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Browsing by Author "Yuan, Cindy"
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Item Efficacy of Post-Induction Therapy for High-risk Neuroblastoma Patients with End-Induction Residual Disease(Wiley, 2022) Desai, Ami V.; Applebaum, Mark A.; Karrison, Theodore G.; Oppong, Akosua; Yuan, Cindy; Berg, Katherine R.; MacQuarrie, Kyle; Sokol, Elizabeth; Hall, Anurekha G.; Pinto, Navin; Wolfe, Ian; Mody, Rajen; Shusterman, Suzanne; Smith, Valeria; Foster, Jennifer H.; Nassin, Michele; LaBelle, James L.; Bagatell, Rochelle; Cohn, Susan L.; Radiology and Imaging Sciences, School of MedicineBackground: High-risk neuroblastoma patients with end-induction residual disease commonly receive post-induction therapy in an effort to increase survival by improving response prior to autologous stem cell transplant (ASCT). We conducted a multi-center, retrospective study to investigate the efficacy of this approach. Methods: Patients diagnosed between 2008 and 2018 without progressive disease (PD) with ≤ partial response (PR) at end-induction were stratified according to post-induction treatment: i) no additional therapy prior to ASCT (Cohort 1); ii) post-induction “bridge” therapy prior to ASCT (Cohort 2); and iii) post-induction therapy without ASCT (Cohort 3). Chi-square tests were used to compare patient characteristics. Three-year event-free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were estimated by the Kaplan-Meier method and survival curves were compared by log-rank test. Results: The study cohort consisted of 201 patients; Cohort 1 (n=123); Cohort 2 (n=51); and Cohort 3 (n=27). Although end-induction response was better for Cohort 1 than Cohorts 2 and 3, outcome for Cohort 1 and 2 was not significantly different (EFS; p=0.77 and OS; p=0.85). Inferior outcome was observed for Cohort 3 (EFS; p<0.001 and OS; p=0.06). Among patients with end-induction stable metastatic disease, 3-year EFS was significantly improved for Cohort 2 compared to Cohort 1 (p=0.04). Cohort 3 patients with complete response (CR) in metastatic sites following post-induction therapy had significantly better 3-year EFS compared to those with residual metastatic disease (p=0.01). Conclusions: Prospective studies to confirm the benefits of bridge treatment and the prognostic significance of metastatic response observed in this study are warranted.Item Whole body metabolic tumor volume is a prognostic marker in patients with newly diagnosed stage 3B non-small cell lung cancer, confirmed with external validation(SpringerOpen, 2017) Dashevsky, Brittany Z.; Zhang, Chenpeng; Yan, Li; Yuan, Cindy; Xiong, Lingyun; Liu, Yongmei; Liu, Haiyan; Spring Kong, Feng-Ming; Pu, Yonglin; Medical and Molecular Genetics, School of MedicinePurpose: TNM Stage 3B encompasses a wide range of primary tumor and nodal metastatic tumor burden. This study aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of quantitative FDG PET/CT parameters in patients with newly diagnosed Stage 3B Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC). Materials and Methods: Institutional review board approved retrospective study identified patients diagnosed with Stage 3B NSCLC (8th edition TNM classification) on baseline FDG PET/CT at two medical centers (Medical centers A and B), between Feb 2004 and Dec 2014. Patients were excluded if they had prior NSCLC treatment or recent diagnosis of a second primary cancer. Quantitative FDG PET/CT parameters including whole body metabolic tumor volume (MTVwb), total lesion glycolysis (TLGwb), and maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmaxwb) were measured from baseline PET/CT using Edge method with Mimvista software. The primary endpoint was overall survival (OS). Cox proportional hazard regression and Kaplan-Meier overall survival analyses were used to test for an association between OS and quantitative FDG PET/CT parameters. The distributions of MTVwb, TLGwb, SUVmaxwb were skewed, so a natural logarithm transformation was applied and the transformed variables [(ln(MTVwb), ln(TLGwb), and ln(SUVmaxwb)] were used in the analysis. Results: The training set included 110 patients from center A with Stage 3B NSCLC. 78.2% of patients expired during follow-up. Median OS was 14 months. 1-year, 2-year, and 5-year OS was 56.5%, 34.6% and 13.9%, respectively. Univariate Cox regression analysis showed no significant difference in OS on the basis of age, gender, histology, ln(TLGwb), or ln(SUVmaxwb). ln(MTVwb) was positively associated with OS [hazard ratio (HR) of 1.23, p = 0.037]. This association persisted on multivariate Cox regression analysis (HR 1.28, p = 0.043), with adjustments for age, gender, treatment and tumor histology. External validation with 44 patients from center B confirmed increasing MTVwb was associated significantly worse OS. An MTVwb cut-off point of 85.6 mL significantly stratified Stage 3B NSCLC patient prognosis. Conclusion: MTVwb is a prognostic marker for OS in patients with Stage 3B NSCLC, independent of age, gender, treatment, and tumor histology.