@article{FischerHartmannReisslandetal.2022, author = {Fischer, Thomas and Hartmann, Oliver and Reissland, Michaela and Prieto-Garcia, Cristian and Klann, Kevin and Pahor, Nikolett and Sch{\"u}lein-V{\"o}lk, Christina and Baluapuri, Apoorva and Polat, B{\"u}lent and Abazari, Arya and Gerhard-Hartmann, Elena and Kopp, Hans-Georg and Essmann, Frank and Rosenfeldt, Mathias and M{\"u}nch, Christian and Flentje, Michael and Diefenbacher, Markus E.}, title = {PTEN mutant non-small cell lung cancer require ATM to suppress pro-apoptotic signalling and evade radiotherapy}, series = {Cell \& Bioscience}, volume = {12}, journal = {Cell \& Bioscience}, issn = {2045-3701}, doi = {10.1186/s13578-022-00778-7}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-299865}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Background Despite advances in treatment of patients with non-small cell lung cancer, carriers of certain genetic alterations are prone to failure. One such factor frequently mutated, is the tumor suppressor PTEN. These tumors are supposed to be more resistant to radiation, chemo- and immunotherapy. Results We demonstrate that loss of PTEN led to altered expression of transcriptional programs which directly regulate therapy resistance, resulting in establishment of radiation resistance. While PTEN-deficient tumor cells were not dependent on DNA-PK for IR resistance nor activated ATR during IR, they showed a significant dependence for the DNA damage kinase ATM. Pharmacologic inhibition of ATM, via KU-60019 and AZD1390 at non-toxic doses, restored and even synergized with IR in PTEN-deficient human and murine NSCLC cells as well in a multicellular organotypic ex vivo tumor model. Conclusion PTEN tumors are addicted to ATM to detect and repair radiation induced DNA damage. This creates an exploitable bottleneck. At least in cellulo and ex vivo we show that low concentration of ATM inhibitor is able to synergise with IR to treat PTEN-deficient tumors in genetically well-defined IR resistant lung cancer models.}, language = {en} } @article{TamihardjaZehnerHartrampfetal.2022, author = {Tamihardja, J{\"o}rg and Zehner, Leonie and Hartrampf, Philipp and Lisowski, Dominik and Kneitz, Susanne and Cirsi, Sinan and Razinskas, Gary and Flentje, Michael and Polat, B{\"u}lent}, title = {Salvage nodal radiotherapy as metastasis-directed therapy for oligorecurrent prostate cancer detected by positron emission tomography shows favorable outcome in long-term follow-up}, series = {Cancers}, volume = {14}, journal = {Cancers}, number = {15}, issn = {2072-6694}, doi = {10.3390/cancers14153766}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-286064}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Simple Summary Patients, who suffer from oligorecurrent prostate cancer with limited nodal involvement, may be offered positron emission tomography (PET)-directed salvage nodal radiotherapy to delay disease progression. This current analysis aimed to access salvage radiotherapy for nodal oligorecurrent prostate cancer with simultaneous integrated boost to PET-involved lymph nodes as metastasis-directed therapy. A long-term oncological outcome was favorable after salvage nodal radiotherapy and severe toxicity rates were low. Androgen deprivation therapy plays a major role in recurrent prostate cancer management and demonstrates a positive influence on the rate of biochemical progression in patients receiving salvage nodal radiotherapy. The present long-term analysis may help clinicians identify patients who would benefit from salvage nodal radiotherapy and androgen deprivation therapy, as a multimodal treatment strategy for oligorecurrent prostate cancer. Abstract Background: The study aimed to access the long-term outcome of salvage nodal radiotherapy (SNRT) in oligorecurrent prostate cancer. Methods: A total of 95 consecutive patients received SNRT for pelvic and/or extrapelvic nodal recurrence after prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) or choline PET from 2010 to 2021. SNRT was applied as external beam radiotherapy with simultaneous integrated boost up to a median total dose of 62.9 Gy (EQD2\(_{1.5Gy}\)) to the recurrent lymph node metastases. The outcome was analyzed by cumulative incidence functions with death as the competing risk. Fine-Gray regression analyses were performed to estimate the relative hazards of the outcome parameters. Genitourinary (GU)/gastrointestinal (GI) toxicity evaluation utilized Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events (v5.0). The results are as follows: the median follow-up was 47.1 months. The five-year biochemical progression rate (95\% CI) was 50.1\% (35.7-62.9\%). Concomitant androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) was adminstered in 60.0\% of the patients. The five-year biochemical progression rate was 75.0\% (42.0-90.9\%) without ADT versus 35.3\% (19.6-51.4\%) with ADT (p = 0.003). The cumulative five-year late grade 3 GU toxicity rate was 2.1\%. No late grade 3 GI toxicity occured. Conclusions: Metastasis-directed therapy through SNRT for PET-staged oligorecurrent prostate cancer demonstrated a favorable long-term oncologic outcome. Omittance of ADT led to an increased biochemical progression.}, language = {en} }