Publications by authors named "Anagnostou V"

Article Synopsis
  • Co-mutations of KRAS and STK11 genes in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are linked to resistance against immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) therapies, although their impact in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy remains unclear.
  • A study investigated how these gene mutations affect recurrence-free survival in resectable KRAS-mutated NSCLC, revealing that those with co-occurring STK11 mutations had a higher risk of recurrence compared to those without.
  • Analysis of tumor-infiltrating T cells indicated that the presence of STK11 mutations altered T cell behavior, suggesting that certain T cell characteristics might hinder effective anti-tumor immune responses in patients with KRASmut/STK11
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: Preclinical and clinical data indicate that chemoradiotherapy (CRT) in combination with checkpoint inhibitors may prime an anti-tumor immunological response in esophageal cancer. However, responses to neoadjuvant therapy can vary widely and the key biomarkers to determine response remain poorly understood. The fecal microbiome is a novel and potentially modifiable biomarker of immunotherapy response, and both fecal and tumor microbes have been found to associate with outcomes in esophageal cancer.

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SpliceMutr shows that splicing antigenicity changes in response to ICI therapies and that native modulation of the splicing machinery through mutations increases the contribution of splicing to the neoantigen load of some The Cancer Genome Atlas cancer subtypes. Future studies of the relationship between splicing antigenicity and immune checkpoint inhibitor response pan-cancer are essential to establish the interplay between antigen heterogeneity and immunotherapy regimen on patient response.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study discusses a patient with metastatic breast cancer who has a genetic mutation in the PALB2 gene, which is linked to DNA repair processes.
  • The patient developed resistance to a class of drugs known as PARP inhibitors (PARPi) after initial treatment, raising concerns about treatment effectiveness.
  • Researchers found that the cancer evolved in multiple ways (convergent evolution) to develop this resistance, highlighting the complexity of managing cancer treatments over time.
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Article Synopsis
  • Dual immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) using CTLA4 and PD-(L)1 inhibitors shows improved anti-tumor effectiveness and immune toxicity compared to PD-(L)1 inhibitors alone in advanced non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients.
  • Patients with mutations in STK11 and/or KEAP1 genes benefit more from the combination treatment compared to those receiving only PD-(L)1 inhibitors, as shown in the POSEIDON trial.
  • The loss of KEAP1 serves as a strong predictor for the success of dual ICB, as it leads to a more favorable outcome by changing the tumor's immune environment to better engage CD4 and CD8 T cells for anti-tumor activity. *
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Modern generative artificial intelligence techniques like retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) may be applied in support of precision oncology treatment discussions. Experts routinely review published literature for evidence and recommendations of treatments in a labor-intensive process. A RAG pipeline may help reduce this effort by providing chunks of text from these publications to an off-the-shelf large language model (LLM), allowing it to answer related questions without any fine-tuning.

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There is a critical need for a streamlined process to identify genotype-matched individuals eligible for enrollment into clinical trials and/or targeted therapies, as current methodologies face challenges in integrating diverse molecular data sources. We have developed a precision oncology platform to assist molecular tumor boards and community oncologists in reviewing patients' phenotypes, evaluating related knowledge, and identifying genotype-matched therapies.

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Many mechanisms underlying an effective immunotherapy-induced antitumour response are transient and critically time dependent. This is equally true for several immunological events in the tumour microenvironment induced by other cancer treatments. Immune checkpoint therapy (ICT) has proven to be very effective in the treatment of some cancers, but unfortunately, with many cancer types, most patients do not experience a benefit.

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This study explores the previously uncharted territory of the effects of ultraviolet (UV) radiation on diabetic skin, compared to its well-documented impact on normal skin, particularly focusing on carcinogenesis and aging. Employing hairless SKH-hr2, Type 1 and 2 diabetic, and nondiabetic male mice, the research subjected these to UV radiation thrice weekly for eight months. The investigation included comprehensive assessments of photoaging and photocarcinogenesis in diabetic versus normal skin, measuring factors such as hydration, trans-epidermal water loss, elasticity, skin thickness, melanin, sebum content, stratum corneum exfoliation and body weight, alongside photo documentation.

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Liquid biopsies are emerging as powerful minimally invasive approaches that have the potential to solve several long-standing problems spanning the continuum of cancer care: early detection of cancer, minimal residual disease tracking, and refinement of the heterogeneity of clinical responses together with therapeutic response monitoring in the metastatic setting. Existing challenges driven by technical limitations and establishment of the clinical value of liquid biopsies represent fields of active research that call for convergence science approaches to bridge scientific discovery with clinical care.

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Gastroesophageal cancer dynamics and drivers of clinical responses with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) remain poorly understood. Potential synergistic activity of dual programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) and lymphocyte-activation gene 3 (LAG-3) inhibition may help improve immunotherapy responses for these tumors. We report a phase Ib trial that evaluated neoadjuvant nivolumab (Arm A, n = 16) or nivolumab-relatlimab (Arm B, n = 16) in combination with chemoradiotherapy in 32 patients with resectable stage II/stage III gastroesophageal cancer together with an in-depth evaluation of pathological, molecular and functional immune responses.

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Unlabelled: While tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) have shown remarkable efficacy in anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) fusion-positive advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), clinical outcomes vary and acquired resistance remains a significant challenge. We conducted a retrospective study of patients with ALK-positive NSCLC who had clinico-genomic data independently collected from two academic institutions (n = 309). This was paired with a large-scale genomic cohort of patients with ALK-positive NSCLC who underwent liquid biopsies (n = 1,118).

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Salvia officinalis L. has attracted scientific and industrial interest due to its pharmacological properties. However, its detailed phytochemical profile and its correlation with beneficial effects in the human microbiome and oxidative stress remained elusive.

