TY - JOUR A1 - Vergote, Ignace A1 - Macarulla, Teresa A1 - Hirsch, Fred R. A1 - Hagemann, Carsten A1 - Miller, David Scott T1 - Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) therapy concomitant with taxanes for cancer treatment JF - Cancers N2 - Non-small cell lung cancer, ovarian cancer, and pancreatic cancer all present with high morbidity and mortality. Systemic chemotherapies have historically been the cornerstone of standard of care (SOC) regimens for many cancers, but are associated with systemic toxicity. Multimodal treatment combinations can help improve patient outcomes; however, implementation is limited by additive toxicities and potential drug–drug interactions. As such, there is a high unmet need to develop additional therapies to enhance the efficacy of SOC treatments without increasing toxicity. Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) are electric fields that exert physical forces to disrupt cellular processes critical for cancer cell viability and tumor progression. The therapy is locoregional and is delivered noninvasively to the tumor site via a portable medical device that consists of field generator and arrays that are placed on the patient’s skin. As a noninvasive treatment modality, TTFields therapy-related adverse events mainly consist of localized skin reactions, which are manageable with effective acute and prophylactic treatments. TTFields selectively target cancer cells through a multi-mechanistic approach without affecting healthy cells and tissues. Therefore, the application of TTFields therapy concomitant with other cancer treatments may lead to enhanced efficacy, with low risk of further systemic toxicity. In this review, we explore TTFields therapy concomitant with taxanes in both preclinical and clinical settings. The summarized data suggest that TTFields therapy concomitant with taxanes may be beneficial in the treatment of certain cancers. KW - Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) KW - taxanes KW - non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) KW - ovarian cancer KW - pancreatic cancer KW - mechanism of action Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-305007 SN - 2072-6694 VL - 15 IS - 3 ER - TY - THES A1 - Krenz, Bastian T1 - The immune-evasive potential of MYC in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma T1 - Das immunevasive Potential von MYC im Pankreaskarzinom N2 - Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is predominantly driven by mutations in KRAS and TP53. However, PDAC tumors display deregulated levels of MYC and are a paradigm example for MYC-driven and -addicted tumors. For many years MYC was described as a transcription factor that regulates a pleiotropic number of genes to drive proliferation. Recent work sheds a different light on MYC biology. First, changes in gene expression that come along with the activation of MYC are mild and MYC seems to act more as a factor that reduces stress and increases resilience towards challenges during transcription. Second, MYC is a strong driver of immune evasion in different entities. In this study we depleted MYC in murine PDAC cells and revealed the immune dependent regression of tumors in an orthotope transplant model, as well as the activation of the innate immune system using global expression analysis, immunoblotting and fCLIP. These experiments revealed that endogenous double-stranded RNA is binding as a viral mimicry to Toll-like receptor 3, causing activation of TBK1 and downstream activation of a proimmunogenic transcription program. The regression of tumors upon depletion of MYC is dependent on this pathway since the knockout of TBK1 prevents regression of tumors after depletion of MYC. We can summarize this study in three main findings: First, the dominant and most important function of MYC in tumors is not to drive proliferation but to promote immune evasion and prevent immune-dependent regression of tumors. Second, cells monitor defects or delay in splicing and RNA processing and activate the immune system to clear cells that face problems with co-transcriptional processing. Third, MYC suppresses the activation of the