IMPORTANCE Tumor-treating fields (TTFields) is an antimitotic treatment modality that interferes with glioblastoma cell division and organelle assembly by delivering low-intensity alternating electric fields to the tumor.OBJECTIVE To investigate whether TTFields improves progression-free and overall survival of patients with glioblastoma, a fatal disease that commonly recurs at the initial tumor site or in the central nervous system. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURESProgression-free survival (tested at α = .046). The secondary end point was overall survival (tested hierarchically at α = .048). Analyses were performed for the intent-to-treat population. Adverse events were compared by group. RESULTSOf the 695 randomized patients (median age, 56 years; IQR, 48-63; 473 men [68%]), 637 (92%) completed the trial. Median progression-free survival from randomization was 6.7 months in the TTFields-temozolomide group and 4.0 months in the temozolomide-alone group (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.52-0.76; P < .001). Median overall survival was 20.9 months in the TTFields-temozolomide group vs 16.0 months in the temozolomide-alone group (HR, 0.63; 95% CI, 0.53-0.76; P < .001). Systemic adverse event frequency was 48% in the TTFields-temozolomide group and 44% in the temozolomide-alone group. Mild to moderate skin toxicity underneath the transducer arrays occurred in 52% of patients who received TTFields-temozolomide vs no patients who received temozolomide alone. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCEIn the final analysis of this randomized clinical trial of patients with glioblastoma who had received standard radiochemotherapy, the addition of TTFields to maintenance temozolomide chemotherapy vs maintenance temozolomide alone, resulted in statistically significant improvement in progression-free survival and overall survival. These results are consistent with the previous interim analysis.TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00916409
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00916409.
Recent data in invertebrates demonstrated that huntingtin (htt) is essential for fast axonal trafficking. Here, we provide direct and functional evidence that htt is involved in fast axonal trafficking in mammals. Moreover, expression of full-length mutant htt (mhtt) impairs vesicular and mitochondrial trafficking in mammalian neurons in vitro and in whole animals in vivo. Particularly, mitochondria become progressively immobilized and stop more frequently in neurons from transgenic animals. These defects occurred early in development prior to the onset of measurable neurological or mitochondrial abnormalities. Consistent with a progressive loss of function, wild-type htt, trafficking motors, and mitochondrial components were selectively sequestered by mhtt in human Huntington's disease-affected brain. Data provide a model for how loss of htt function causes toxicity; mhtt-mediated aggregation sequesters htt and components of trafficking machinery leading to loss of mitochondrial motility and eventual mitochondrial dysfunction.Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion mutation in the coding region of a novel gene. The mechanism of HD is unknown. However, most data suggest that polyglutamine-mediated aggregation contributes to the pathology (32). Studies of human brain (14), mouse models (48), and cells (8, 28) demonstrate that mutant huntingtin (mhtt) binds and sequesters its normal counterpart as well as many cellular proteins (41). But whether pathophysiology results from a loss of normal function or a gain of a new function in adult neurons is not well understood.A major gap in our understanding of the disease mechanism is the absence of a known function for normal huntingtin (htt). Emerging evidence suggests that htt is likely to be a multifunctional protein that can mediate transactions in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Transcriptional dysfunction caused by mhtt has been proposed to lead to toxicity. The mutation in full-length htt prevents its normal ability to bind and sequester a repressor of brain-derived neurotrophic factor expression, reducing the availability of brain-derived neurotrophic factor to striatal neurons (54). The N-terminal, truncated form of mhtt can bind to and interfere with nuclear factors such as CREB (51), CREB binding protein (30, 39), corepressor (22), and transcriptional activator Sp1 (12,23).Cytoplasmic dysfunction has also been implicated as a toxic mechanism. Recently, novel data obtained with Drosophila (17) and isolated squid axoplasm (42) have provided direct evidence that htt is an essential protein involved in fast axonal trafficking. Additionally, these data demonstrate that the mutation in htt causes trafficking abnormalities. Reduction of htt expression in Drosophila caused axonal transport defects in larval nerves and the same neurodegenerative phenotype in adult eyes as expression of mutant dynein or p150 Glued (17). In invertebrate models for HD, expression of truncated proteins with an expanded gluta...
SNAIL1 has been suggested to regulate breast cancer metastasis based on analyses of human breast tumor transcriptomes and experiments using cancer cell lines and xenografts. However, in vivo genetic experimental support for a role for SNAIL1 in breast cancer metastasis that develops in an immunocompetent tumor microenvironment has not been determined. To address this question, we created a genetic SNAIL1 model by coupling an endogenous SNAIL1 reporter with an inducible SNAIL1 transgene. Using multiple genetic models of breast cancer, we demonstrated that endogenous SNAIL1 expression was restricted to primary tumors that ultimately disseminate. SNAIL1 gene deletion either during the premalignant phase or after primary tumors have reached a palpable size blunted metastasis, indicating that late metastasis was the main driver of metastasis and that this was dependent on SNAIL1. Importantly, SNAIL1 expression during breast cancer metastasis was transient and forced transient, but not continuous, SNAIL1 expression in breast tumors was sufficient to increase metastasis.
Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition (EMT) is a normal developmental program that is considered to also play an important role in cancer metastasis. Ultimate inducers of EMT are transcriptional repressors that individually can induce experimental EMT, yet in many cells, particularly cancer cells, multiple inducers are expressed simultaneously. Why, and if and how they interact to regulate EMT is unanswered. Using RNAi technology to effect protein knockdown and avoid potential over-expression artifact coupled with transient TGFβ treatment to better mimic in vivo conditions we show, in both non-tumorigenic and tumorigenic epithelial cancer cells, that Snail1 is uniquely required for EMT initiation, while Twist1 is required to maintain late EMT. Twist1, present in resting epithelial cells, is dispensable for EMT initiation. Mechanistically, in response to transient TGFβ treatment, transient Snail1 expression represses Twist1 transcription directly, which is subsequently upregulated, as Snail1 levels decrease, to sustain E-cadherin downregulation and growth arrest of EMT. Persistent Twist1 expression is associated with a p38 and ERK signal feedback loop that sustains growth-inhibitory signals characteristic of quiescent micrometastatic tumors. This Snail1-Twist1 temporal and spatial cooperation was also observed in vivo during human breast cancer progression to metastasis. Twist1 level, but not Snail1 level, and Twist1:Snail1 ratio in disseminated micrometastatic bone marrow tumor cells was found to correlate with survival and treatment resistance, and is highly predictive of metastatic or recurrent disease.
Recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a highly aggressive cancer with poor prognosis, and an overall survival of 6 to 7 months with optimal therapies. The NovoTTF-100A™ System is a novel antimitotic cancer therapy recently approved for the treatment of recurrent GBM, based on phase III (EF-11) trial results. The Patient Registry Dataset (PRiDe) is a post-marketing registry of all recurrent GBM patients who received NovoTTF Therapy in a real-world, clinical practice setting in the United States between 2011 and 2013. Data were collected from all adult patients with recurrent GBM who began commercial NovoTTF Therapy in the United States between October 2011 and November 2013. All patients provided written consent before treatment was started. Overall survival (OS) curves were constructed for PRiDe using the Kaplan-Meier method. Median OS in PRiDe was compared for patients stratified by average daily compliance (≥75% v<75% per day) and other prognostic variables. Adverse events were also evaluated. Data from 457 recurrent GBM patients who received NovoTTF Therapy in 91 US cancer centers were analyzed. More patients in PRiDe than the EF-11 trial received NovoTTF Therapy for first recurrence (33% v 9%) and had received prior bevacizumab therapy (55.1% v 19%). Median OS was significantly longer with NovoTTF Therapy in clinical practice (PRiDe data set) than in the EF-11 trial (9.6 v 6.6 months; HR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.05 to 0.86, P = .0003). One- and 2-year OS rates were more than double for NovoTTF Therapy patients in PRiDe than in the EF-11 trial (1-year: 44% v 20%; 2-year: 30% v 9%). First and second versus third and subsequent recurrences, high Karnofsky performance status (KPS), and no prior bevacizumab use were favorable prognostic factors. No unexpected adverse events were detected in PRiDe. As in the EF-11 trial, the most frequent adverse events were mild to moderate skin reactions associated with application of the NovoTTF Therapy transducer arrays. Results from PRiDe, together with those previously reported in the EF-11 trial, indicate that NovoTTF Therapy offers clinical benefit to patients with recurrent GBM. NovoTTF Therapy has high patient tolerability and favorable safety profile in the real-world, clinical practice setting.
Purpose: Rindopepimut is a vaccine targeting the tumor-specific EGF driver mutation, EGFRvIII. The ReACT study investigated whether the addition of rindopepimut to standard bevacizumab improved outcome for patients with relapsed, EGFRvIII-positive glioblastoma.Patients and Methods: In this double-blind, randomized, phase II study (NCT01498328) conducted at 26 hospitals in the United States, bevacizumab-na€ ve patients with recurrent EGFRvIII-positive glioblastoma were randomized to receive rindopepimut or a control injection of keyhole limpet hemocyanin, each concurrent with bevacizumab. The primary endpoint was 6-month progression-free survival (PFS6) by central review with a one-sided significance of 0.2.Results: Between May 2012 and 2014, 73 patients were randomized (36 rindopepimut, 37 control). Rindopepimut toxicity included transient, low-grade local reactions. As primary endpoint, PFS6 was 28% (10/36) for rindopepimut compared with 16% (6/37) for control (P ¼ 0.12, one-sided). Secondary and exploratory endpoints also favored the rindopepimut group including a statistically significant survival advantage [HR, 0.53; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.32-0.88; two-sided log-rank P ¼ 0.01], a higher ORR [30% (9/30) vs. 18% (6/34; P ¼ 0.38)], median duration of response [7.8 months (95% CI, 3.5-22.2) vs. 5.6 (95% CI, 3.7-7.4)], and ability to discontinue steroids for !6 months [33% (6/18) vs. 0% (0/19)]. Eighty percent of rindopepimut-treated patients achieved robust anti-EGFRvIII titers (!1:12,800), which were associated with prolonged survival (HR ¼ 0.17; 95% CI, 0.07-0.45; P < 0.0001).Conclusions: Our randomized trial supports the potential for targeted immunotherapy among patients with GBM, but the therapeutic benefit requires validation due to the small sample size and potential heterogeneity of bevacizumab response among recurrent patients with GBM.See related commentary by Wick and Wagener, p.
and the Inovitro system from Novocure to support parts of the work reported here. The conceptualization, design, data collection, analysis, interpretation, decision to publish and manuscript preparation were performed by the authors independent of Novocure. D.C. and D.D.T. are inventors of 2 patent applications (63172862 and 63015093) based on the data. All rights were 2 transferred to Novocure. D.D.T. has received research funding in the last 12 months from Merck, Sarepta, and Lacerta for unrelated works. Other co-authors have declared no conflict of interest.
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