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Objectives: Understand from a real-world cohort the unique clinical and genomic determinants of a durable response to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs).

Materials And Methods: This is a retrospective study of patients with NSCLC who received any ICI-based regimen as first or second line therapy. Long-term responders (LTR) achieved an overall survival (OS) ≥ 3 years from time of treatment start, while nonresponders (NR) were patients who had an OS of 6 to 12 months from time of treatment start.

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Background: Despite the putatively targetable genomic landscape of high-grade gliomas, the long-term survival benefit of genomically-tailored targeted therapies remains discouraging.

Methods: Using glioblastoma (GBM) as a representative example of high-grade gliomas, we evaluated the clonal architecture and distribution of hotspot mutations in 388 GBMs from the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Mutations were matched with 54 targeted therapies, followed by a comprehensive evaluation of drug biochemical properties in reference to the drug's clinical efficacy in high-grade gliomas.

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Background: Brain metastasis (BRM) is uncommon in gastroesophageal cancer. As such, clinicopathologic and molecular determinants of BRM and impact on clinical outcome remain incompletely understood.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed clinicopathologic data from advanced esophageal/gastroesophageal junction (E/GEJ) patients at Johns Hopkins from 2003 to 2021.

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Purpose: Although immunotherapy is the mainstay of therapy for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), robust biomarkers of clinical response are lacking. The heterogeneity of clinical responses together with the limited value of radiographic response assessments to timely and accurately predict therapeutic effect-especially in the setting of stable disease-calls for the development of molecularly informed real-time minimally invasive approaches. In addition to capturing tumor regression, liquid biopsies may be informative in capturing immune-related adverse events (irAE).

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Identifying neoepitopes that elicit an adaptive immune response is a major bottleneck to developing personalized cancer vaccines. Experimental validation of candidate neoepitopes is extremely resource intensive and the vast majority of candidates are non-immunogenic, creating a needle-in-a-haystack problem. Here we address this challenge, presenting computational methods for predicting class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) epitopes and identifying immunogenic neoepitopes with improved precision.

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Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) has shown promise in capturing primary resistance to immunotherapy. BR.36 is a multi-center, randomized, ctDNA-directed, phase 2 trial of molecular response-adaptive immuno-chemotherapy for patients with lung cancer.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Stereotactic ablative body radiation (SABR) shows promise for treating early-stage non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), with 83% of patients remaining alive without tumor progression at a median follow-up of 40 months.
  • - The study examined the immune and pathological effects of SABR by analyzing blood and tumor biopsies from six patients before and after treatment, focusing on immune-cell populations and T-cell receptor changes.
  • - While early post-SABR biopsies revealed viable tumors and maintained immune-cell populations, a subset of patients exhibited a temporary increase in neoantigen-specific T-cells after treatment, suggesting that SABR can provoke a delayed immune response.
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Article Synopsis
  • Regulatory T cells (T) are traditionally seen as suppressors of antitumor immunity, but their influence on immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) responses remains uncertain.
  • This study used advanced sequencing techniques to analyze over 73,000 tumor-infiltrating T cells from both anti-PD-1 treated and untreated lung cancer patients, identifying 10 distinct T cell subsets, with one subset showing high expression of activation markers linked to immune suppression.
  • The findings suggest that not all TIL-Ts are detrimental; a specific subset may help enhance responses to therapy, illustrating the complex role of TIL-Ts in cancer treatment.
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Unlabelled: Neoadjuvant chemoimmunotherapy improves pathologic complete response rate and event-free survival in patients with resectable non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) versus chemotherapy alone. NeoCOAST was the first randomized, multidrug platform trial to examine novel neoadjuvant immuno-oncology combinations for patients with resectable NSCLC, using major pathologic response (MPR) rate as the primary endpoint. Eighty-three patients received a single cycle of treatment: 26 received durvalumab (anti-PD-L1) monotherapy, 21 received durvalumab plus oleclumab (anti-CD73), 20 received durvalumab plus monalizumab (anti-NKG2A), and 16 received durvalumab plus danvatirsen (anti-STAT3 antisense oligonucleotide).

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Somatic mutations are a hallmark of tumorigenesis and may be useful for non-invasive diagnosis of cancer. We analyzed whole-genome sequencing data from 2,511 individuals in the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) study as well as 489 individuals from four prospective cohorts and found distinct regional mutation type-specific frequencies in tissue and cell-free DNA from patients with cancer that were associated with replication timing and other chromatin features. A machine-learning model using genome-wide mutational profiles combined with other features and followed by CT imaging detected >90% of patients with lung cancer, including those with stage I and II disease.

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Non-small-cell lung cancer remains a deadly form of human cancer even in the era of immunotherapy with existing immunotherapy strategies currently only benefiting a minority of patients. Therefore, the derivation of treatment options, which might extend the promise of immunotherapy to more patients, remains of paramount importance. Here, we define using TCGA lung squamous and lung adenocarcinoma RNAseq datasets a significant correlation between epigenetic therapy actionable interferon genes with both predicted tumor immune score generally, and CD8A specifically.

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Article Synopsis
  • Immunotherapy is the primary treatment for advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), but effective predictive biomarkers of clinical response are limited, highlighting the need for better real-time monitoring methods.
  • Liquid biopsies measuring circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) and immune response dynamics were used in a study of metastatic NSCLC patients undergoing immunotherapy, finding that molecular response was closely linked to survival outcomes.
  • The study concluded that tracking molecular responses through minimally invasive techniques can enhance understanding of treatment effects, particularly in patients with stable disease and those experiencing immune-related adverse events.
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