cell-intrinsic innate immune system and shields highly proliferating cells from the recognition by the immune system. To translate this into a therapeutically approach, we replaced the shRNA mediated depletion of MYC by treatment with cardiac glycosides. Upon treatment with cardiac glycosides tumor cells reduce uptake of nutrients, causing a downregulation of MYC translation, inhibition of proliferation, glycolysis and lactate secretion. Lactate is a major reason for immune evasion in solid tumors since it dampens, amongst others, cytotoxic T cells and promotes regulatory T cells. Treatment of mice with cardiac glycosides causes a complete and immune-dependent remission of PDAC tumors in vivo, pointing out that cardiac glycosides have strong proimmunogenic, anti-cancer effects. More detailed analyses will be needed to dissect the full mechanism how cardiac glycosides act on MYC translation and immune evasion in PDAC tumors. N2 - Pankreaskarzinome entwickeln sich in den meisten Fällen durch die Mutation von KRAS und TP53. Nichtsdestotrotz weisen Pankreaskarzinome sehr hohe, deregulierte Level des MYC Proteins auf und sind exemplarisch für Tumore, deren Wachstum abhängig von MYC ist. Für lange Zeit wurde MYC als Transkriptionsfaktor beschrieben, der vor allem Gene aktiviert, die für die Proliferation von Zellen notwendig sind. Die jüngste Forschung wirft jedoch ein anderes Bild auf die Biologie von MYC. Zum einen sind die transkriptionellen Veränderung nach Aktivierung von MYC mild und vieles deutet darauf hin, dass die Funktion von MYC zum einen in der Reduktion von transkriptionellem Stress liegt. Zum anderen verhindert MYC die Erkennung von Tumorzellen durch das Immunsystem. In dieser Studie wurde MYC in murinen Pankreaskarzinomzellen depletiert und die immunabhängige Regression der Tumore in einem orthotopen Transplantationsmodel untersucht. Die Aktivierung der zell-intrinsischen Immunantwort wurde mittels globaler Expressionsanalyse, Immunoblots und fCLIP Experimenten untersucht. Diese Experimente haben gezeigt, dass endogene doppel-strängige RNAs als virales Mimikry an Toll-like Rezeptor 3 binden, worauf TBK1 phosphoryliert und ein pro-immunogenes Transkriptionsprogram aktiviert wird. Die Deletion von TBK1 konnte beweisen werden, dass die Regression der Tumore von diesem Signalweg abhängig ist. Die Ergebnisse der Studie lassen sich in drei zentrale Erkenntnisse zusammenfassen: Erstens ist die prä-dominante Funktion von MYC in Tumoren in vivo nicht die Proliferation der Zellen zu fördern, sondern zu verhindern, dass der Tumor vom Immunsystem erkannt und bekämpft wird. Zweitens überwachen Zellen das richtige Prozessieren von RNA und aktivieren bei Bedarf das Immunsystem um defekte Zellen zu entfernen. Drittens unterdrückt MYC die Aktivierung dieses zell-intrinsischen Signalweges und schirmt den Tumor dadurch vom Immunsystem ab. Um diese Ergebnisse in einen translationalen Ansatz zu überführen, haben wir die shRNA vermittelte Depletion von MYC durch die Behandlung mit Herzglykosiden ersetzt, die die Aufnahme von Nährstoffen reduzieren, Proliferation einschränken, die Translation des MYC Proteins stoppen und Glykolyse und Laktatsekretion herunterfahren. Laktat hat starke immunsuppressive Eigenschaften in soliden Tumoren, da es zytotoxische T Zellen erschöpft und regulatorische T Zellen aktiviert. Die Behandlung von Mäusen mit Herzglykosiden führte in Abhängigkeit vom Immunsystem zur kompletten Remission der Tumore, auch wenn noch weitere Forschung notwendig ist, um die exakten Zusammenhänge besser zu verstehen. KW - immune evasion KW - pancreatic cancer KW - innate immunity KW - TLR3 KW - Bauchspeicheldrüsenkrebs KW - Myc Y1 - 2023 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-325903 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bolm, Louisa A1 - Zemskov, Sergii A1 - Zeller, Maria A1 - Baba, Taisuke A1 - Roldan, Jorge A1 - Harrison, Jon M. A1 - Petruch, Natalie A1 - Sato, Hiroki A1 - Petrova, Ekaterina A1 - Lapshyn, Hryhoriy A1 - Braun, Ruediger A1 - Honselmann, Kim C. A1 - Hummel, Richard A1 - Dronov, Oleksii A1 - Kirichenko, Alexander V. A1 - Klinkhammer-Schalke, Monika A1 - Kleihues-van