Background: Maintenance therapy with niraparib, a poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitor, has been shown to extend progression-free survival in patients with newly diagnosed advanced ovarian cancer who responded to first-line platinum-based chemotherapy, regardless of biomarker status. However, there are limited data on niraparib's efficacy and safety in the neoadjuvant setting. The objective of Cohort C of the OPAL trial (OPAL-C) is to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of neoadjuvant niraparib treatment compared with neoadjuvant platinum-taxane doublet chemotherapy in patients with newly diagnosed stage III/IV ovarian cancer with confirmed homologous recombination-deficient tumors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn conversation with endometrial tumor cells, the endometrial cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are the "partners in crime" of uterine neoplasm's highly heterogeneous tumor microenvironment (TME). We designed a laboratory-friendly method to culture endometrial CAFs on a patient-to-patient basis for studying the CAF-TME and CAF-tumor cell interaction(s). Here, we present a comprehensive characterization of endometrial CAFs derived from patients' tumor tissues (T) and tumor-adjacent normal tissues (N).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Phase 1 trial to determine the safety and tolerability of everolimus and niraparib in patients with advanced ovarian and breast malignancies.
Results: Fourteen heavily pretreated patients were enrolled (12 high-grade serous ovarian cancer, 1 clear cell ovarian cancer, and 1 triple negative breast cancer). All patients were PARP naïve and received comprehensive genomic profiling prior to enrollment.
Background: Phase I trial to determine the safety and efficacy of paclitaxel, sapanisertib, and serabelisib.
Patients And Methods: Patients with previously treated advanced solid tumors were eligible for this open label, cohort study of sapanisertib (TAK-228) and serabelisib (TAK-117) with weekly paclitaxel. A traditional 3 + 3 dose escalation design with 5 dosing cohorts was used.
The WNT-beta-catenin pathway (WP) is one of the major oncogenic pathways in solid tumors. Wnt beta-catenin pathway plays a unique role in a wide range of endometrial dysfunctions, from embryo implantation failure to severe pathogenic changes like endometriosis and endometrial cancer. Although abnormal activation of the pathway has long been known to be associated with endometrial tumorigenesis, the pathway's exact mode of involvement remains to be understood.
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