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Browsing by Author "Tallman, Martin S."
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Item CNS involvement in AML at diagnosis is rare and does not affect response or survival: data from 11 ECOG-ACRIN trials(American Society of Hematology, 2021) Ganzel, Chezi; Lee, Ju-Whei; Fernandez, Hugo F.; Paietta, Elisabeth M.; Luger, Selina M.; Lazarus, Hillard M.; Cripe, Larry D.; Douer, Dan; Wiernik, Peter H.; Rowe, Jacob M.; Tallman, Martin S.; Litzow, Mark R.; Medicine, School of MedicineCentral nervous system (CNS) involvement in patients with newly diagnosed acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is rare, and systematic data regarding outcome are scarce. This retrospective study summarized data from 11 consecutive Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group-American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ECOG-ACRIN) clinical trials for patients with newly diagnosed AML. In all, 3240 patients with AML were analyzed, and 36 (1.11%) were found to have CNS involvement at diagnosis. The incidence of CNS disease among the 5 studies with per protocol mandatory lumbar puncture (LP) was similar to the incidence among studies in which LP was performed at the discretion of the investigator (0.86% vs 1.41%; P = .18). There was no significant difference in the rate of complete remission (CR) among patients with CNS involvement and those with other extramedullary disease (EMD) sites or those with no EMD (52.8% vs 59.3%-60%). The median overall survival (OS) for patients who were CNS positive, who had other EMD, or who had no EMD was 11.4, 11.3, and 12.7 months, respectively. There was no difference in OS among patients with CNS involvement, those with other EMD (hazard ratio [HR], 0.96; adjusted P = .84), and those with no EMD (HR, 1.19; adjusted P = .44). In conclusion, the reported incidence of CNS involvement in patients with newly diagnosed AML is low (1.1%), irrespective of whether an LP is mandatory or not. The presence of CNS disease at diagnosis in and of itself does not seem to portend a poor prognosis for achieving an initial CR or for OS.Item In Support of a Patient-Driven Initiative and Petition to Lower the High Price of Cancer Drugs(Elsevier, 2015-08) Tefferi, Ayalew; Kantarjian, Hagop; Rajkumar, S. Vincent; Baker, Lawrence H.; Abkowitz, Jan L.; Adamson, John W.; Advani, Ranjana Hira; Allison, James; Antman, Karen H.; Bast Jr., Robert C.; Bennett, John M.; Benz Jr., Edward J.; Berliner, Nancy; Bertino, Joseph; Bhatia, Ravi; Bhatia, Smita; Bhojwani, Deepa; Blanke, Charles D.; Bloomfield, Clara D.; Bosserman, Linda; Broxmeyer, Hal E.; Byrd, John C.; Cabanillas, Fernando; Canellos, George Peter; Chabner, Bruce A.; Chanan-Khan, Asher; Cheson, Bruce; Clarkson, Bayard; Cohn, Susan L.; Colon-Otero, Gerardo; Cortese, Jorge; Coutre, Steven; Cristofanilli, Massimo; Curran Jr., Walter J.; Daley, George Q.; DeAngelo, Daniel J.; Deeg, H. Joachim; Einhorn, Lawrence H.; Erba, Harry P.; Esteva, Francisco J.; Estey, Elihu; Fidler, Isaiah J.; Foran, James; Forman, Stephen; Freireich, Emil; Fuchs, Charles; George, James N.; Gertz, Morie A.; Giralt, Sergio; Golomb, Harvey; Greenberg, Peter; Gutterman, Jordan; Handin, Robert I.; Hellman, Samuel; Hoff, Paulo Marcelo; Hoffman, Ronald; Hong, Waun Ki; Horowitz, Mary; Hortobagyi, Gabriel N.; Hudis, Clifford; Issa, Jean Pierre; Johnson, Bruce Evan; Kantoff, Philip W.; Kaushansky, Kenneth; Khayat, David; Khuri, Fadlo R.; Kipps, Thomas J.; Kripke, Margaret; Kyle, Robert A.; Larson, Richard A.; Lawrence, Theodore S.; Levine, Ross; Link, Michael P.; Lippman, Scott M.; Lonial, Sagar; Lyman, Gary H.; Markman, Maurie; Mendelsohn, John; Meropol, Neal J.; Messinger, Yoav; Mulvey, Therese M.; O’Brien, Susan; Perez-Soler, Roman; Pollock, Raphael; Prchal, Josef; Press, Oliver; Radich, Jerald; Rai, Kanti; Rosenberg, Saul A.; Rowe, Jacob M.; Rugo, Hope; Runowicz, Carolyn D.; Sandmaier, Brenda M.; Saven, Alan; Schafer, Andrew I.; Schiffer, Charles; Sekeres, Mikkael A.; Silver, Richard T.; Siu, Lillian L.; Steensma, David P.; Stewart, F. Marc; Stock, Wendy; Stone, Richard; Storb, Rainer; Strong, Louise C.; Tallman, Martin S.; Thompson, Michael; Ueno, Naoto T.; Van Etten, Richard A.; Vose, Julie M.; Wiernik, Peter H.; Winer, Eric P.; Younes, Anas; Zelenetz, Andrew D.