43 results match your criteria: "USA (P.Y.W.); University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center[Affiliation]"

Patients with osteosarcoma (OS), a debilitating pediatric bone malignancy, have limited treatment options to combat aggressive disease. OS thrives on insulin growth factor (IGF)-mediated signaling that can facilitate cell proliferation. Previous efforts to target IGF-1R signaling were mostly unsuccessful, likely due to compensatory signaling through alternative splicing of the insulin receptor () to the proliferative isoform.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Leptomeningeal metastatic disease (LMD), encompassing entities of 'meningeal carcinomatosis', neoplastic meningitis' and 'leukaemic/lymphomatous meningitis', arises secondary to the metastatic dissemination of cancer cells from extracranial and certain intracranial malignancies into the leptomeninges and cerebrospinal fluid. The clinical burden of LMD has been increasing secondary to more sensitive diagnostics, aggressive local therapies for discrete brain metastases, and improved management of extracranial disease with targeted and immunotherapeutic agents, resulting in improved survival. However, owing to drug delivery challenges and the unique microenvironment of LMD, novel therapies against systemic disease have not yet translated into improved outcomes for these patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adolescents and young adults (AYAs; ages 15-39 years) are a vulnerable population facing challenges in oncological care, including access to specialized care, transition of care, unique tumor biology, and poor representation in clinical trials. Brain tumors are the second most common tumor type in AYA, with malignant brain tumors being the most common cause of cancer-related death. The 2021 WHO Classification for central nervous system (CNS) Tumors highlights the importance of integrated molecular characterization with histologic diagnosis in several tumors relevant to the AYA population.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Theranostics is a new treatment modality integrating molecular imaging with targeted radionuclide therapy. Theranostic agents have received regulatory approval for some systemic cancers and have therapeutic potential in neuro-oncology. As clinical trials are developed to evaluate the efficacy of theranostic agents in brain tumors, specific considerations will have to be considered, taking into account lessons learned from previous studies examining other treatment modalities in neuro-oncology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Argonaute (AGO) proteins associate with guide RNAs to form complexes that slice transcripts that pair to the guide. This slicing drives post-transcriptional gene-silencing pathways that are essential for many eukaryotes and the basis for new clinical therapies. Despite this importance, structural information on eukaryotic AGOs in a fully paired, slicing-competent conformation-hypothesized to be intrinsically unstable-has been lacking.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Velcrins are molecular glues that kill cells by inducing the formation of a protein complex between the RNase SLFN12 and the phosphodiesterase PDE3A. Formation of the complex activates SLFN12, which cleaves tRNA(TAA) and induces apoptosis. Velcrins such as the clinical investigational compound, BAY 2666605, were found to have activity across multiple solid tumor cell lines from the cancer cell line encyclopedia, including glioblastoma cell lines.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recurrent high-grade gliomas (rHGGs) have a dismal prognosis, where the maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of IV terameprocol (5 days/month), a transcriptional inhibitor of specificity protein 1 (Sp1)-regulated proteins, is 1,700 mg/day with median area under the plasma concentration-time curve (AUC) of 31.3 μg∗h/mL. Given potentially increased efficacy with sustained systemic exposure and challenging logistics of daily IV therapy, here we investigate oral terameprocol for rHGGs in a multicenter, phase 1 trial (GATOR).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Leptomeningeal metastases (LM) are increasingly becoming recognized as a treatable, yet generally incurable, complication of advanced cancer. As modern cancer therapeutics have prolonged the lives of patients with metastatic cancer, specifically in patients with parenchymal brain metastases, treatment options, and clinical research protocols for patients with LM from solid tumors have similarly evolved to improve survival within specific populations. Recent expansions in clinical investigation, early diagnosis, and drug development have given rise to new unanswered questions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study assessed the safety of using immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) — specifically anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 — for treating newly diagnosed glioblastoma (GBM) patients after standard treatment, aiming to explore combined therapies.
  • A total of 32 patients participated, showing that the treatments were generally well tolerated, with low rates of severe toxicity and no deaths related to the treatments; specifically, the combination treatment did not show increased toxicity compared to single-agent therapies.
  • The findings indicate that the combination of Ipilimumab and Nivolumab could provide promising results for overall and progression-free survival in patients with GBM, supporting further trials to evaluate their efficacy in this setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Preclinical studies have demonstrated that VT1021, a first-in-class therapeutic agent, inhibits tumor growth via stimulation of thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) and reprograms the tumor microenvironment. We recently reported data from the dose escalation part of a phase I study of VT1021 in solid tumors. Here, we report findings from the dose expansion phase of the same study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Population pharmacokinetics of imetelstat, a first-in-class oligonucleotide telomerase inhibitor.

