Andrey Zaritskey
Hackensack University Medical Center
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Featured researches published by Andrey Zaritskey.
Blood | 2012
H. Jean Khoury; Jorge Cortes; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Carlo Gambacorti-Passerini; Michele Baccarani; Dong-Wook Kim; Andrey Zaritskey; Athena Countouriotis; Nadine Besson; Eric Leip; Virginia Kelly; Tim H. Brümmendorf
Bosutinib, a dual Src/Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), has shown potent activity against chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). This phase 1/2 study evaluated the efficacy and safety of once-daily bosutinib 500 mg in leukemia patients after resistance/intolerance to imatinib. The current analysis included 118 patients with chronic-phase CML who had been pretreated with imatinib followed by dasatinib and/or nilotinib, with a median follow-up of 28.5 months. In this subpopulation, major cytogenetic response was attained by 32% of patients; complete cytogenetic response was attained by 24%, including in one of 3 patients treated with 3 prior TKIs. Complete hematologic response was achieved/maintained in 73% of patients. On-treatment transformation to accelerated/blast phase occurred in 5 patients. At 2 years, Kaplan-Meier-estimated progression-free survival was 73% and estimated overall survival was 83%. Responses were seen across Bcr-Abl mutations, including those associated with dasatinib and nilotinib resistance, except T315I. Bosutinib had an acceptable safety profile; treatment-emergent adverse events were primarily manageable grade 1/2 gastrointestinal events and rash. Grade 3/4 nonhematologic adverse events (> 2% of patients) included diarrhea (8%) and rash (4%). Bosutinib may offer a new treatment option for patients with chronic-phase CML after treatment with multiple TKIs. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00261846.
Cell Cycle | 2012
Renata Dmitrieva; Izida Minullina; Anna A. Bilibina; Olga V. Tarasova; Sergey Anisimov; Andrey Zaritskey
Bone marrow (BM) and subcutaneous adipose tissue (Ad) are both considered being prospective sources of MSC for therapeutic applications. However, functional properties and therapeutic efficacy of MSC derived from different tissues of the same patient are still poorly investigated. In our study, BM-MSC and F-MSC cultures from 43 adult donors were evaluated in successive passages for immunophenotype, secretion of VEGF, SDF1, MCP1, IL6 and TGFβ1, frequency of colony-forming units (CFU-F), frequency of adipo- and osteo-progenitors (CFU-Ad, CFU-Ost), and for onset of in vitro replicative senescence. We have demonstrated that at early passages (P2-P4 or up to 14-15 in vitro population doublings) BM- and Ad- derived MSC cultures are comparable in such important characteristics as proliferation rate (population doubling time: 3,4±0,2% in BM-MSC, 3±0,3 % in F-MSC), clonogenity (CFU-F frequency: 32±5% in BM-MSC, 31±5% in F-MSC), differentiation potential (CFU-Ad frequency: 10,4±2% in BM-MSC, 13±3% in F-MSC; CFU-Ost frequency: 18,5±5,5% in BM-MSC, 18±5% in F-MSC), but differ significantly in abundance of CD146+ fraction within the sample (25±5% in BM-MSC, 7±3 % in F-MSC) and in a level of VEGF, SDF-1, MCP1 and TGFβ1 secretion. We have also demonstrated that BM-MSC enter senescence after P3-4 while most of F-MSC did not show senescence features up to P6-8. Together, these data demonstrate that specific properties of MSC from different sources should be always taken into account, when developing and optimizing the specific protocols for MSC expansion and evaluation for each particular clinical application.