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineComment in Lowering the High Cost of Cancer Drugs--III. [Mayo Clin Proc. 2016] Lowering the High Cost of Cancer Drugs--I. [Mayo Clin Proc. 2016] Lowering the High Cost of Cancer Drugs--IV. [Mayo Clin Proc. 2016] In Reply--Lowering the High Cost of Cancer Drugs. [Mayo Clin Proc. 2016] US oncologists call for government regulation to curb drug price rises. [BMJ. 2015]Item Independent Prognostic Significance of Monosomy 17 and Impact of Karyotype Complexity in Monosomal Karyotype/Complex Karyotype Acute Myeloid Leukemia: Results from Four ECOG-ACRIN Prospective Therapeutic Trials(Elsevier, 2017-08) Strickland, Stephen A.; Sun, Zhuoxin; Ketterling, Rhett P.; Cherry, Athena M.; Cripe, Larry D.; Dewald, Gordon; Fernandez, Hugo; Hicks, Gary A.; Higgins, Rodney R.; Lazarus, Hillard M.; Litzow, Mark R.; Luger, Selina M.; Paietta, Elisabeth M.; Rowe, Jacob M.; Vance, Gail H.; Wiernik, Peter; Wiktor, Anne E.; Zhang, Yanming; Tallman, Martin S.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineThe presence of a monosomal karyotype (MK+) and/or a complex karyotype (CK+) identifies subcategories of AML with poor prognosis. The prognostic significance of the most common monosomies (monosomy 5, monosomy 7, and monosomy 17) within MK+/CK+ AML is not well defined. We analyzed data from 1,592 AML patients age 17–93 years enrolled on ECOG-ACRIN therapeutic trials. The majority of MK+ patients (182/195; 93%) were MK+/CK+ with 87% (158/182) having ≥5 clonal abnormalities (CK≥ 5). MK+ patients with karyotype complexity ≤4 had a median overall survival (OS) of 0.4y compared to 1.0y for MK- with complexity ≤4 (p < 0.001), whereas no OS difference was seen in MK+ vs. MK- patients with CK≥ 5 (p = 0.82). Monosomy 5 (93%; 50/54) typically occurred within a highly complex karyotype and had no impact on OS (0.4y; p = 0.95). Monosomy 7 demonstrated no impact on OS in patients with CK≥ 5 (p = 0.39) or CK ≤ 4 (p = 0.44). Monosomy 17 appeared in 43% (68/158) of CK≥ 5 patients and demonstrated statistically significant worse OS (0.4y) compared to CK≥ 5 patients without monosomy 17 (0.5y; p = 0.012). Our data suggest that the prognostic impact of MK+ is limited to those with less complex karyotypes and that monosomy 17 may independently predict for worse survival in patients with AML.Item Integrative analysis identifies an older female-linked AML patient group with better risk in ECOG-ACRIN Cancer Research Group's clinical trial E3999(Springer Nature, 2022-09-23) Rapaport, Franck; Seier, Kenneth; Neelamraju, Yaseswini; Hassane, Duane; Baslan, Timour; Gildea, Daniel T.; Haddox, Samuel; Lee, Tak; Murdock, H. Moses; Sheridan, Caroline; Thurmond, Alexis; Wang, Ling; Carroll, Martin; Cripe, Larry D.; Fernandez, Hugo; Mason, Christopher E.; Paietta, Elisabeth; Roboz, Gail J.; Sun, Zhuoxin; Tallman, Martin S.; Zhang, Yanming; Gönen, Mithat; Levine, Ross; Melnick, Ari M.; Kleppe, Maria; Garrett-Bakelman, Francine E.; Medicine, School of MedicineItem Mutated Ptpn11 alters leukemic stem cell frequency and reduces the sensitivity of acute myeloid leukemia cells to Mcl1 inhibition(Nature Publishing Group, 2015-06) Chen, Lili; Chen, Wei; Mysliwski, Maria; Serio, Justin; Ropa, James; Abulwerdi, Fardokht A.; Chan, Rebecca J.; Patel, Jay P.; Tallman, Martin S.; Paietta, Elisabeth; Melnick, Ari; Levine, Ross L.; Abdel-Wahab, Omar; Nikolovska-Coleska, Zaneta; Muntean, Andrew G.; Department of Pediatrics, IU School of MedicinePTPN11 encodes the Shp2 non-receptor protein-tyrosine phosphatase implicated in several signaling pathways. Activating mutations in Shp2 are commonly associated with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia but are not as well defined