Elife
Metabolite Profiling of Human Renal Cell Carcinoma Reveals Tissue-Origin Dominance in Nutrient Availability
Abbott KL, Ali A, Deik A, Subudhi S, Nabel CS, Jain RK, Clish CB, Vander Heiden MG
The tumor microenvironment is a determinant of cancer progression and therapeutic efficacy, with nutrient availability playing an important role. Although it is established that the local abundance of specific nutrients defines the metabolic parameters for tumor growth, the factors guiding nutrient availability in tumor compared to normal tissue and blood remain poorly understood. To define these factors in renal cell carcinoma (RCC), we performed quantitative metabolomic and comprehensive lipidomic analyses of tumor interstitial fluid (TIF), adjacent normal kidney interstitial fluid (KIF), and plasma samples collected from patients. TIF nutrient composition closely resembles KIF, suggesting that tissue-specific factors unrelated to the presence of cancer exert a stronger influence on nutrient levels than tumor-driven alterations. Notably, select metabolite changes consistent with known features of RCC metabolism are found in RCC TIF, while glucose levels in TIF are not depleted to levels that are lower than those found in KIF. These findings inform tissue nutrient dynamics in RCC, highlighting a dominant role of non-cancer-driven tissue factors in shaping nutrient availability in these tumors.
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Journal of Clinical Oncology
Crenolanib and Intensive Chemotherapy in Adults with Newly Diagnosed FLT3-Mutated AML
Stone RM
PURPOSE: Crenolanib is a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor with activity against FLT3-ITD- and TKD-mutant AML. We conducted a trial of crenolanib plus intensive chemotherapy in adults with newly diagnosed FLT3-mutant AML.
METHODS: Eligible patients were 18 years and older. Induction chemotherapy consisted of cytarabine (100 mg/m2) continuous infusion on days 1-7 and anthracycline (daunorubicin 60-90 mg/m2 or idarubicin 12 mg/m2, once daily) on days 1-3 followed by consolidation with high-dose cytarabine (1-3 g/m2 twice daily on days 1, 3, 5) and/or allogeneic transplant. Crenolanib (100 mg thrice a day) was given from day 9 until 72 hours before the next cycle, after consolidation, and for 12 months after consolidation or transplant.
RESULTS: Forty-four patients (median age, 57; range, 19-75 years) were enrolled. Thirty-six had FLT3-ITD, and 11 had FLT3-TKD mutations. European LeukemiaNet 2017 disease risk was favorable in 34%, intermediate in 30%, and adverse in 36%. The overall response rate was 86% (complete remission [CR], 77%; CR with incomplete count recovery [CRi], 9%): 90% in patients 60 years and younger and 80% in older patients. Measurable residual disease-negative CR/CRi rates were 89% and 45%, respectively. With a 45-month follow-up, median overall survival has not been reached and the median event-free survival was 44.7 months. Among younger patients, the estimated 3-year survival was 71.4% with 15% cumulative incidence of relapse. Treatment-related serious adverse events included febrile neutropenia, diarrhea, and nausea. The median time to platelets ?100,000/µL and absolute neutrophil count ?1,000/µL during induction was 29 and 32 days, respectively. No new FLT3-mutant clones were detected at relapse in patients completing consolidation.
CONCLUSION: Crenolanib plus intensive chemotherapy in adults with newly diagnosed FLT3-mutant AML results in high rate of deep responses and long-term survival with acceptable toxicity. A randomized trial of crenolanib versus midostaurin plus chemotherapy in younger patients is ongoing.
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JAMA
Aspirin vs Placebo as Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer: The Alliance A011502 Randomized Trial
Chen WY, Partridge AH, Briccetti FM, Holmes MD
IMPORTANCE: Observational studies of survivors of breast cancer and prospective trials of aspirin for cardiovascular disease suggest improved breast cancer survival among aspirin users, but prospective studies of aspirin to prevent breast cancer recurrence are lacking.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether aspirin decreases the risk of invasive cancer events among survivors of breast cancer.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A011502, a phase 3, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial conducted in the United States and Canada with 3020 participants who had high-risk nonmetastatic breast cancer, enrolled participants from 534 sites from January 6, 2017, through December 4, 2020, with follow-up to March 4, 2023.
INTERVENTIONS: Participants were randomized (stratified for hormone receptor status [positive vs negative], body mass index [?30 vs >30], stage II vs III, and time since diagnosis [<18 vs ?18 months]) to receive 300 mg of aspirin (n?=?1510) or placebo once daily (n?=?1510) for 5 years.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was invasive disease-free survival. Overall survival was a key secondary outcome.
RESULTS: A total of 3020 participants were randomized when the data and safety monitoring committee recommended suspending the study at the first interim analysis because the hazard ratio had crossed the prespecified futility bound. By median follow-up of 33.8 months (range, 0.1-72.6 months), 253 invasive disease-free survival events were observed (141 in the aspirin group and 112 in the placebo group), yielding a hazard ratio of 1.27 (95% CI, 0.99-1.63; P?=?.06). All invasive disease-free survival events, including death, invasive progression (both distant and locoregional), and new primary events, were numerically higher in the aspirin group, although the differences were not statistically significant. There was no difference in overall survival (hazard ratio, 1.19; 95% CI, 0.82-1.72). Rates of grades 3 and 4 adverse events were similar in both groups.
CONCLUSION AND RELEVANCE: Among participants with high-risk nonmetastatic breast cancer, daily aspirin therapy did not improve risk of breast cancer recurrence or survival in early follow-up. Despite its promise and wide availability, aspirin should not be recommended as an adjuvant breast cancer treatment.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02927249.