Tol, Kees A1 - Zeissig, Sylke R. A1 - Rades, Dirk A1 - Keck, Tobias A1 - Fernandez-del Castillo, Carlos A1 - Wellner, Ulrich F. A1 - Wegner, Rodney E. T1 - Concepts and outcomes of perioperative therapy in stage IA-III pancreatic cancer — a cross-validation of the National Cancer Database (NCDB) and the German Cancer Registry Group of the Society of German Tumor Centers (GCRG/ADT) JF - Cancers N2 - (1) Background: The aim of this study is to assess perioperative therapy in stage IA-III pancreatic cancer cross-validating the German Cancer Registry Group of the Society of German Tumor Centers — Network for Care, Quality, and Research in Oncology, Berlin (GCRG/ADT) and the National Cancer Database (NCDB). (2) Methods: Patients with clinical stage IA-III PDAC undergoing surgery alone (OP), neoadjuvant therapy (TX) + surgery (neo + OP), surgery+adjuvantTX (OP + adj) and neoadjuvantTX + surgery + adjuvantTX (neo + OP + adj) were identified. Baseline characteristics, histopathological parameters, and overall survival (OS) were evaluated. (3) Results: 1392 patients from the GCRG/ADT and 29,081 patients from the NCDB were included. Patient selection and strategies of perioperative therapy remained consistent across the registries for stage IA-III pancreatic cancer. Combined neo + OP + adj was associated with prolonged OS as compared to neo + OP alone (17.8 m vs. 21.3 m, p = 0.012) across all stages in the GCRG/ADT registry. Similarly, OS with neo + OP + adj was improved as compared to neo + OP in the NCDB registry (26.4 m vs. 35.4 m, p < 0.001). (4) Conclusion: The cross-validation study demonstrated similar concepts and patient selection criteria of perioperative therapy across clinical stages of PDAC. Neoadjuvant therapy combined with adjuvant therapy is associated with improved overall survival as compared to either therapy alone. KW - pancreatic cancer KW - perioperative therapy KW - neoadjuvant therapy KW - pancreatic surgery Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-262174 SN - 2072-6694 VL - 14 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mainz, Laura A1 - Sarhan, Mohamed A. F. E. A1 - Roth, Sabine A1 - Sauer, Ursula A1 - Maurus, Katja A1 - Hartmann, Elena M. A1 - Seibert, Helen-Desiree A1 - Rosenwald, Andreas A1 - Diefenbacher, Markus E. A1 - Rosenfeldt, Mathias T. T1 - Autophagy blockage reduces the incidence of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma in the context of mutant Trp53 JF - Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology N2 - Macroautophagy (hereafter referred to as autophagy) is a homeostatic process that preserves cellular integrity. In mice, autophagy regulates pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) development in a manner dependent on the status of the tumor suppressor gene Trp53. Studies published so far have investigated the impact of autophagy blockage in tumors arising from Trp53-hemizygous or -homozygous tissue. In contrast, in human PDACs the tumor suppressor gene TP53 is mutated rather than allelically lost, and TP53 mutants retain pathobiological functions that differ from complete allelic loss. In order to better represent the patient situation, we have investigated PDAC development in a well-characterized genetically engineered mouse model (GEMM) of PDAC with mutant Trp53 (Trp53\(^{R172H}\)) and deletion of the essential autophagy gene Atg7. Autophagy blockage reduced PDAC incidence but had no impact on survival time in the subset of animals that formed a tumor. In the absence of Atg7, non-tumor-bearing mice reached a similar age as animals with malignant disease. However, the architecture of autophagy-deficient, tumor-free pancreata was effaced, normal acinar tissue was largely replaced with low-grade pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasias (PanINs) and insulin expressing islet β-cells were reduced. Our data add further complexity to the interplay between Atg7 inhibition and Trp53 status in tumorigenesis. KW - pancreatic cancer KW - autophagy KW - p53 KW - metastasis KW - ATG7 Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-266005 SN - 2296-634X VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fayez, Shaimaa