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1. Distinct serum biosignatures are associated with different tuberculosis treatment outcomes. [2019]
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Ronacher K, Chegou NN, Kleynhans L, Djoba Siawaya JF, du Plessis N, Loxton AG, Maasdorp E, Tromp G, Kidd M, Stanley K, Kriel M, Menezes A, Gutschmidt A, van der Spuy GD, Warren RM, Dietze R, Okwera A, Thiel B, Belisle JT, Cliff JM, Boom WH, Johnson JL, van Helden PD, Dockrell HM, and Walzl G
Tuberculosis (Edinburgh, Scotland) [Tuberculosis (Edinb)] 2019 Sep; Vol. 118, pp. 101859. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Aug 12.
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Adult, Cytokines blood, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay methods, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Predictive Value of Tests, Prognosis, ROC Curve, Recurrence, Treatment Failure, Treatment Outcome, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary diagnosis, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary immunology, Antitubercular Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers blood, and Tuberculosis, Pulmonary drug therapy
- Abstract
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Biomarkers for TB treatment response and outcome are needed. This study characterize changes in immune profiles during TB treatment, define biosignatures associated with treatment outcomes, and explore the feasibility of predictive models for relapse. Seventy-two markers were measured by multiplex cytokine array in serum samples from 78 cured, 12 relapsed and 15 failed treatment patients from South Africa before and during therapy for pulmonary TB. Promising biosignatures were evaluated in a second cohort from Uganda/Brazil consisting of 17 relapse and 23 cured patients. Thirty markers changed significantly with different response patterns during TB treatment in cured patients. The serum biosignature distinguished cured from relapse patients and a combination of two clinical (time to positivity in liquid culture and BMI) and four immunological parameters (TNF-β, sIL-6R, IL-12p40 and IP-10) at diagnosis predicted relapse with a 75% sensitivity (95%CI 0.38-1) and 85% specificity (95%CI 0.75-0.93). This biosignature was validated in an independent Uganda/Brazil cohort correctly classifying relapse patients with 83% (95%CI 0.58-1) sensitivity and 61% (95%CI 0.39-0.83) specificity. A characteristic biosignature with value as predictor of TB relapse was identified. The repeatability and robustness of these biomarkers require further validation in well-characterized cohorts.
(Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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2. Intranasal oxytocin treatment for social deficits and biomarkers of response in children with autism [2017]
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Parker Karen J., Oztan Ozge, Libove Robin A., Sumiyoshi Raena D., Jackson Lisa P., Karhson Debra S., Summers Jacqueline E., Hinman Kyle E., Motonaga Kara S., Phillips Jennifer M., Carson Dean S., Garner Joseph P., and Hardan Antonio Y.
- Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 114(30):8119-8124
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READ, Robert W, RICHES, James R, STEVENS, Jacqueline A, STUBBS, Sarah J, and BLACK, Robin M
- Archives of toxicology. 84(1):25-36
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Toxicology, Toxicologie, Sciences biologiques et medicales, Biological and medical sciences, Sciences medicales, Medical sciences, Toxicologie, Toxicology, Aminoacide, Aminoacid, Aminoácido, Carboxylic ester hydrolases, Enzyme, Enzima, Esterases, Hydrolases, Toxine, Toxin, Toxina, Albumine, Albumin, Albúmina, Cholinesterase, Etude comparative, Comparative study, Estudio comparativo, Exposition, Exposure, Exposición, Marqueur biologique, Biological marker, Marcador biológico, Neurotoxine, Neurotoxin, Neurotoxina, Organophosphoré, Organophosphorus compounds, Organofosforado, Oxime, Oxima, Traitement, Treatment, Tratamiento, Tyrosine, Tirosina, Biomarkers, Nerve agents, Oxime therapy, Phosphylated butyrylcholinesterase, and Phosphylated tyrosine
- Abstract
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Organophosphorus nerve agents inhibit the activity of cholinesterases by phosphylation of the active site serine. In addition, sarin, cyclosarin, soman and tabun have been shown to phosphylate a tyrosine residue in albumin. Therapies against nerve agent poisoning include the use of oximes to reactivate inhibited cholinesterases by displacement of the phosphyl moiety and hence detectable levels of adducts with cholinesterases may be reduced. Adducts with tyrosine have been shown to be persistent in the guinea pig in the presence of oxime therapy. Plasma samples obtained from an animal study aimed at improving therapy against nerve agent poisoning were used to compare the suitability of tyrosine and butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) adducts as biomarkers of nerve agent exposure after treatment with therapeutic oximes. Under the terms of the project licence, these samples could be collected only on death of the animal, which occurred within hours of exposure or when culled at 23 or 24 days. Tyrosine adducts were detected in all samples collected following intra-muscular administration of twice the LD50 dose of the respective nerve agent. Aged BuChE adducts were detected in samples collected within a few hours after administration of soman and tabun, but not after 23 or 24 days. No BuChE adducts were detected in animals exposed to sarin and cyclosarin where samples were collected only after 23 or 24 days.
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Snyder, Alexandra, Nathanson, Tavi, Buros Novik, Jacqueline, Hellmann, Matthew D., Chang, Eliza, Aksoy, Bulent Arman, Vignali, Marissa, Robins, Harlan S., Merghoub, Taha, Hammerbacher, Jeff, Rosenberg, Jonathan E., Bajorin, Dean F., Funt, Samuel A., Ahuja, Arun, Al-Ahmadie, Hikmat, Yusko, Erik, Benzeno, Sharon, Boyd, Mariel, Moran, Meredith, Iyer, Gopa, and Mardis, Elaine R.
- PLoS Medicine, Vol 14, Iss 5, p e1002309 (2017)
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Immune System Proteins, Cancer Treatment, Research Article, Anatomy, Oncology, T Cell Receptors, Clinical Medicine, Genetics, White Blood Cells, Immune Response, Proteins, Immunotherapy, Immunology, Cellular Types, Biology and Life Sciences, Signal Transduction, Biomarkers, Physiology, Blood Cells, Immune Cells, Medicine, Animal Cells, Body Fluids, Blood, Mutation, Cell Biology, T Cells, Clinical Immunology, Biochemistry, Cancer Immunotherapy, Medicine and Health Sciences, Immune Receptors, and Somatic Mutation
- Abstract
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BACKGROUND:Inhibition of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) with atezolizumab can induce durable clinical benefit (DCB) in patients with metastatic urothelial cancers, including complete remissions in patients with chemotherapy refractory disease. Although mutation load and PD-L1 immune cell (IC) staining have been associated with response, they lack sufficient sensitivity and specificity for clinical use. Thus, there is a need to evaluate the peripheral blood immune environment and to conduct detailed analyses of mutation load, predicted neoantigens, and immune cellular infiltration in tumors to enhance our understanding of the biologic underpinnings of response and resistance. METHODS AND FINDINGS:The goals of this study were to (1) evaluate the association of mutation load and predicted neoantigen load with therapeutic benefit and (2) determine whether intratumoral and peripheral blood T cell receptor (TCR) clonality inform clinical outcomes in urothelial carcinoma treated with atezolizumab. We hypothesized that an elevated mutation load in combination with T cell clonal dominance among intratumoral lymphocytes prior to treatment or among peripheral T cells after treatment would be associated with effective tumor control upon treatment with anti-PD-L1 therapy. We performed whole exome sequencing (WES), RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), and T cell receptor sequencing (TCR-seq) of pretreatment tumor samples as well as TCR-seq of matched, serially collected peripheral blood, collected before and after treatment with atezolizumab. These parameters were assessed for correlation with DCB (defined as progression-free survival [PFS] >6 months), PFS, and overall survival (OS), both alone and in the context of clinical and intratumoral parameters known to be predictive of survival in this disease state. Patients with DCB displayed a higher proportion of tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes (TIL) (n = 24, Mann-Whitney p = 0.047). Pretreatment peripheral blood TCR clonality below the median was associated with improved PFS (n = 29, log-rank p = 0.048) and OS (n = 29, log-rank p = 0.011). Patients with DCB also demonstrated more substantial expansion of tumor-associated TCR clones in the peripheral blood 3 weeks after starting treatment (n = 22, Mann-Whitney p = 0.022). The combination of high pretreatment peripheral blood TCR clonality with elevated PD-L1 IC staining in tumor tissue was strongly associated with poor clinical outcomes (n = 10, hazard ratio (HR) (mean) = 89.88, HR (median) = 23.41, 95% CI [2.43, 506.94], p(HR > 1) = 0.0014). Marked variations in mutation loads were seen with different somatic variant calling methodologies, which, in turn, impacted associations with clinical outcomes. Missense mutation load, predicted neoantigen load, and expressed neoantigen load did not demonstrate significant association with DCB (n = 25, Mann-Whitney p = 0.22, n = 25, Mann-Whitney p = 0.55, and n = 25, Mann-Whitney p = 0.29, respectively). Instead, we found evidence of time-varying effects of somatic mutation load on PFS in this cohort (n = 25, p = 0.044). A limitation of our study is its small sample size (n = 29), a subset of the patients treated on IMvigor 210 (NCT02108652). Given the number of exploratory analyses performed, we intend for these results to be hypothesis-generating. CONCLUSIONS:These results demonstrate the complex nature of immune response to checkpoint blockade and the compelling need for greater interrogation and data integration of both host and tumor factors. Incorporating these variables in prospective studies will facilitate identification and treatment of resistant patients.
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