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Browsing by Author "Hancock, Brad A."
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Item Germline and Somatic DNA Damage Repair Gene Mutations and Overall Survival in Metastatic Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma Patients Treated with FOLFIRINOX(AACR, 2018-12) Sehdev, Amikar; Gbolahan, Olumide; Hancock, Brad A.; Stanley, Melissa; Shahda, Safi; Wan, Jun; Wu, Howard H.; Radovich, Milan; O'Neil, Bert H.; Medicine, School of MedicinePurpose: Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a lethal cancer with lack of predictive biomarkers. We conducted a study to assess DNA damage repair (DDR) gene mutations as a predictive biomarker in PDAC patients treated with FOLFIRINOX. Experimental Design: Indiana University Simon Cancer Center pancreatic cancer database was used to identify patients with metastatic PDAC, treated with FOLFIRINOX and had tissue available for DNA sequencing. Baseline demographic, clinical, and pathologic information was gathered. DNA isolation and targeted sequencing was performed using the Ion AmpliSeq protocol. Overall survival (OS) analysis was conducted using Kaplan–Meier, logistic regression and Cox proportional hazard methods. Multivariate models were adjusted for age, gender, margin status, CA 19-9, adjuvant chemotherapy, tumor and nodal stage. Results: Overall, 36 patients were sequenced. DDR gene mutations were found in 12 patients. Mutations were seen in BRCA1 (N = 7), BRCA2 (N = 5), PALB2 (N = 3), MSH2 (N = 1), and FANCF (N = 1) of all the DDR genes sequenced. Median age was 65.5 years, 58% were male, 97.2% were Caucasian and 51.4% had any family history of cancer. The median OS was near significantly superior in those with DDR gene mutations present vs. absent [14 vs. 5 months; HR, 0.58; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.29–1.14; log-rank P = 0.08]. Multivariate logistic (OR, 1.47; 95% CI, 1.04–2.06; P = 0.04) and Cox regression (HR, 0.37; 95% CI, 0.15–0.94; P = 0.04) showed presence of DDR gene mutations was associated with improved OS. Conclusions: In a single institution, retrospective study, we found that the presence of DDR gene mutations are associated with improved OS in PDAC patients treated with FOLFIRINOX.Item Regulation of cellular sterol homeostasis by the oxygen responsive noncoding RNA lincNORS(Nature Publishing Group, 2020-09-21) Wu, Xue; Niculite, Cristina M.; Preda, Mihai Bogdan; Rossi, Annalisa; Tebaldi, Toma; Butoi, Elena; White, Mattie K.; Tudoran, Oana M.; Petrusca, Daniela N.; Jannasch, Amber S.; Bone, William P.; Zong, Xingyue; Fang, Fang; Burlacu, Alexandrina; Paulsen, Michelle T.; Hancock, Brad A.; Sandusky, George E.; Mitra, Sumegha; Fishel, Melissa L.; Buechlein, Aaron; Ivan, Cristina; Oikonomopoulos, Spyros; Gorospe, Myriam; Mosley, Amber; Radovich, Milan; Davé, Utpal P.; Ragoussis, Jiannis; Nephew, Kenneth P.; Mari, Bernard; McIntyre, Alan; Konig, Heiko; Ljungman, Mats; Cousminer, Diana L.; Macchi, Paolo; Ivan, Mircea; Medicine, School of MedicineWe hereby provide the initial portrait of lincNORS, a spliced lincRNA generated by the MIR193BHG locus, entirely distinct from the previously described miR-193b-365a tandem. While inducible by low O2 in a variety of cells and associated with hypoxia in vivo, our studies show that lincNORS is subject to multiple regulatory inputs, including estrogen signals. Biochemically, this lincRNA fine-tunes cellular sterol/steroid biosynthesis by repressing the expression of multiple pathway components. Mechanistically, the function of lincNORS requires the presence of RALY, an RNA-binding protein recently found to be implicated in cholesterol homeostasis. We also noticed the proximity between this locus and naturally occurring genetic variations highly significant for sterol/steroid-related phenotypes, in particular the age of sexual maturation. An integrative analysis of these variants provided a more formal link between these phenotypes and lincNORS, further strengthening the case for its biological relevance.