Leukemia | 2015
Verena S. Hoffmann; M Baccarani; Jörg Hasford; Doris Lindoerfer; Sonja Burgstaller; D. Sertić; P. Costeas; Jiri Mayer; Karel Indrak; Hele Everaus; Perttu Koskenvesa; Joelle Guilhot; Gabriele Schubert-Fritschle; Fausto Castagnetti; F. Di Raimondo; Sandra Lejniece; Laimonas Griskevicius; Noortje Thielen; Tomasz Sacha; Andrzej Hellmann; Anna G. Turkina; Andrey Zaritskey; Andrija Bogdanovic; Zuzana Sninská; Irena Preloznik Zupan; J-L Steegmann; Bengt Simonsson; Richard E. Clark; A. Covelli; G. Guidi
This population-based registry was designed to provide robust and updated information on the characteristics and the epidemiology of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). All cases of newly diagnosed Philadelphia positive, BCR-ABL1+ CML that occurred in a sample of 92.5 million adults living in 20 European countries, were registered over a median period of 39 months. 94.3% of the 2904 CML patients were diagnosed in chronic phase (CP). Median age was 56 years. 55.5% of patients had comorbidities, mainly cardiovascular (41.9%). High-risk patients were 24.7% by Sokal, 10.8% by EURO, and 11.8% by EUTOS risk scores. The raw incidence increased with age from 0.39/100 000/year in people 20–29 years old to 1.52 in those >70 years old, and showed a maximum of 1.39 in Italy and a minimum of 0.69 in Poland (all countries together: 0.99). The proportion of Sokal and Euro score high-risk patients seen in many countries indicates that trial patients were not a positive selection. Thus from a clinical point of view the results of most trials can be generalized to most countries. The incidences observed among European countries did not differ substantially. The estimated number of new CML cases per year in Europe is about 6370.
Blood | 2012
Joelle Guilhot; Michele Baccarani; Richard E. Clark; Francisco Cervantes; François Guilhot; Andreas Hochhaus; Sergei M Kulikov; Jiri Mayer; Andreas L. Petzer; Gianantonio Rosti; Philippe Rousselot; Giuseppe Saglio; Susanne Saussele; Bengt Simonsson; Juan-Luis Steegmann; Andrey Zaritskey; R. Hehlmann
The treatment policy of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), particularly with tyrosine kinase inhibitors, has been influenced by several recent studies that were well designed and rapidly performed, but their interpretation is of some concern because different end points and methodologies were used. To understand and compare the results of the previous and future studies and to translate their conclusion into clinical practice, there is a need for common definitions and methods for analyses of CML studies. A panel of experts was appointed by the European LeukemiaNet with the aim of developing a set of definitions and recommendations to be used in design, analyses, and reporting of phase 3 clinical trials in this disease. This paper summarizes the consensus of the panel on events and major end points of interest in CML. It also focuses on specific issues concerning the intention-to-treat principle and longitudinal data analyses in the context of long-term follow-up. The panel proposes that future clinical trials follow these recommendations.
American Journal of Hematology | 2014
Carlo Gambacorti-Passerini; Tim H. Brümmendorf; Dong-Wook Kim; Anna G. Turkina; Tamas Masszi; Sarit Assouline; Simon Durrant; Hagop M. Kantarjian; H. Jean Khoury; Andrey Zaritskey; Zhi Xiang Shen; Jie Jin; Edo Vellenga; Ricardo Pasquini; Vikram Mathews; Francisco Cervantes; Nadine Besson; Kathleen Turnbull; Eric Leip; Virginia Kelly; Jorge Cortes
Bosutinib is an orally active, dual Src/Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor for treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) following resistance/intolerance to prior therapy. Here, we report the data from the 2‐year follow‐up of a phase 1/2 open‐label study evaluating the efficacy and safety of bosutinib as second‐line therapy in 288 patients with chronic phase CML resistant (n = 200) or intolerant (n = 88) to imatinib. The cumulative response rates to bosutinib were as follows: 85% achieved/maintained complete hematologic response, 59% achieved/maintained major cytogenetic response (including 48% with complete cytogenetic response), and 35% achieved major molecular response. Responses were durable, with 2‐year estimates of retaining response >70%. Two‐year probabilities of progression‐free survival and overall survival were 81% and 91%, respectively. The most common toxicities were primarily gastrointestinal adverse events (diarrhea [84%], nausea [45%], vomiting [37%]), which were primarily mild to moderate, typically transient, and first occurred early during treatment. Thrombocytopenia was the most common grade 3/4 hematologic laboratory abnormality (24%). Outcomes were generally similar among imatinib‐resistant and imatinib‐intolerant patients and did not differ with age. The longer‐term results of the present analysis confirm that bosutinib is an effective and tolerable second‐line therapy for patients with imatinib‐resistant or imatinib‐intolerant chronic phase CML. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00261846. Am. J. Hematol. 89:732–742, 2014.
Leukemia | 2017
Verena S. Hoffmann; M. Baccarani; Jörg Hasford; Fausto Castagnetti; F. Di Raimondo; L.F. Casado; Anna G. Turkina; D Zackova; Gert J. Ossenkoppele; Andrey Zaritskey; Martin Höglund; Bengt Simonsson; Karel Indrak; Zuzana Sninská; Tomasz Sacha; Richard E. Clark; Andrija Bogdanovic; Andrzej Hellmann; Laimonas Griskevicius; Gabriele Schubert-Fritschle; D. Sertić; Joelle Guilhot; Sandra Lejniece; Irena Preloznik Zupan; Sonja Burgstaller; Perttu Koskenvesa; Hele Everaus; P. Costeas; Doris Lindoerfer; Giovanni Rosti
The European Treatment and Outcome Study (EUTOS) population-based registry includes data of all adult patients newly diagnosed with Philadelphia chromosome-positive and/or BCR-ABL1+ chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in 20 predefined countries and regions of Europe. Registration time ranged from 12 to 60 months between January 2008 and December 2013. Median age was 55 years and median observation time was 29 months. Eighty percent of patients were treated first line with imatinib, and 17% with a second-generation tyrosine kinase inhibitor, mostly according to European LeukemiaNet recommendations. After 12 months, complete cytogenetic remission (CCyR) and major molecular response (MMR) were achieved in 57% and 41% of patients, respectively. Patients with high EUTOS risk scores achieved CCyR and MMR significantly later than patients with low EUTOS risk. Probabilities of overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival for all patients at 12, 24 and 30 months was 97%, 94% and 92%, and 95%, 92% and 90%, respectively. The new EUTOS long-term survival score was validated: the OS of patients differed significantly between the three risk groups. The probability of dying in remission was 1% after 24 months. The current management of patients with tyrosine kinase inhibitors resulted in responses and outcomes in the range reported from clinical trials. These data from a large population-based, patient sample provide a solid benchmark for the evaluation of new treatment policies.
Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2016
Anders Österborg; Miklós Udvardy; Andrey Zaritskey; Per-Ola Andersson; Sebastian Grosicki; Grzegorz Mazur; Polina Kaplan; Michael Steurer; Anna Schuh; Marco Montillo; Iryna Kryachok; Jan Moritz Middeke; Yaroslav Kulyaba; Grygoriy Rekhtman; Michele Gorczyca; Siobhan Daly; Chai Ni Chang; Steen Lisby; Ira V. Gupta
Abstract We report results of a randomized, phase III study of ofatumumab versus physicians’ choice treatment in patients with bulky fludarabine-refractory chronic lymphocytic leukemia and explore extended versus standard-length ofatumumab treatment. Patients (79 ofatumumab, 43 physicians’ choice) completed a median 6 (ofatumumab) or 3 (physicians’ choice) months’ therapy. Ofatumumab-treated patients with stable disease or better were randomized (2:1) to 6 months’ extended ofatumumab treatment or observation. Although the study did not meet the primary endpoint of progression-free survival (PFS) by independent review committee (ofatumumab: 5.4 months, physicians’ choice: 3.6 months; p = 0.27), median PFS by investigators was significantly longer for ofatumumab versus physicians’ choice (7.0 versus 4.5 months; p = 0.003) as was time to next therapy (median 11.5 versus 6.5 months; p = 0.0004). PFS and time to next therapy were significantly longer with ofatumumab extended treatment than observation (p = 0.026 and p = 0.002, respectively; n = 37). The adverse-event profile of long-term ofatumumab administration showed no unexpected findings (Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT01313689).
Cell Cycle | 2014
Izida Minullina; Nina P Alexeyeva; Sergey Anisimov; Maxim V. Puzanov; Svetlana N Kozlova; Yurii V Sviryaev; Andrey Zaritskey; Eugeniy V. Shlyakhto
It is proposed that patients with heart failure may have not only myocardial dysfunction, but also a reduced regenerative capacity of stem cells. However, very little is known about bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) characteristics in heart failure and its comorbidities (obesity and/or diabetes). We hypothesized that metabolic alterations associated with the latter will be reflected in altered expression of key genes related to angiogenesis, inflammation, and tissue remodeling in patient-derived BMSCs. We found that BMSCs of heart failure patients with lower body mass index have enhanced expression of genes involved in extracellular matrix remodeling. In particular, body mass index <30 was associated with upregulated expression of genes encoding collagen type I, proteases and protease activators (MMP2, MMP14, uPA), and regulatory molecules (CTGF, ITGβ5, SMAD7, SNAIL1). In contrast, these transcript levels did not differ significantly between BMSCs from obese heart failure patients and healthy subjects. Comorbidities (including obesity and diabetes) are known to play role in heart failure progression rate and outcome of the disease. We thus suggest that key molecular targets identified in this study should become the target of the subsequent focused studies. In the future, these targets may find some use in the clinical setting.
Oncotarget | 2018
Sergey V. Kulemzin; Andrey A. Gorchakov; Anton N. Chikaev; Valeriya V. Kuznetsova; Olga Y. Volkova; Daria A. Matvienko; Alexey Petukhov; Andrey Zaritskey; A. V. Taranin
T and NK cells armed with chimeric antigen receptors (CAR) are promising tools for the specific elimination of cancer cells. In most CAR designs implemented to date, the recognition of target cells is mediated by single-chain variable fragments (scFvs) derived from murine monoclonal antibodies. This format, however, has a number of limitations, including its relatively large size and potential immunogenicity in humans. In this study, we explored the feasibility of using human fibronectin type III domains (Fn3) as the antigen recognition domain in CARs. Human Fn3 domains have lower predicted immunogenicity compared to mouse-derived sequences, and a reduced molecular weight compared to scFvs. We created a functional CAR using a VEGFR2-specific Fn3 module replacing the conventional scFv. The resulting FnCAR specifically potentiates the cytotoxic activity of human T cells and YT NK cells in the presence of VEGFR2-positive targets. These findings demonstrate that Fn3 domains can be used in CARs for antigen recognition.
Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma & Leukemia | 2018
Aleksei Titov; Evgeny Smirnov; Alexey Petukhov; Ekaterina Zaikova; Ekaterina Belotcerkovskaya; Oleg Shuvalov; Irina Suvorova; Nikita M. Volkov; Fedor Moiseenko; Alexey V. Danilov; Natalia Makshanova; Andrey Zaritskey
S300 lymphocytosis. Immunomagnetic selection of lymphocytes in this group (n 33) showed that the clonal T-cells were CD8+ and CD57+, except two patients with rheumatoid arthritis who had clonal expansion of CD4+ lymphocytes. No clonal Vb-Jb-TCRB rearrangements were revealed in control group, only Db-Jb-TCRB and TCRG. Given the high detectability of monoclonal rearrangements of V b -J b -TCRB(96.7%) in patients with ab -T-LGL, this marker had the greatest (100%) specificity and accuracy (99.2%) for T-cell clonality detection. Also, good specificity and accuracy was achieved when monoclonality was detected in TCRG and TCRB loci simultaneously (100%; 91.2%). Conclusions: The presence of clonal products is common for CD8+CD57+ cells in HI and patients with reactive conditions may not associate with any malignancy. Patients with T-LGL leukemia may have similar T-cell clonality profiles with HI, RD and reactive LGL proliferation. Therefore, interpretation of T-cell clonality should be conducted with caution.