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Browsing by Subject "Anthracyclines"
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Item Genome-Wide Association Study for Anthracycline-Induced Congestive Heart Failure(American Association for Cancer Research, 2017-01-01) Schneider, Bryan P.; Shen, Fei; Gardner, Laura; Radovich, Milan; Li, Lang; Miller, Kathy D.; Jiang, Guanglong; Lai, Dongbing; O’Neill, Anne; Sparano, Joseph A.; Davidson, Nancy E.; Cameron, David; Gradus-Pizlo, Irmina; Mastouri, Ronald A.; Suter, Thomas M.; Foroud, Tatiana; Sledge, George W., Jr.; Medicine, School of MedicinePURPOSE: Anthracycline-induced congestive heart failure (CHF) is a rare but serious toxicity associated with this commonly employed anticancer therapy. The ability to predict which patients might be at increased risk prior to exposure would be valuable to optimally counsel risk-to-benefit ratio for each patient. Herein, we present a genome-wide approach for biomarker discovery with two validation cohorts to predict CHF from adult patients planning to receive anthracycline. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We performed a genome-wide association study in 3,431 patients from the randomized phase III adjuvant breast cancer trial E5103 to identify single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotypes associated with an increased risk of anthracycline-induced CHF. We further attempted candidate validation in two independent phase III adjuvant trials, E1199 and BEATRICE. RESULTS: When evaluating for cardiologist-adjudicated CHF, 11 SNPs had a P value <10-5, of which nine independent chromosomal regions were associated with increased risk. Validation of the top two SNPs in E1199 revealed one SNP rs28714259 that demonstrated a borderline increased CHF risk (P = 0.04, OR = 1.9). rs28714259 was subsequently tested in BEATRICE and was significantly associated with a decreased left ventricular ejection fraction (P = 0.018, OR = 4.2). CONCLUSIONS: rs28714259 represents a validated SNP that is associated with anthracycline-induced CHF in three independent, phase III adjuvant breast cancer clinical trials.Item Imaging Brain Networks After Cancer and Chemotherapy: Advances Toward Etiology and Unanswered Questions(The JAMA Network, 2016-02) Nudelman, Kelly N.H.; McDonald, Brenna C.; Saykin, Andrew J.; Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, IU School of MedicineComment on Neurotoxic Effects of Anthracycline- vs Nonanthracycline-Based Chemotherapy on Cognition in Breast Cancer Survivors. [JAMA Oncol. 2016]