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JAMA Oncology
Body Composition in Advanced Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Treated with Immunotherapy
Chaunzwa TL, Qian JM, Ricciuti B, Nuernberg L, Johnson JW, Weiss J, Zhang Z, Di Federico A, Alessi JV, Mak RH, Awad MM, Aerts HJWL
IMPORTANCE: The association between body composition (BC) and cancer outcomes is complex and incompletely understood. Previous research in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has been limited to small, single-institution studies and yielded promising, albeit heterogeneous, results.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the association of BC with oncologic outcomes in patients receiving immunotherapy for advanced or metastatic NSCLC.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This comprehensive multicohort analysis included clinical data from cohorts receiving treatment at the Dana-Farber Brigham Cancer Center (DFBCC) who received immunotherapy given alone or in combination with chemotherapy and prospectively collected data from the phase 1/2 Study 1108 and the chemotherapy arm of the phase 3 MYSTIC trial. Baseline and follow-up computed tomography (CT) scans were collected and analyzed using deep neural networks for automatic L3 slice selection and body compartment segmentation (skeletal muscle [SM], subcutaneous adipose tissue [SAT], and visceral adipose tissue). Outcomes were compared based on baseline BC measures or their change at the first follow-up scan. The data were analyzed between July 2022 and April 2023.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Hazard ratios (HRs) for the association of BC measurements with overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS).
RESULTS: A total of 1791 patients (878 women [49%]) with NSCLC were analyzed, of whom 487 (27.2%) received chemoimmunotherapy at DFBCC (DFBCC-CIO), 825 (46.1%) received ICI monotherapy at DFBCC (DFBCC-IO), 222 (12.4%) were treated with durvalumab monotherapy on Study 1108, and 257 (14.3%) were treated with chemotherapy on MYSTIC; median (IQR) ages were 65 (58-74), 66 (57-71), 65 (26-87), and 63 (30-84) years, respectively. A loss in SM mass, as indicated by a change in the L3 SM area, was associated with worse oncologic outcome across patient groups (HR, 0.59 [95% CI, 0.43-0.81] and 0.61 [95% CI, 0.47-0.79] for OS and PFS, respectively, in DFBCC-CIO; HR, 0.74 [95% CI, 0.60-0.91] for OS in DFBCC-IO; HR, 0.46 [95% CI, 0.33-0.64] and 0.47 [95% CI, 0.34-0.64] for OS and PFS, respectively, in Study 1108; HR, 0.76 [95% CI, 0.61-0.96] for PFS in the MYSTIC trial). This association was most prominent among male patients, with a nonsignificant association among female patients in the MYSTIC trial and DFBCC-CIO cohorts on Kaplan-Meier analysis. An increase of more than 5% in SAT density, as quantified by the average CT attenuation in Hounsfield units of the SAT compartment, was associated with poorer OS in 3 patient cohorts (HR, 0.61 [95% CI, 0.43-0.86] for DFBCC-CIO; HR, 0.62 [95% CI, 0.49-0.79] for DFBCC-IO; and HR, 0.56 [95% CI, 0.40-0.77] for Study 1108). The change in SAT density was also associated with PFS for DFBCC-CIO (HR, 0.73; 95% CI, 0.54-0.97). This was primarily observed in female patients on Kaplan-Meier analysis.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The results of this multicohort study suggest that loss in SM mass during systemic therapy for NSCLC is a marker of poor outcomes, especially in male patients. SAT density changes are also associated with prognosis, particularly in female patients. Automated CT-derived BC measurements should be considered in determining NSCLC prognosis.
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JAMA Oncology
Community Health Care Workers Empowering Advance Care Planning
Fromme EK
Advance care planning (ACP) has undergone criticism for a paucity of evidence that it improves the quality of care, decision-making, or the experience of the patient, their family, and the clinician at the end of life.1 After so much effort for admittedly limited results, why do clinicians, patients, their families, investigators, health care administrators, and policymakers keep trying to make ACP bear fruit? Originally, ACP arose from an ethical obligation to ensure patients have a voice in their care. As we become increasingly aware of systemic racism and inequities in health care, that obligation seems more pressing than ever. We should keep aiming for ACP, but how?
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Nature Communications
Bone Marrow Stromal Cells Induce Chromatin Remodeling in Multiple Myeloma Cells Leading to Transcriptional Changes
Binder M, Szalat RE, Talluri S, Fulciniti M, Parmigiani G, Samur MK, Munshi NC
The natural history of multiple myeloma is characterized by its localization to the bone marrow and its interaction with bone marrow stromal cells. The bone marrow stromal cells provide growth and survival signals, thereby promoting the development of drug resistance. Here, we show that the interaction between bone marrow stromal cells and myeloma cells (using human cell lines) induces chromatin remodeling of cis-regulatory elements and is associated with changes in the expression of genes involved in the cell migration and cytokine signaling. The expression of genes involved in these stromal interactions are observed in extramedullary disease in patients with myeloma and provides the rationale for survival of myeloma cells outside of the bone marrow microenvironment. Expression of these stromal interaction genes is also observed in a subset of patients with newly diagnosed myeloma and are akin to the transcriptional program of extramedullary disease. The presence of such adverse stromal interactions in newly diagnosed myeloma is associated with accelerated disease dissemination, predicts the early development of therapeutic resistance, and is of independent prognostic significance. These stromal cell induced transcriptomic and epigenomic changes both predict long-term outcomes and identify therapeutic targets in the tumor microenvironment for the development of novel therapeutic approaches.
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Developmental Cell
Nucleotide Depletion Promotes Cell Fate Transitions by Inducing DNA Replication Stress
Hsu PP, Hirz T, Abbott KL, Aziz N, Bjelosevic S, Paolino J, Ferreira R, Zhang H, Milosevic J, Schmidt DR, Chidley C, Pikman Y, Stegmaier K, Sykes DB, Vander Heiden MG
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