A1 - Feineis, Doris A1 - Mudogo, Virima A1 - Awale, Suresh A1 - Bringmann, Gerhard T1 - Ancistrolikokines E-H and related 5,8\('\)-coupled naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids from the Congolese liana \(Ancistrocladus\) \(likoko\) with antiausterity activities against PANC-1 human pancreatic cancer cells JF - RSC Advances N2 - A striking feature of the metabolite profile of \(Ancistrocladus\) \(likoko\) (Ancistrocladaceae) is the exclusive production of 5,8\('\)-linked naphthylisoquinoline alkaloids varying in their OMe/OH substitution patterns and in the hydrogenation degree in their isoquinoline portions. Here we present nine new compounds of this coupling type isolated from the twigs of this remarkable Central African liana. Three of them, the ancistrolikokines E (9), E\(_2\) (10), and F (11), are the first 5,8\('\)-linked naphthyldihydroisoquinolines found in nature with \(R\)-configuration at C-3. The fourth new metabolite, ancistrolikokine G (12), is so far the only representative of the 5,8\('\)-coupling type that belongs to the very rare group of alkaloids with a fully dehydrogenated isoquinoline portion. Moreover, five new \(N\)-methylated naphthyltetrahydroisoquinolines, named ancistrolikokines A\(_2\) (13), A\(_3\) (14), C\(_2\) (5), H (15), and H\(_2\) (16) are presented, along with six known 5,8\('\)-linked alkaloids, previously identified in related African \(Ancistrocladus\) species, now found for the first time in \(A.\) \(likoko\). The structural elucidation was achieved by spectroscopic analysis (HRESIMS, 1D and 2D NMR) and by chemical (oxidative degradation) and chiroptical (electronic circular dichroism) methods. The new ancistrolikokines showed moderate to good preferential cytotoxic activities towards pancreatic PANC-1 cells in nutrient-deprived medium (NDM), without causing toxicity under normal, nutrient-rich conditions, with ancistrolikokine H\(_2\) (16) being the most potent compound. KW - chemistry KW - Ancistrocladus likoko KW - alkaloids KW - bioactive compound KW - anti-cancer-agent KW - pancreatic cancer KW - naphthylisoquinoline alkaloid KW - spectroscopic analysis Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-172008 VL - 7 IS - 85 ER - TY - THES A1 - Kuen, Janina T1 - Influence of 3D tumor cell/fibroblast co-culture on monocyte differentiation and tumor progression in pancreatic cancer T1 - Einfluss von 3D Tumorzell/Fibroblasten Ko-kulturen auf die Monozyten Differenzierung und das Tumorwachstum bei Bauchspeicheldrüsenkrebs N2 - Pancreatic cancer (PC) remains one of the most challenging solid tumors to treat with a high unmet medical need as patients poorly respond to standard-of-care-therapies. Prominent desmoplastic reaction involving cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and the immune cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) and their cross-talk play a significant role in tumor immune escape and progression. To identify the key cellular mechanisms induce an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment, we established 3D co-culture model with pancreatic cancer cells, CAFs, monocyte as well as T cells. Using this model, we analysed the influence of tumor cells and fibroblasts on monocytes and their immune suppressive phenotype. Phenotypic characterization of the monocytes after 3D co-culture with tumor/fibroblast spheroids was performed by analysing the expression of defined cell surface markers and soluble factors. Functionality of these monocytes and their ability to influence T cell phenotype and proliferation was investigated. 