in other neoplasms. Here we report that Shp2 mutations occur in human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) at a rate of 6.6% (6/91) in the ECOG E1900 data set. We examined the role of mutated Shp2 in leukemias harboring MLL translocations, which co-occur in human AML. The hyperactive Shp2E76K mutant, commonly observed in leukemia patients, significantly accelerated MLL-AF9-mediated leukemogenesis in vivo. Shp2E76K increased leukemic stem cell frequency and affords MLL-AF9 leukemic cells IL3 cytokine hypersensitivity. As Shp2 is reported to regulate anti-apoptotic genes, we investigated Bcl2, Bcl-xL and Mcl1 expression in MLL-AF9 leukemic cells with and without Shp2E76K. Although the Bcl2 family of genes was upregulated in Shp2E76K cells, Mcl1 showed the highest upregulation in MLL-AF9 cells in response to Shp2E76K. Indeed, expression of Mcl1 in MLL-AF9 cells phenocopies expression of Shp2E76K, suggesting Shp2 mutations cooperate through activation of anti-apoptotic genes. Finally, we show Shp2E76K mutations reduce sensitivity of AML cells to small-molecule-mediated Mcl1 inhibition, suggesting reduced efficacy of drugs targeting MCL1 in patients with hyperactive Shp2.Item Prognostic effect of gender on outcome of treatment for adults with acute myeloid leukaemia(Wiley, 2021) Wiernik, Peter H.; Sun, Zhuoxin; Cripe, Larry D.; Rowe, Jacob M.; Fernandez, Hugo F.; Luger, Selina M.; Lazarus, Hillard M.; Paietta, Elisabeth M.; Tallman, Martin S.; Litzow, Mark R.; Medicine, School of MedicineThere are conflicting reports in the literature suggesting that one gender or the other has a better survival with acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). This study was done in an attempt to resolve the issue. The effect of gender was examined on 3,546 newly diagnosed patients with AML, including 548 patients with acute promyelocytic leukaemia (APL) enrolled in 10 multi-institutional treatment studies from March 1984 to November 2008. Kaplan-Meier estimates were used to estimate event-time distributions for survival and multivariate models were used to examine the gender effect after adjusting for multiple risk factors. P values were based on 2-sided tests. Non-APL female patients had a significantly better overall but not disease-free survival than males, irrespective of age, initial WBC count, or dose of daunorubicin. No differences were observed for obese or FLT3-ITD + patients. Female APL patients had a significantly better overall and disease-free survival than male APL patients, and differences in survival were greater for patients with t(15;17) + other cytogenetic abnormalities compared with those with t(15;17) only. Gender is an independent prognostic variable in patients with AML. Whether these survival differences are due to hormonal, genetic or pharmacokinetic differences between the sexes, or differential toxin exposure such as smoking is unknown. However, the former seems less likely since patient age did not influence the survival advantage for female patients.Item The Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer consensus statement on immunotherapy for the treatment of hematologic malignancies: multiple myeloma, lymphoma, and acute leukemia(BioMed Central, 2016-12-20) Boyiadzis, Michael; Bishop, Michael R.; Abonour, Rafat; Anderson, Kenneth C.; Ansell, Stephen M.; Avigan, David; Barbarotta, Lisa; Barrett, Austin John; Van Besien, Koen; Bergsagel, Leif; Borrello, Ivan; Brody, Joshua; Brufsky, Jill; Cairo, Mitchell; Chari, Ajai; Cohen, Adam; Cortes, Jorge; Forman, Stephen J.; Friedberg, Jonathan W.; Fuchs, Ephraim J.; Gore, Steven D.; Jagannath, Sundar; Kahl, Brad S; Kline, Justin; Kochenderfer, James N.; Kwak, Larry W.; Levy, Ronald; de Lima, Marcos; Litzow, Mark R.; Mahindra, Anuj; Miller, Jeffrey; Munshi, Nikhil C.; Orlowski, Robert Z.; Pagel, John M.; Porter, David L.; Russell, Stephen J.; Schwartz, Karl; Shipp, Margaret A.; Siegel, David; Stone, Richard M.; Tallman, Martin S.; Timmerman, John M.; Van Rhee, Frits; Waller, Edmund