult because many elderly patients have multiple co-morbidities. Current global risk scores including the STS score and the EuroSCORE may be
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- 2017
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49. Multivariate data analysis of key pollutants in sewage samples: a case study
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George Hatzimihalis, Pentti Minkkinen, Michael A. Connor, Mari Pantsar-Kallio, Philip J. Wilkie, Satu-Pia Mujunen, and Paul Koutoufides
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Pollutant ,Multivariate statistics ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,0207 environmental engineering ,Environmental engineering ,Sewage ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,6. Clean water ,Analytical Chemistry ,Waste treatment ,Wastewater ,13. Climate action ,Environmental Chemistry ,Sewage treatment ,020701 environmental engineering ,business ,Effluent ,Spectroscopy ,Sludge ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Waste water treatment plants often need detailed information about the sources and levels of pollutants in sewage in order to maintain stable process conditions and to achieve permitted levels for hazardous compounds in their effluents. A high content of pollutants is usually traceable to industrial inputs. In this study the main objective was to study the factors affecting the composition of sewage of domestic origin. Sixty-five domestic sewage samples collected during 9 months at eight different sites in Melbourne, Australia, were analyzed for 83 chemical variables. The data set also included two samples of combined domestic/industrial wastewaters, seven samples from waste water treatment plant influent streams and five domestic water supply samples. The data was studied with multivariate data analysis methods; principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least squares (PLS). With multivariate methods, effects of lifestyle of residents, day of the week and sampling time or weather on the pollutant levels could be determined.
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- 1999
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50. Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) to track responses and to capture the genomic heterogeneity of metastatic melanoma.
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Sandhu, Shahneen Kaur, primary, Wong, Stephen Q, additional, Vergara, Ismael A., additional, Raleigh, Jeanette, additional, Callahan, Jason, additional, Ftouni, Sarah, additional, Hatzimihalis, Athena, additional, Devbarna, Sinha, additional, Doig, Ken, additional, Colebatch, Andrew, additional, MirArnau, Gisela, additional, Cullinane, Carleen, additional, Gyorki, David E., additional, Kee, Damien, additional, Brady, Benjamin M., additional, Shackleton, Mark J., additional, Papenfuss, Anthony, additional, Hicks, Rodney J, additional, McArthur, Grant A., additional, and Dawson, Sarah-Jane, additional
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- 2016
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