3D co-culture of monocytes with pancreatic cancer cells and fibroblasts induced the production of immunosuppressive cytokines which are known to promote polarization of M2 like macrophages and myeloid derived suppressive cells (MDSCs). These co-culture spheroid polarized monocyte derived macrophages (MDMs) were poorly differentiated and had an M2 phenotype. The immunosuppressive function of these co-culture spheroids polarized MDMs was demonstrated by their ability to inhibit autologous CD4+ and CD8+ T cell activation and proliferation in vitro, which we could partially reverse by 3D co-culture spheroid treatment with therapeutic molecules that are able to re-activate spheroid polarized MDMs or block immune suppressive factors such as Arginase-I. In conclusion, we generated a physiologically relevant 3D co-culture model, which can be used as a promising tool to study complex cell-cell interactions between different cell types within the tumor microenvironment and to support drug screening and development. In future, research focused on better understanding of resistance mechanisms to existing cancer immunotherapies will help to develop new therapeutic strategies in order to combat cancer. N2 - Bei Bauchspeicheldrüsenkrebs handelt es sich um eine maligne Tumorerkrankung, deren Behandlung Ärzte noch immer vor große Herausforderungen stellen und die zur dritthäufigsten krebsbedingten Todesursache der westlichen Welt zählt. Desmoplastische Reaktionen im Tumorgewebe sind hierbei ein besonderes Merkmal dieser Erkrankung. Dabei spielen tumor-assoziierte Fibroblasten sowie unterschiedliche Zellen des Immunsystems und deren Interaktionen eine essentielle Rolle hinsichtlich Tumorwachstum und der Herunterregulation des Immunsystems. Um zelluläre Mechanismen, die ein immunsuppressives Tumormilieu induzieren, zu identifizieren, entwickelten wir ein 3D Ko-Kultur Modell mit Bauchspeicheldrüsenkrebszellen, tumor-assoziierten Fibroblasten sowie Monozyten und T-Zellen. Mit Hilfe dieses Modells konnten wir den Einfluss von Tumorzellen und Fibroblasten auf den Phänotyp und das Verhalten von Monozyten untersuchen. Dazu wurden Monozyten in einer 3D Tumorzell/Fibroblasten Ko-Kultur kultiviert und differenziert, um anschließend die Expression definierter Zelloberflächenmarker und löslicher Faktoren zu analysieren. Des Weiteren wurde das Verhalten dieser 3D Ko-Kultur differenzierten myeloiden Zellpopulation sowie ihre Fähigkeit den Phänotyp von T Zellen und deren Proliferation zu beeinflussen untersucht. Die 3D Ko-Kultur der Monozyten zusammen mit den Tumorzellen und den Fibroblasten führten zur Produktion immunsuppressiver Zytokine und Chemokine, wodurch die Differenzierung der Monozyten in M2-ähnliche Makrophagen induziert wurde. Diese durch die 3D Tumorzell/Fibroblasten Sphäroide polarisierten aus Monozyten herangereiften M2-ähnlichen Makrophagen besaßen außerdem immunsuppressive funktionelle Eigenschaften, indem sie in der Lage waren, die Aktivierung und Proliferation von autologen CD4+ und CD8+ T Zellen in vitro zu inhibieren. Die Suppression sowohl der CD4+ als auch der CD8+ T Zellen konnte durch die Behandlung therapeutischer Moleküle, die die Re-Aktivierung der immunsuppressiven 3D Sphäroid polarisierten Makrophagen stimulierten oder suppressive Faktoren wie Arginase-I blockierten, wieder aufgehoben und die T Zell Proliferation teilweise wiederhergestellt werden. Unser etabliertes 3D Ko-Kultur System repräsentiert ein vielversprechendes physiologisch relevantes Modell, welches genutzt werden kann, um Zell-Zell Interaktion und Kommunikation im Tumormilieu zu untersuchen und dadurch die Wirkung von Medikamenten zu verbessern. Ein gezieltes besseres Verständnis von Tumorresistenz Mechanismen gegen bereits bestehende Immun Therapien fördert die Entwicklung neuer therapeutischer Ansätze zur Bekämpfung von Krebs. KW - monocyte KW - pancreatic cancer KW - 3D cell culture KW - monocyte differentiation KW - Bauchspeicheldrüsenkrebs KW - fibroblasts KW - TAMs KW - 3D Ko-kulture KW - Monozytendifferenzierung KW - Fibroblasten Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-156226 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Grimmig, Tanja A1 - Moench, Romana A1 - Kreckel, Jennifer A1 - Haack, Stephanie A1 - Rueckert, Felix A1 - Rehder, Roberta A1 - Tripathi, Sudipta A1 - Ribas, Carmen A1 - Chandraker, Anil A1 - Germer, Christoph T. A1 - Gasser, Martin A1 - Waaga-Gasser, Ana Maria T1 - Toll Like Receptor 2, 4, and 9 Signaling Promotes Autoregulative Tumor Cell Growth and VEGF/PDGF Expression in Human Pancreatic Cancer JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences N2 - Toll like receptor (TLR) signaling has been suggested to play an important role in the inflammatory microenvironment of solid tumors and through this inflammation-mediated tumor growth. Here, we studied the role of tumor cells in their process of self-maintaining TLR expression independent of inflammatory cells and cytokine milieu for autoregulative tumor growth signaling in pancreatic cancer. We analyzed the expression of TLR2, -4, and -9 in primary human cancers and their impact on tumor growth via induced activation in several established pancreatic cancers. TLR-stimulated pancreatic cancer cells were specifically investigated for activated signaling pathways of VEGF/PDGF and anti-apoptotic Bcl-xL expression as well as tumor cell growth. The primary pancreatic cancers and cell lines expressed TLR2, -4, and -9. TLR-specific stimulation resulted in activated MAP-kinase signaling, most likely via autoregulative stimulation of demonstrated TLR-induced VEGF and PDGF expression. Moreover, TLR activation prompted the expression of Bcl-xL and has been demonstrated for the first time to induce tumor cell proliferation in pancreatic cancer. These findings strongly suggest that pancreatic cancer cells use specific Toll like receptor signaling to promote tumor cell proliferation and emphasize the particular role of TLR2, -4, and -9 in this autoregulative process of tumor cell activation and proliferation in pancreatic cancer. KW - tumor growth KW - TLR2 KW - TLR4 KW - TLR9 KW - pancreatic cancer KW - inflammation Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165743 VL - 17 IS - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Chiorean, E. G. A1 - Von Hoff, D. D. A1 - Reni, M. A1 - Arena, F. P. A1 - Infante, J. R. A1 - Bathini, V. G. A1 - Wood, T. E. A1 - Mainwaring, P. N. A1 - Muldoon, R. T. A1 - Clingan, P. R. A1 - Kunzmann, V. A1 - Ramanathan, R. K. A1 - Tabernero, J. A1 - Goldstein, D. A1 - McGovern, D. A1 - Lu, B. A1 - Ko, A. T1 - CA19-9 decrease at 8 weeks as a predictor of overall survival in a randomized phase III trial (MPACT) of weekly nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine versus gemcitabine alone in patients with metastatic pancreatic cancer JF - Annals of Oncology N2 - Background A phase I/II study and subsequent phase III study (MPACT) reported significant correlations between CA19-9 decreases and prolonged overall survival (OS) with nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine (nab-P + Gem) treatment for metastatic pancreatic cancer (MPC). CA19-9 changes at week 8 and potential associations with efficacy were investigated as part of an exploratory analysis in the MPACT trial. Patients and methods Untreated patients with MPC (N = 861) received nab-P + Gem or Gem alone. CA19-9 was evaluated at baseline and every 8 weeks. Results Patients with baseline and week-8 CA19-9 measurements were analyzed (nab-P + Gem: 252; Gem: 202). In an analysis pooling the treatments, patients with any CA19-9 decline (80%) versus those without (20%) had improved OS (median 11.1 versus 8.0 months; P = 0.005). In the nab-P + Gem arm, patients with (n = 206) versus without (n = 46) any CA19-9 decrease at week 8 had a confirmed overall response rate (ORR) of 40% versus 13%, and a median OS of 13.2 versus 8.3 months (P = 0.001), respectively. In the Gem-alone arm, patients with (n = 159) versus without (n = 43) CA19-9 decrease at week 8 had a confirmed ORR of 15% versus 5%, and a median OS of 9.4 versus 7.1 months (P = 0.404), respectively. In the nab-P + Gem and Gem-alone arms, by week 8, 16% (40/252) and 6% (13/202) of patients, respectively, had an unconfirmed radiologic response (median OS 13.7 and 14.7 months, respectively), and 79% and 84% of patients, respectively, had stable disease (SD) (median OS 11.1 and 9 months, respectively). Patients with SD and any CA19-9 decrease (158/199 and 133/170) had a median OS of 13.2 and 9.4 months, respectively. Conclusion This analysis demonstrated that, in patients with MPC, any CA19-9 decrease at week 8 can be an early marker for chemotherapy efficacy, including in those patients with SD. CA19-9 decrease identified more patients with survival benefit than radiologic response by week 8. KW - CA19-9 KW - pancreatic cancer KW - chemotherapy KW - nab-paclitaxel KW - MPACT Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189659 VL - 27 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schütze, Friedrich A1 - Röhring, Florian A1 - Vorlová, Sandra A1 - Gätzner, Sabine A1 - Kuhn, Anja A1 - Ergün, Süleyman A1 - Henke, Erik T1 - Inhibition of lysyl oxidases improves drug diffusion and increases efficacy of cytotoxic treatment in 3D tumor models JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Tumors are characterized by a rigid, highly cross-linked extracellular matrix (ECM), which impedes homogeneous drug distribution and potentially protects malignant cells from exposure to therapeutics. Lysyl oxidases are major contributors to tissue stiffness and the elevated expression of these enzymes observed in most cancers might influence drug distribution and efficacy. We examined the effect of lysyl oxidases on drug distribution and efficacy in 3D in vitro assay systems. In our experiments elevated lysyl oxidase activity was responsible for reduced drug diffusion under hypoxic conditions and consequently impaired cytotoxicity of various chemotherapeutics. This effect was only observed in 3D settings but not in 2D-cell culture, confirming that lysyl oxidases affect drug efficacy by modification of the ECM and do not confer a direct desensitizing effect. Both drug diffusion and efficacy were strongly enhanced by inhibition of lysyl oxidases. The results from the in vitro experiments correlated with tumor drug distribution in vivo, and predicted response to therapeutics in murine tumor models. Our results demonstrate that lysyl oxidase activity modulates the physical barrier function of ECM for small molecule drugs influencing their therapeutic efficacy. Targeting this process has the potential to significantly enhance therapeutic efficacy in the treatment of malignant diseases. KW - human osteosarcoma xenografts KW - factor binding profiles KW - open-access database KW - vascular normalization KW - solid tumors KW - transcapillary pressure gradient KW - hypoxia inducible factor 1 KW - breast cancer cells KW - beta-aminopropionitrile KW - pancreatic cancer Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-145109 VL - 5 IS - 17576 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kunzmann, Volker A1 - Herrmann, Ken A1 - Bluemel, Christina A1 - Kapp, Markus A1 - Hartlapp, Ingo A1 - Steger, Ulrich T1 - Intensified neoadjuvant chemotherapy with nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine followed by FOLFIRINOX in a patient with locally advanced unresectable pancreatic cancer JF - Case Reports in Oncology N2 - The prognosis of patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer can be improved if secondary complete (R0) resection is possible. In patients initially staged as unresectable this may be achieved with neoadjuvant treatment which is usually chemoradiotherapy based. We report the case of a 46-year-old patient with an unresectable, locally advanced pancreatic cancer (pT4 Nx cM0 G2) who was treated with a sequential neoadjuvant chemotherapy regimen consisting of 2 cycles of nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine followed by 4 cycles of FOLFIRINOX. Neoadjuvant chemotherapy resulted in secondary resectability (R0 resection). After 2 cycles of nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine, the patient already had a complete metabolic remission as measured by integrated fludeoxyglucose ((18)F) positron emission tomography and computerized tomography. After a follow-up of 18 months the patient is alive without progression of disease. We propose to assess the clinical benefit of sequencing the combinations nab-paclitaxel plus gemcitabine and FOLFIRINOX as neoadjuvant therapy for patients with locally advanced and initially unresectable pancreatic cancer in a controlled clinical trial. KW - nab-paclitaxel KW - neoadjuvant chemotherapy KW - oxaliplatin KW - pancreatic cancer KW - locally advanced disease KW - irinotecan KW - gemcitabine KW - folinic acid KW - 5-Fluorouracil Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120189 SN - 1662-6575 VL - 7 IS - 3 ER -