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"Zaidi, Shane"
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The Role of Local Therapy in Multi-focal Epithelioid Haemangioendothelioma
2019
Epithelioid haemangioendothelioma (EHE) is a rare tumor with a wide spectrum of clinical behavior. There is no consensus on the role of local therapy in symptomatic, multi-focal disease.
A retrospective review of patients presenting to the Royal Marsden Hospital between January 2000 and December 2017 was conducted.
Fifty-three patients with EHE were identified, of which 18 patients (34.0%) received local therapy, and 11 patients (20.8%) underwent active surveillance. A variety of local treatment modalities were used with few toxicities, and local recurrence was managed with other local treatments or systemic therapy. Distal disease progression was infrequent (n=4, 7.5%). Patients who developed pleural effusion (n=5, 9.4%) had poor outcome irrespective of treatment.
Local therapy has a role in a selected patient group managed in a multidisciplinary setting, including patients with indolent disease, and patients with a solitary area of progression/symptomatic disease.
Journal Article
Low-grade Fibromyxoid Sarcoma: Treatment Outcomes and Efficacy of Chemotherapy
by
JONES, ROBIN L.
,
MESSIOU, CHRISTINA
,
ZAIDI, SHANE
in
Chemotherapy
,
Fecal incontinence
,
Metastasis
2020
Low-grade fibromyxoid sarcoma (LGFMS) is a rare sarcoma subtype with a generally indolent pattern of clinical behaviour, but treatments for advanced disease are limited.
A retrospective search of a prospectively maintained institutional database identified 102 patients treated from December 1994 to August 2018. We evaluated the outcome of patients and the efficacy and safety of non-surgical therapies in LGFMS.
Ninety-four out of 102 (92.2%) underwent primary resection, seven (6.9%) were treated with systemic therapy and one (1.0%) is currently being treated with pre-operative radiotherapy. The RECIST 1.1 response rate to first-line chemotherapy was 0%, and median progression-free survival was 1.84 months (95% confidence intervaI=0.10-3.6 months).
Conventional systemic therapy has limited efficacy in advanced LGFMS.
Journal Article
Treatments and Outcomes in Oligometastatic Soft Tissue Soft Sarcoma – A Single Centre Retrospective Analysis
2021
Background/Aim: Distinguishing true oligometastatic disease from early polymetastatic disease is vital in patients with soft tissue sarcoma as contemporary treatment strategies differ significantly. Clinical factors such as tumour biology, organ involved, number of lesions, and patient fitness influence clinical decisions. Patients and Methods: A retrospective search of a prospective database identified patients with new distant relapse, treated between 2009 and 2012. Results: A total of 223 patients were included, and oligometastases were diagnosed in 81 (36%) patients, which were pulmonary in just over half of cases. These were treated with local therapy in 66 of 89 cases, and 7 patients received subsequent treatment for additional oligometastases. Metastasectomy was the most common treatment modality. A total of 16/66 patients (24%) underwent active surveillance for >6 months prior to local therapy. Conclusion: Patients with oligometastatic disease can experience durable disease control with timely multimodality treatment approaches for evolving metastatic disease, where disease biology allows.
Journal Article
The route to diagnosis of sarcoma patients: Results from an interview study in the Netherlands and the United Kingdom
by
Schreuder, Bart H. W. B.
,
Husson, Olga
,
van der Graaf, Winette T. A.
in
Adult
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Cancer
2020
Sarcomas are rare tumours. Early diagnosis is challenging, but important for local control and potentially survival and quality of life(QoL). We investigated (1)the route to diagnosis (RtD) experienced by sarcoma patients, including factors contributing to the length of the RtD from patients' perspective; (2)the impact of the RtD on QoL and care satisfaction; and (3)differences in aims 1-2 between English and Dutch patients.
Fifteen sarcoma patients from The Royal Marsden Hospital, United Kingdom, and Radboud University Medical Centre, The Netherlands, were interviewed, exploring RtD experiences. Interviews were analysed according to qualitative content analysis.
The main themes were: patient interval, diagnostic interval, reflection on the RtD and recommendations for improvement. Patient interval was long if symptoms were attributed as benign, did not interfere with daily life or were expected to cease. An incorrect working diagnosis, ineffective process of additional investigations, long referral times and lack of a lead clinician lengthened the diagnostic interval. Long waiting times, false reassurance and inadequate information provision led to dissatisfaction and a high emotional burden. Factors for improvement included increasing awareness of patients and healthcare providers, empowering patients, and having a lead clinician.
The RtD of sarcoma patients is complex. Increasing awareness of patients and healthcare providers may contribute to shorten the RtD.
Journal Article
Predicting radiotherapy response, Toxicities and quality-of-life related functional outcomes in soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities (PredicT) using dose–volume constraints development: a study protocol
by
Nguyen, Thuy-Giang
,
Gulliford, Sarah
,
Robinson, Martin
in
Clinical outcomes
,
Clinical trials
,
Drug dosages
2024
IntroductionRadiotherapy improves local tumour control in patients with soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities (STSE) but it also increases the probability of long-term toxicities such as tissue fibrosis, joint stiffness and lymphoedema. The use of radiation dose and volume thresholds, called dose constraints, may potentially reduce the development of toxicities in STSE. The aim of this study is to determine predictors of radiotherapy-related side effects for STSE.Methods and analysisPredicting radiotherapy response, Toxicities and quality-of-life related functional outcomes in soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities (PredicT) is a multicentre observational study comprising two cohorts (PredicT A and B). PredicT A, a retrospective analysis of the UK VorteX (NCT00423618) and IMRiS clinical trials (NCT02520128), is aimed at deriving a statistical model for development of dose–volume constraints. This model will use receiving operator characteristics and multivariate analysis to predict radiotherapy side effects and patient-reported outcomes. PredicT B, a prospective cohort study of 150 patients with STSE, is aimed at testing the validity of those dose–volume constraints. PredicT B is open and planned to complete recruitment by September 2024.Ethics and disseminationPredicT B has received ethical approval from North West - Liverpool Central Research Ethics Committee (20/NW/0267). Participants gave informed consent to participate in the study before taking part. We will disseminate our findings via publications, presentations, national and international conference meetings and engage with local charities.Trial registration number NCT05978024.
Journal Article
Efficacy of Gemcitabine-based Chemotherapy in Clear Cell Sarcoma of Soft Tissue
2020
Clear cell sarcoma (CCS) is an aggressive sarcoma subtype, resistant to conventional anthracycline-based chemotherapy and radiation. The diagnosis is often challenging due to similarities with malignant melanoma.
We aimed to analyse the activity of gemcitabine-based chemotherapy in a cohort of patients with CCS treated at the Royal Marsden Hospital.
Five patients with metastatic CCS received gemcitabine as first- or second-line systemic therapy. The median time-to-progression was 10 weeks. The median number of cycles of gemcitabine-based therapy was 3 (range=2-7 cycles). Median overall survival in our cohort was 66 months from the initial diagnosis but in the metastatic setting, the overall survival was reduced to 28 months.
Gemcitabine-based therapy has modest activity in CCS. There remains a significant unmet medical need for novel, effective therapies for this disease.
Journal Article
Clinical Characteristics and efficacy of chemotherapy in sclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma
2018
BackgroundSclerosing epithelioid fibrosarcoma (SEF) is a very rare soft tissue sarcoma subtype. Clinically it is an aggressive tumour; however, to our knowledge there are no published reports regarding the efficacy of chemotherapy in SEF. Therefore, the aim of this study was to document the outcome of a series of patients with SEF treated at a single referral centre with reference to systemic therapy.MethodsA retrospective search of a prospectively maintained database was performed to identify all patients diagnosed with SEF between 1990 and 2017. The diagnosis was confirmed in each case by a dedicated soft tissue sarcoma pathologist. We analysed those with recurrent disease and the effect of systemic chemotherapy in the metastatic setting.ResultsThirteen patients were identified, median overall survival from diagnosis and metastasis were 47.3 (95% CI 25.0–131.9) and 16.3 (95% CI 5.3–20.6) months, respectively. In total, 12 (92.3%) patients developed metastatic disease of which 10 died of disease, 1 was lost to follow-up and 1 had recently commenced palliative treatment. Among the 10 patients with metastatic disease, 7 received palliative chemotherapy. Palliative chemotherapy resulted in partial response in 1 patient, stable disease in 3 patients and progressive disease in 3 patients. Median time to disease progression was 2.7 (95% CI 1.2–4.4) months. Two of 13 patients were treated with adjuvant chemotherapy, receiving 6 cycles of liposomal doxorubicin and 1 cycle of doxorubicin, respectively, with a metastasis-free survival of 28.2 and 7.1 months, respectively.ConclusionSEF is an aggressive sarcoma subtype with a poor outcome and with limited responsiveness to conventional chemotherapy. Patients with this subtype should be considered for participation in clinical trials with novel agents. Further investigation into the biology of this rare disease is required to improve outcomes.
Journal Article
The efficacy of combination immunotherapy with ipilimumab plus nivolumab in metastatic myxofibrosarcoma
by
Benson, Charlotte
,
Thway, Khin
,
Kalofonou, Foteini
in
Case Report
,
Chemotherapy
,
CTLA-4 protein
2024
We present the case of a patient with Myxofibrosarcoma (MFS), a mesenchymal type of soft tissue sarcoma (STS) and the response to combination immunotherapy with anti PD-1 and anti-CTLA-4 therapy, following disease progression after Standard chemotherapy (SACT) and Radiotherapy (RT). We have shown a timeline of treatment and responses, as well as the overall safety profile and the management of immunotherapy related adverse events. This study demonstrates the potential of checkpoint inhibitors as therapeutic agents in the treatment of MFS.
Journal Article
The HSP90 Inhibitor NVP-AUY922 Radiosensitizes by Abrogation of Homologous Recombination Resulting in Mitotic Entry with Unresolved DNA Damage
by
Harrington, Kevin J.
,
Eccles, Suzanne A.
,
Nutting, Christopher M.
in
Aberration
,
Animals
,
Anticancer properties
2012
Heat shock protein 90 (HSP90) is a molecular chaperone responsible for the conformational maintenance of a number of client proteins that play key roles in cell cycle arrest, DNA damage repair and apoptosis following radiation. HSP90 inhibitors exhibit antitumor activity by modulating the stabilisation and activation of HSP90 client proteins. We sought to evaluate NVP-AUY922, the most potent HSP90 inhibitor yet reported, in preclinical radiosensitization studies.
NVP-AUY922 potently radiosensitized cells in vitro at low nanomolar concentrations with a concurrent depletion of radioresistance-linked client proteins. Radiosensitization by NVP-AUY922 was verified for the first time in vivo in a human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma xenograft model in athymic mice, as measured by delayed tumor growth and increased surrogate end-point survival (p = <0.0001). NVP-AUY922 was shown to ubiquitously inhibit resolution of dsDNA damage repair correlating to delayed Rad51 foci formation in all cell lines tested. Additionally, NVP-AUY922 induced a stalled mitotic phenotype, in a cell line-dependent manner, in HeLa and HN5 cell lines irrespective of radiation exposure. Cell cycle analysis indicated that NVP-AUY922 induced aberrant mitotic entry in all cell lines tested in the presence of radiation-induced DNA damage due to ubiquitous CHK1 depletion, but resultant downstream cell cycle effects were cell line dependent.
These results identify NVP-AUY922 as the most potent HSP90-mediated radiosensitizer yet reported in vitro, and for the first time validate it in a clinically relevant in vivo model. Mechanistic analysis at clinically achievable concentrations demonstrated that radiosensitization is mediated by the combinatorial inhibition of cell growth and survival pathways, ubiquitous delay in Rad51-mediated homologous recombination and CHK1-mediated G(2)/M arrest, but that the contribution of cell cycle perturbation to radiosensitization may be cell line specific.
Journal Article
Combination Therapy With Reovirus and Anti-PD-1 Blockade Controls Tumor Growth Through Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses
2016
Oncolytic reovirus can be delivered both systemically and intratumorally, in both preclinical models and in early phase clinical trials. Reovirus has direct oncolytic activity against a variety of tumor types and antitumor activity is directly associated with immune activation by virus replication in tumors. Immune mechanisms of therapy include both innate immune activation against virally infected tumor cells, and the generation of adaptive antitumor immune responses as a result of in vivo priming against tumor-associated antigens. We tested the combination of local oncolytic reovirus therapy with systemic immune checkpoint inhibition. We show that treatment of subcutaneous B16 melanomas with a combination of intravenous (i.v.) anti-PD-1 antibody and intratumoral (i.t.) reovirus significantly enhanced survival of mice compared to i.t. reovirus (P < 0.01) or anti-PD-1 therapy alone. In vitro immune analysis demonstrated that checkpoint inhibition improved the ability of NK cells to kill reovirus-infected tumor cells, reduced Treg activity, and increased the adaptive CD8+ T-cell-dependent antitumor T-cell response. PD-1 blockade also enhanced the antiviral immune response but through effector mechanisms which overlapped with but also differed from those affecting the antitumor response. Therefore, combination with checkpoint inhibition represents a readily translatable next step in the clinical development of reovirus viroimmunotherapy.
Journal Article