Publications by authors named "A V Bagaev"

Renal medullary carcinoma is a rare undifferentiated tumor of the kidney associated with sickle cell trait and characterized by INI1 (SMARCB1) loss. Although metastasis to lungs, lymph nodes, and bone is commonly reported, distant spread to the central nervous system almost never occurs. Here we present an unusual case of a patient with renal medullary carcinoma with metastasis to the brain following treatment which included tazemetostat, an EZH2 inhibitor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

PI3K-δ inhibitors have shown impressive activity in lymphoid malignancies but have been hampered by autoimmune and infectious toxicities, leading to market withdrawals. We previously demonstrated activity of the PI3K-δγ inhibitor duvelisib in T cell lymphomas (TCLs) that was associated with inflammatory adverse events. As reported here, we conducted a phase 1b/2a study of duvelisib in combination with either romidepsin (n = 66) or bortezomib (n = 32) in patients with relapsed/refractory TCL and found that the addition of romidepsin, but not bortezomib, appeared to increase efficacy while attenuating PI3K inhibitor-driven toxicity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The lack of comprehensive diagnostics and consensus analytical models for evaluating the status of a patient's immune system has hindered a wider adoption of immunoprofiling for treatment monitoring and response prediction in cancer patients. To address this unmet need, we developed an immunoprofiling platform that uses multiparameter flow cytometry to characterize immune cell heterogeneity in the peripheral blood of healthy donors and patients with advanced cancers. Using unsupervised clustering, we identified five immunotypes with unique distributions of different cell types and gene expression profiles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Personalized cancer vaccines targeting neoantigens show promise for treating follicular lymphoma (FL) by using advanced sequencing technologies to identify unique tumor mutations.
  • In a study involving 58 tumor samples from 57 FL patients, researchers predicted and filtered high-quality neoantigens, finding an average of 52 mutations per patient with multiple high-quality neoantigens identified.
  • A pilot clinical trial using these personalized neoantigen vaccines combined with PD-1 blockade has been initiated, showing early signs of feasibility, safety, and potential therapeutic benefits for patients with relapsed or refractory FL.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF