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Dive into the research topics where Anthony M. Magliocco is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony M. Magliocco.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2007

A large-scale study of the ultrawideband microwave dielectric properties of normal, benign and malignant breast tissues obtained from cancer surgeries

Mariya Lazebnik; Dijana Popovic; Leah McCartney; Cynthia B Watkins; Mary J. Lindstrom; Josephine Harter; Sarah Sewall; Travis Ogilvie; Anthony M. Magliocco; Tara M. Breslin; Walley J. Temple; Daphne Mew; John H. Booske; Michal Okoniewski; Susan C. Hagness

The development of microwave breast cancer detection and treatment techniques has been driven by reports of substantial contrast in the dielectric properties of malignant and normal breast tissues. However, definitive knowledge of the dielectric properties of normal and diseased breast tissues at microwave frequencies has been limited by gaps and discrepancies across previously published studies. To address these issues, we conducted a large-scale study to experimentally determine the ultrawideband microwave dielectric properties of a variety of normal, malignant and benign breast tissues, measured from 0.5 to 20 GHz using a precision open-ended coaxial probe. Previously, we reported the dielectric properties of normal breast tissue samples obtained from reduction surgeries. Here, we report the dielectric properties of normal (adipose, glandular and fibroconnective), malignant (invasive and non-invasive ductal and lobular carcinomas) and benign (fibroadenomas and cysts) breast tissue samples obtained from cancer surgeries. We fit a one-pole Cole-Cole model to the complex permittivity data set of each characterized sample. Our analyses show that the contrast in the microwave-frequency dielectric properties between malignant and normal adipose-dominated tissues in the breast is considerable, as large as 10:1, while the contrast in the microwave-frequency dielectric properties between malignant and normal glandular/fibroconnective tissues in the breast is no more than about 10%.


Lancet Oncology | 2015

Standard-dose versus high-dose conformal radiotherapy with concurrent and consolidation carboplatin plus paclitaxel with or without cetuximab for patients with stage IIIA or IIIB non-small-cell lung cancer (RTOG 0617): a randomised, two-by-two factorial phase 3 study.

Jeff Bradley; Rebecca Paulus; Ritsuko Komaki; Gregory A. Masters; George R. Blumenschein; Steven E. Schild; Jeff Bogart; Chen Hu; Kenneth M. Forster; Anthony M. Magliocco; Vivek Kavadi; Yolanda I. Garces; Samir Narayan; Puneeth Iyengar; Cliff G. Robinson; Raymond B. Wynn; Christopher Koprowski; Joanne Meng; Jonathan J. Beitler; Rakesh Gaur; Walter J. Curran; Hak Choy

BACKGROUND We aimed to compare overall survival after standard-dose versus high-dose conformal radiotherapy with concurrent chemotherapy and the addition of cetuximab to concurrent chemoradiation for patients with inoperable stage III non-small-cell lung cancer. METHODS In this open-label randomised, two-by-two factorial phase 3 study in 185 institutions in the USA and Canada, we enrolled patients (aged ≥ 18 years) with unresectable stage III non-small-cell lung cancer, a Zubrod performance status of 0-1, adequate pulmonary function, and no evidence of supraclavicular or contralateral hilar adenopathy. We randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) patients to receive either 60 Gy (standard dose), 74 Gy (high dose), 60 Gy plus cetuximab, or 74 Gy plus cetuximab. All patients also received concurrent chemotherapy with 45 mg/m(2) paclitaxel and carboplatin once a week (AUC 2); 2 weeks after chemoradiation, two cycles of consolidation chemotherapy separated by 3 weeks were given consisting of paclitaxel (200 mg/m(2)) and carboplatin (AUC 6). Randomisation was done with permuted block randomisation methods, stratified by radiotherapy technique, Zubrod performance status, use of PET during staging, and histology; treatment group assignments were not masked. Radiation dose was prescribed to the planning target volume and was given in 2 Gy daily fractions with either intensity-modulated radiation therapy or three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy. The use of four-dimensional CT and image-guided radiation therapy were encouraged but not necessary. For patients assigned to receive cetuximab, 400 mg/m(2) cetuximab was given on day 1 followed by weekly doses of 250 mg/m(2), and was continued through consolidation therapy. The primary endpoint was overall survival. All analyses were done by modified intention-to-treat. The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00533949. FINDINGS Between Nov 27, 2007, and Nov 22, 2011, 166 patients were randomly assigned to receive standard-dose chemoradiotherapy, 121 to high-dose chemoradiotherapy, 147 to standard-dose chemoradiotherapy and cetuximab, and 110 to high-dose chemoradiotherapy and cetuximab. Median follow-up for the radiotherapy comparison was 22.9 months (IQR 27.5-33.3). Median overall survival was 28.7 months (95% CI 24.1-36.9) for patients who received standard-dose radiotherapy and 20.3 months (17.7-25.0) for those who received high-dose radiotherapy (hazard ratio [HR] 1.38, 95% CI 1.09-1.76; p=0.004). Median follow-up for the cetuximab comparison was 21.3 months (IQR 23.5-29.8). Median overall survival in patients who received cetuximab was 25.0 months (95% CI 20.2-30.5) compared with 24.0 months (19.8-28.6) in those who did not (HR 1.07, 95% CI 0.84-1.35; p=0.29). Both the radiation-dose and cetuximab results crossed protocol-specified futility boundaries. We recorded no statistical differences in grade 3 or worse toxic effects between radiotherapy groups. By contrast, the use of cetuximab was associated with a higher rate of grade 3 or worse toxic effects (205 [86%] of 237 vs 160 [70%] of 228 patients; p<0.0001). There were more treatment-related deaths in the high-dose chemoradiotherapy and cetuximab groups (radiotherapy comparison: eight vs three patients; cetuximab comparison: ten vs five patients). There were no differences in severe pulmonary events between treatment groups. Severe oesophagitis was more common in patients who received high-dose chemoradiotherapy than in those who received standard-dose treatment (43 [21%] of 207 patients vs 16 [7%] of 217 patients; p<0.0001). INTERPRETATION 74 Gy radiation given in 2 Gy fractions with concurrent chemotherapy was not better than 60 Gy plus concurrent chemotherapy for patients with stage III non-small-cell lung cancer, and might be potentially harmful. Addition of cetuximab to concurrent chemoradiation and consolidation treatment provided no benefit in overall survival for these patients. FUNDING National Cancer Institute and Bristol-Myers Squibb.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2007

A large-scale study of the ultrawideband microwave dielectric properties of normal breast tissue obtained from reduction surgeries.

Mariya Lazebnik; Leah McCartney; Dijana Popovic; Cynthia B Watkins; Mary J. Lindstrom; Josephine Harter; Sarah Sewall; Anthony M. Magliocco; John H. Booske; Michal Okoniewski; Susan C. Hagness

The efficacy of emerging microwave breast cancer detection and treatment techniques will depend, in part, on the dielectric properties of normal breast tissue. However, knowledge of these properties at microwave frequencies has been limited due to gaps and discrepancies in previously reported small-scale studies. To address these issues, we experimentally characterized the wideband microwave-frequency dielectric properties of a large number of normal breast tissue samples obtained from breast reduction surgeries at the University of Wisconsin and University of Calgary hospitals. The dielectric spectroscopy measurements were conducted from 0.5 to 20 GHz using a precision open-ended coaxial probe. The tissue composition within the probes sensing region was quantified in terms of percentages of adipose, fibroconnective and glandular tissues. We fit a one-pole Cole-Cole model to the complex permittivity data set obtained for each sample and determined median Cole-Cole parameters for three groups of normal breast tissues, categorized by adipose tissue content (0-30%, 31-84% and 85-100%). Our analysis of the dielectric properties data for 354 tissue samples reveals that there is a large variation in the dielectric properties of normal breast tissue due to substantial tissue heterogeneity. We observed no statistically significant difference between the within-patient and between-patient variability in the dielectric properties.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

Type I and II Endometrial Cancers: Have They Different Risk Factors?

Veronica Wendy Setiawan; Hannah P. Yang; Malcolm C. Pike; Susan E. McCann; Herbert Yu; Yong Bing Xiang; Alicja Wolk; Nicolas Wentzensen; Noel S. Weiss; Penelope M. Webb; Piet A. van den Brandt; Koen van de Vijver; Pamela J. Thompson; Brian L. Strom; Amanda B. Spurdle; Robert A. Soslow; Xiao-Ou Shu; Catherine Schairer; Carlotta Sacerdote; Thomas E. Rohan; Kim Robien; Harvey A. Risch; Fulvio Ricceri; Timothy R. Rebbeck; Radhai Rastogi; Jennifer Prescott; Silvia Polidoro; Yikyung Park; Sara H. Olson; Kirsten B. Moysich

PURPOSE Endometrial cancers have long been divided into estrogen-dependent type I and the less common clinically aggressive estrogen-independent type II. Little is known about risk factors for type II tumors because most studies lack sufficient cases to study these much less common tumors separately. We examined whether so-called classical endometrial cancer risk factors also influence the risk of type II tumors. PATIENTS AND METHODS Individual-level data from 10 cohort and 14 case-control studies from the Epidemiology of Endometrial Cancer Consortium were pooled. A total of 14,069 endometrial cancer cases and 35,312 controls were included. We classified endometrioid (n = 7,246), adenocarcinoma not otherwise specified (n = 4,830), and adenocarcinoma with squamous differentiation (n = 777) as type I tumors and serous (n = 508) and mixed cell (n = 346) as type II tumors. RESULTS Parity, oral contraceptive use, cigarette smoking, age at menarche, and diabetes were associated with type I and type II tumors to similar extents. Body mass index, however, had a greater effect on type I tumors than on type II tumors: odds ratio (OR) per 2 kg/m(2) increase was 1.20 (95% CI, 1.19 to 1.21) for type I and 1.12 (95% CI, 1.09 to 1.14) for type II tumors (P heterogeneity < .0001). Risk factor patterns for high-grade endometrioid tumors and type II tumors were similar. CONCLUSION The results of this pooled analysis suggest that the two endometrial cancer types share many common etiologic factors. The etiology of type II tumors may, therefore, not be completely estrogen independent, as previously believed.


Oncogene | 1999

Suppression of ING1 expression in sporadic breast cancer

Tatsuya Toyama; Hirotaka Iwase; Peter H. Watson; Huong Muzik; Elizabeth Saettler; Anthony M. Magliocco; Lisa M. DiFrancesco; Peter Forsyth; Igor Garkavtsev; Shunzo Kobayashi; Karl Riabowol

Down regulation of the ING1 candidate tumour suppressor promotes growth in soft agar and focus formation in vitro and tumour formation in vivo. ING1 encodes a nuclear, cell cycle-regulated protein, overexpression of which efficiently blocks cell growth and is capable of inducing apoptosis in different experimental systems. Here we present the first report of ING1 mutation and expression analysis in a total of 452 cancer samples. One germline missense alteration and three germline silent alterations were detected in 377 primary breast cancers while marked (2 – 10-fold) decreases in ING1 mRNA expression were seen in 44% of primary breast cancers and in ten of ten breast cancer cell lines examined. Furthermore, the majority of breast cancers (58%) showing decreased ING1 expression had metastasized to regional lymph nodes whereas only 9% of cancers with elevated ING1 expression, compared to adjacent normal tissues, were metastatic. Thus, ING1 mutation is very rare in breast or ovarian cancers, however, repression of ING1 expression frequently accompanies tumour development of breast cancer.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2011

Inhalable nanoparticles, a non-invasive approach to treat lung cancer in a mouse model

Wilson Roa; Shirzad Azarmi; M. H. D. Kamal Al-Hallak; Warren H. Finlay; Anthony M. Magliocco; Raimar Löbenberg

Doxorubicin-loaded nanoparticles (NPs) were incorporated into inhalable effervescent and non-effervescent carrier particles using a spray-freeze drying technique. The prepared inhalable powders were tested in a tumor bearing Balb/c mouse model. Control mice were treated with blank inhalable NPs, inhalable lactose powder containing free doxorubicin, and intravenous injections of a suspension of doxorubicin NPs, doxorubicin solution, or saline solution. The survival of treatment groups was plotted with Kaplan-Meier curves. Animals treated with inhalable effervescent nanoparticle powder containing 30μg doxorubicin showed a highly significant improvement in survival compared to all other treatment groups. Mice in control groups treated with doxorubicin solution or doxorubicin NPs as intravenous injection, died in less than 50 days. Inhalable free doxorubicin showed high cardiac toxicity. Pathological samples showed large tumor masses in the lungs of animals not treated or treated with i.v. injections of doxorubicin NPs or doxorubicin solution. The lungs of animals treated with inhalable effervescent doxorubicin NPs showed fewer and much smaller tumors compared to the control groups, as visualized by MRI imaging which confirmed the observed pathology results. The present study demonstrates that inhalable effervescent doxorubicin NPs are an effective way to treat lung cancer. This non-invasive route of administration might change the way lung cancer is treated in the future.


NeuroImage | 2010

An analysis of image texture, tumor location, and MGMT promoter methylation in glioblastoma using magnetic resonance imaging

Sylvia Drabycz; Gloria Roldán; Paula de Robles; Daniel H. Adler; John B. McIntyre; Anthony M. Magliocco; J. Gregory Cairncross; J. Ross Mitchell

In glioblastoma (GBM), promoter methylation of the DNA repair gene O(6)-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) is associated with benefit from chemotherapy. Correlations between MGMT promoter methylation and visually assessed imaging features on magnetic resonance (MR) have been reported suggesting that noninvasive detection of MGMT methylation status might be possible. Our study assessed whether MGMT methylation status in GBM could be predicted using MR imaging. We conducted a retrospective analysis of MR images in patients with newly diagnosed GBM. Tumor texture was assessed by two methods. First, we analyzed texture by expert consensus describing the tumor borders, presence or absence of cysts, pattern of enhancement, and appearance of tumor signal in T2-weighted images. Then, we applied space-frequency texture analysis based on the S-transform. Tumor location within the brain was determined using automatized image registration and segmentation techniques. Their association with MGMT methylation was analyzed. We confirmed that ring enhancement assessed visually is significantly associated with unmethylated MGMT promoter status (P=0.006). Texture features on T2-weighted images assessed by the space-frequency analysis were significantly different between methylated and unmethylated cases (P<0.05). However, blinded classification of MGMT promoter methylation status reached an accuracy of only 71%. There were no significant differences in the locations of methylated and unmethylated GBM tumors. Our results provide further evidence that individual MR features are associated with MGMT methylation but better algorithms for predicting methylation status are needed. The relevance of this study lies on the application of novel techniques for the analysis of anatomical MR images of patients with GBM allowing the evaluation of subtleties not seen by an observer and facilitating the standardization of the methods, decreasing the potential for interobserver bias.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2012

Enhanced cytotoxicity of PARP inhibition in mantle cell lymphoma harbouring mutations in both ATM and p53

Chris T. Williamson; Eiji Kubota; Jeffrey D. Hamill; Alexander C. Klimowicz; Ruiqiong Ye; Huong Muzik; Michelle Dean; LiRen Tu; David Gilley; Anthony M. Magliocco; Bruce C. McKay; D. Gwyn Bebb; Susan P. Lees-Miller

Poly‐ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) inhibitors have shown promise in the treatment of human malignancies characterized by deficiencies in the DNA damage repair proteins BRCA1 and BRCA2 and preclinical studies have demonstrated the potential effectiveness of PARP inhibitors in targeting ataxia‐telangiectasia mutated (ATM)‐deficient tumours. Here, we show that mantle cell lymphoma (MCL) cells deficient in both ATM and p53 are more sensitive to the PARP inhibitor olaparib than cells lacking ATM function alone. In ATM‐deficient MCL cells, olaparib induced DNA‐PK‐dependent phosphorylation and stabilization of p53 as well as expression of p53‐responsive cell cycle checkpoint regulators, and inhibition of DNA‐PK reduced the toxicity of olaparib in ATM‐deficient MCL cells. Thus, both DNA‐PK and p53 regulate the response of ATM‐deficient MCL cells to olaparib. In addition, small molecule inhibition of both ATM and PARP was cytotoxic in normal human fibroblasts with disruption of p53, implying that the combination of ATM and PARP inhibitors may have utility in targeting p53‐deficient malignancies.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

Loss of Nuclear Localized and Tyrosine Phosphorylated Stat5 in Breast Cancer Predicts Poor Clinical Outcome and Increased Risk of Antiestrogen Therapy Failure

Amy R. Peck; Agnieszka K. Witkiewicz; Chengbao Liu; Ginger A. Stringer; Alexander C. Klimowicz; Edward Pequignot; Boris Freydin; Thai H. Tran; Ning Yang; Anne L. Rosenberg; Jeffrey A. Hooke; Albert J. Kovatich; Marja T. Nevalainen; Craig D. Shriver; Terry Hyslop; Guido Sauter; David L. Rimm; Anthony M. Magliocco; Hallgeir Rui

PURPOSE To investigate nuclear localized and tyrosine phosphorylated Stat5 (Nuc-pYStat5) as a marker of prognosis in node-negative breast cancer and as a predictor of response to antiestrogen therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Levels of Nuc-pYStat5 were analyzed in five archival cohorts of breast cancer by traditional diaminobenzidine-chromogen immunostaining and pathologist scoring of whole tissue sections or by immunofluorescence and automated quantitative analysis (AQUA) of tissue microarrays. RESULTS Nuc-pYStat5 was an independent prognostic marker as measured by cancer-specific survival (CSS) in patients with node-negative breast cancer who did not receive systemic adjuvant therapy, when adjusted for common pathology parameters in multivariate analyses both by standard chromogen detection with pathologist scoring of whole tissue sections (cohort I; n = 233) and quantitative immunofluorescence of a tissue microarray (cohort II; n = 291). Two distinct monoclonal antibodies gave concordant results. A progression array (cohort III; n = 180) revealed frequent loss of Nuc-pYStat5 in invasive carcinoma compared to normal breast epithelia or ductal carcinoma in situ, and general loss of Nuc-pYStat5 in lymph node metastases. In cohort IV (n = 221), loss of Nuc-pYStat5 was associated with increased risk of antiestrogen therapy failure as measured by univariate CSS and time to recurrence (TTR). More sensitive AQUA quantification of Nuc-pYStat5 in antiestrogen-treated patients (cohort V; n = 97) identified by multivariate analysis patients with low Nuc-pYStat5 at elevated risk for therapy failure (CSS hazard ratio [HR], 21.55; 95% CI, 5.61 to 82.77; P < .001; TTR HR, 7.30; 95% CI, 2.34 to 22.78; P = .001). CONCLUSION Nuc-pYStat5 is an independent prognostic marker in node-negative breast cancer. If confirmed in prospective studies, Nuc-pYStat5 may become a useful predictive marker of response to adjuvant hormone therapy.


Cancer Research | 2010

Oncolytic Viral Therapy for Prostate Cancer: Efficacy of Reovirus as a Biological Therapeutic

Chandini M. Thirukkumaran; Michael J. Nodwell; Kensuke Hirasawa; Zhong-Qiao Shi; Roman Diaz; Joanne Luider; Randal N. Johnston; Peter A. Forsyth; Anthony M. Magliocco; Patrick W.K. Lee; Sandra G. Nishikawa; Bryan Donnelly; Matt Coffey; Kiril Trpkov; Kevin Fonseca; Jason C. L. Spurrell; Don Morris

Reovirus is a nonattenuated double-stranded RNA virus that exploits aberrant signaling pathways allowing selective cytotoxicity against multiple cancer histologies. The use of reovirus as a potential treatment modality for prostate cancer has not previously been described, and in this study evidence of in vitro and in vivo activity against prostate cancer was seen both in preclinical models and in six patients. The human prostate carcinoma cell lines PC-3, LN-CaP, and DU-145 exposed to replication-competent reovirus showed evidence of infection as illustrated by viral protein synthesis, cytopathic effect, and release of viral progeny. This oncolytic effect was found to be manifested through apoptosis, as DNA fragmentation, Apo 2.7 expression, Annexin V binding, and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage were observed in live reovirus-infected cells, but not in uninfected or dead virus-treated cells. In vivo, hind flank severe combined immunodeficient/nonobese diabetic murine xenograft showed reduction in tumor size when treated with even a single intratumoral injection of reovirus. Finally, intralesional reovirus injections into a cohort of six patients with clinically organ-confined prostate cancer resulted in minimal side effects and evidence of antitumor activity. Histologic analysis after prostatectomy found a significant CD8 T-cell infiltration within the reovirus-injected areas as well as evidence of increased caspase-3 activity. These findings suggest that reovirus therapy may provide a promising novel treatment for prostate cancer and also imply a possible role for viral immune targeting of tumor.

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Linda S. Cook

University of New Mexico

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Desiree Hao

Tom Baker Cancer Centre

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Kathryn Winter

Radiation Therapy Oncology Group

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