K.; Welsh, Ann; Werner, Michael; Wiernik, Peter H.; Dhodapkar, Madhav V.; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineIncreasing knowledge concerning the biology of hematologic malignancies as well as the role of the immune system in the control of these diseases has led to the development and approval of immunotherapies that are resulting in impressive clinical responses. Therefore, the Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) convened a hematologic malignancy Cancer Immunotherapy Guidelines panel consisting of physicians, nurses, patient advocates, and patients to develop consensus recommendations for the clinical application of immunotherapy for patients with multiple myeloma, lymphoma, and acute leukemia. These recommendations were developed following the previously established process based on the Institute of Medicine’s clinical practice guidelines. In doing so, a systematic literature search was performed for high-impact studies from 2004 to 2014 and was supplemented with further literature as identified by the panel. The consensus panel met in December of 2014 with the goal to generate consensus recommendations for the clinical use of immunotherapy in patients with hematologic malignancies. During this meeting, consensus panel voting along with discussion were used to rate and review the strength of the supporting evidence from the literature search. These consensus recommendations focus on issues related to patient selection, toxicity management, clinical endpoints, and the sequencing or combination of therapies. Overall, immunotherapy is rapidly emerging as an effective therapeutic strategy for the management of hematologic malignances. Evidence-based consensus recommendations for its clinical application are provided and will be updated as the field evolves.Item Special considerations in the management of adult patients with acute leukaemias and myeloid neoplasms in the COVID-19 era: recommendations from a panel of international experts(Elsevier, 2020-06-18) Zeidan, Amer M.; Boddu, Prajwal C.; Patnaik, Mrinal M.; Bewersdorf, Jan Philipp; Stahl, Maximilian; Rampal, Raajit K.; Shallis, Rory; Steensma, David P.; Savona, Michael R.; Sekeres, Mikkael A.; Roboz, Gail J.; DeAngelo, Daniel J.; Schuh, Andre C.; Padron, Eric; Zeidner, Joshua F.; Walter, Roland B.; Onida, Francesco; Fathi, Amir; DeZern, Amy; Hobbs, Gabriela; Stein, Eytan M.; Vyas, Paresh; Wei, Andrew H.; Bowen, David T.; Montesinos, Pau; Griffiths, Elizabeth A.; Verma, Amit K.; Keyzner, Alla; Bar-Natan, Michal; Navada, Shyamala C.; Kremyanskaya, Marina; Goldberg, Aaron D.; Al-Kali, Aref; Heaney, Mark L.; Nazha, Aziz; Salman, Huda; Luger, Selina; Pratz, Keith W.; Konig, Heiko; Komrokji, Rami; Deininger, Michael; Cirici, Blanca Xicoy; Bhatt, Vijaya Raj; Silverman, Lewis R.; Erba, Harry P.; Fenaux, Pierre; Platzbecker, Uwe; Santini, Valeria; Wang, Eunice S.; Tallman, Martin S.; Stone, Richard M.; Mascarenhas, John; Medicine, School of MedicineThe ongoing COVID-19 pandemic caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 is a global public health crisis. Multiple observations indicate poorer post-infection outcomes for patients with cancer than for the general population. Herein, we highlight the challenges in caring for patients with acute leukaemias and myeloid neoplasms amid the COVID-19 pandemic. We summarise key changes related to service allocation, clinical and supportive care, clinical trial participation, and ethical considerations regarding the use of lifesaving measures for these patients. We recognise that these recommendations might be more applicable to high-income countries and might not be generalisable because of regional differences in health-care infrastructure, individual circumstances, and a complex and highly fluid health-care environment. Despite these limitations, we aim to provide a general framework for the care of patients with acute leukaemias and myeloid neoplasms during the COVID-19 pandemic on the basis of recommendations from international experts.