CPT Pharmacometrics Syst Pharmacol

July 2024

Morcos Pharmaceutical Consulting, LLC, Marlboro, New Jersey, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • * A mixed-effects model was created to analyze how different factors like demographics and health conditions affect the drug's pharmacokinetics using data from 424 patients across seven clinical trials.
  • * The final model found that factors such as sex, disease type, and dosage impact drug clearance and volume in the body, but generally suggests that body-weight-based dosing is appropriate without needing individual dose adjustments for most patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC), which powers RNA interference (RNAi), consists of a guide RNA and an Argonaute protein that slices target RNAs complementary to the guide. We find that for different guide-RNA sequences, slicing rates of perfectly complementary, bound targets can be surprisingly different (>250-fold range), and that faster slicing confers better knockdown in cells. Nucleotide sequence identities at guide-RNA positions 7, 10, and 17 underlie much of this variation in slicing rates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the effects of the AMPA receptor antagonist perampanel on hyperexcitability and clinical outcomes in patients undergoing surgery for high-grade glioma.
  • The trial compared perampanel to standard care using levetiracetam, measuring intraoperative hyperexcitability through high-frequency oscillation (HFO) rates and tracking seizure-free outcomes and overall survival.
  • Results indicated no significant difference in hyperexcitability or survival outcomes between the two treatments, leading to the early termination of the trial due to futility, while perampanel was found to be safe and well-tolerated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The utility of liquid biopsies is well documented in several extracranial and intracranial (brain/leptomeningeal metastases, gliomas) tumors.

Methods: The RANO (Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology) group has set up a multidisciplinary Task Force to critically review the role of blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-liquid biopsy in CNS lymphomas, with a main focus on primary central nervous system lymphomas (PCNSL).

Results: Several clinical applications are suggested: diagnosis of PCNSL in critical settings (elderly or frail patients, deep locations, and steroid responsiveness), definition of minimal residual disease, early indication of tumor response or relapse following treatments, and prediction of outcome.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers used advanced RNA-sequencing techniques on tumor samples taken from patients after four weeks of IDHi treatment to examine cellular changes.
  • * Findings reveal that IDHi promotes differentiation of tumor cells toward a specific brain cell type (astrocytes), reduces stem-like cells, and highlights a mutation (NOTCH1) that may hinder this differentiation and affect treatment response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Brain tumor diagnostics have progressed with techniques like PET and advanced MRI, aiding in tumor differentiation, extent evaluation, and treatment response assessment.
  • Joint recommendations from major medical groups emphasize the significant value of using radiolabeled amino acids alongside standard MRI for better clinical outcomes.
  • Despite their importance, these imaging methods face challenges that need to be addressed through standardized protocols and interdisciplinary collaboration to enhance patient care in brain tumor management.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: H3 K27M-mutant diffuse glioma primarily affects children and young adults, is associated with a poor prognosis, and no effective systemic therapy is currently available. ONC201 (dordaviprone) has previously demonstrated efficacy in patients with recurrent disease. This phase 3 trial evaluates ONC201 in patients with newly diagnosed H3 K27M-mutant glioma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Therapeutic benefit of idebenone in patients with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy: The LEROS nonrandomized controlled trial.

Cell Rep Med

March 2024

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), 81377 Munich, Germany; Munich Cluster for Systems Neurology (SyNergy), 81377 Munich, Germany; Friedrich Baur Institute at the Department of Neurology, LMU University Hospital, LMU Munich, 80336 Munich, Germany. Electronic address:

Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrial disease leading to rapid and severe bilateral vision loss. Idebenone has been shown to be effective in stabilizing and restoring vision in patients treated within 1 year of onset of vision loss. The open-label, international, multicenter, natural history-controlled LEROS study (ClinicalTrials.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) are designed to deliver chemotherapeutic agents to specific cancer cells, and recent research shows that even low levels of target proteins like HER2 can lead to effective treatment in certain brain tumors.
  • A study analyzing gene expression data from over 500 CNS tumors revealed that various tumor types express different ADC targets, with ependymomas having high HER2 levels, while meningiomas and other tumors exhibited specific patterns of target protein expression.
  • The findings suggest that understanding the unique expression profiles of ADC targets in CNS tumors can guide future treatment strategies and help develop new therapies tailored for specific cancer types.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Immunotherapy failures can result from the highly suppressive tumour microenvironment that characterizes aggressive forms of cancer such as recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM). Here we report the results of a first-in-human phase I trial in 41 patients with rGBM who were injected with CAN-3110-an oncolytic herpes virus (oHSV). In contrast to other clinical oHSVs, CAN-3110 retains the viral neurovirulence ICP34.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The lack of reliable predictive biomarkers to guide effective therapy is a major obstacle to the advancement of therapy for high-grade gliomas, particularly glioblastoma (GBM), one of the few cancers whose prognosis has not improved over the past several decades. With this pilot clinical trial (number NCT04135807), we provide first-in-human evidence that drug-releasing intratumoral microdevices (IMDs) can be safely and effectively used to obtain patient-specific, high-throughput molecular and histopathological drug response profiling. These data can complement other strategies to inform the selection of drugs based on their observed antitumor effect in situ.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: One strategy for identifying targets of a regulatory factor is to perturb the factor and use high-throughput RNA sequencing to examine the consequences. However, distinguishing direct targets from secondary effects and experimental noise can be challenging when confounding signal is present in the background at varying levels.

Results: Here, we present a statistical modeling strategy to identify microRNAs that are primary substrates of target-directed miRNA degradation (TDMD) mediated by ZSWIM8.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Growth Differentiation Factor-15 (GDF15) is a circulating polypeptide linked to cellular stress and metabolic adaptation. GDF15's half-life is ~3 h and activates the glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor family receptor alpha-like (GFRAL) receptor expressed in the area postrema. To characterize sustained GFRAL agonism on food intake (FI) and body weight (BW), we tested a half-life extended analog of GDF15 (Compound H [CpdH]) suitable for reduced dosing frequency in obese cynomolgus monkeys.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

BRAFV600E alterations are prevalent across multiple tumors. Here we present final efficacy and safety results of a phase 2 basket trial of dabrafenib (BRAF kinase inhibitor) plus trametinib (MEK inhibitor) in eight cohorts of patients with BRAFV600E-mutated advanced rare cancers: anaplastic thyroid carcinoma (n = 36), biliary tract cancer (n = 43), gastrointestinal stromal tumor (n = 1), adenocarcinoma of the small intestine (n = 3), low-grade glioma (n = 13), high-grade glioma (n = 45), hairy cell leukemia (n = 55) and multiple myeloma (n = 19). The primary endpoint of investigator-assessed overall response rate in these cohorts was 56%, 53%, 0%, 67%, 54%, 33%, 89% and 50%, respectively.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Central nervous system (CNS) tumor patients often receive a mix of treatments that can lead to significant side effects affecting their quality of life, but these complications have not been thoroughly studied.
  • The European Association of Neuro-Oncology (EANO) has created guidelines to help prevent, recognize, and manage these adverse effects in adults with primary brain tumors, focusing on surgery, radiotherapy, and drugs.
  • The recommendations include advice on adjusting medication doses and identifying treatments that are unnecessary or not effective, aiming to standardize care for patients both in and out of clinical trials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF