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Dive into the research topics where Armand Glassman is active.

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Featured researches published by Armand Glassman.


Cancer Research | 2004

A genetically defined model for human ovarian cancer.

Jinsong Liu; Gong Yang; Jennifer A. Thompson-Lanza; Armand Glassman; Kimberly Hayes; Andrea P. Patterson; Rebecca T. Marquez; Nelly Auersperg; Yinhua Yu; William C. Hahn; Gordon B. Mills; Robert C. Bast

Disruptions of the p53, retinoblastoma (Rb), and RAS signaling pathways and activation of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) are common in human ovarian cancer; however, their precise role in ovarian cancer development is not clear. We thus introduced the catalytic subunit of hTERT, the SV40 early genomic region, and the oncogenic alleles of human HRAS or KRAS into human ovarian surface epithelial cells and examined the phenotype and gene expression profile of those cells. Disruption of p53 and Rb pathway by SV40 early genomic region and hTERT immortalized but did not transform the cells. Introduction of HRASV12 or KRASV12 into the immortalized cells, however, allowed them to form s.c. tumors after injection into immunocompromised mice. Peritoneal injection of the transformed cells produced undifferentiated carcinoma or malignant mixed Mullerian tumor and developed ascites; the tumor cells are focally positive for CA125 and mesothelin. Gene expression profile analysis of transformed cells revealed elevated expression of several cytokines, including interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, and IL-8, that are up-regulated by the nuclear factor-κB pathway, which is known to contribute to the tumor growth of naturally ovarian cancer cells. Incubation with antibodies to IL-1β or IL-8 led to apoptosis in the ras-transformed cells and ovarian cancer cells but not in immortalized cells that had not been transformed. Thus, the transformed human ovarian surface epithelial cells recapitulated many features of natural ovarian cancer including a subtype of ovarian cancer histology, formation of ascites, CA125 expression, and nuclear factor-κB-mediated cytokine activation. These cells provide a novel model system to study human ovarian cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Prognostic factors for survival of patients treated systemically for disseminated melanoma

Omar Eton; Sewa S. Legha; Thomas E. Moon; Antonio C. Buzaid; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Carl Plager; Andrew M. Burgess; Agop Y. Bedikian; Sigrid Ring; Qiong Dong; Armand Glassman; Charles M. Balch; Robert S. Benjamin

PURPOSE The current American Joint Commission on Cancer (AJCC) staging system distinguishes between soft tissue and visceral metastases in advanced (stage IV) melanoma. We sought to verify these staging criteria and to identify prognostic variables that could be used to evaluate the impact of systemic therapy on long-term survival during the prior decade. PATIENTS AND METHODS We conducted a retrospective study of patients with advanced cutaneous melanoma enrolled in clinical trials between 1979 and 1989 at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Pretreatment age, sex, number of organs with metastases, serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and albumin, and period of enrollment were analyzed using a Cox proportional hazards model of survival. RESULTS In univariate and multivariate analyses that involved 318 stage IV patients, normal serum levels of LDH and albumin, soft tissue and/or single visceral organ metastases (especially lung), female sex, and enrollment late in the decade were independent positive predictors for survival. In multivariate analyses, the current AJCC criteria did not significantly predict outcome. Systemic treatment response did not bias these results, and only 4% of patients had a complete response. Patients who lived more than 2 years (11%) had a mix of favorable prognostic characteristics and a high frequency of systemic or surgically induced complete response. CONCLUSION This study supports the use of stratification parameters that reflect the favorable prognostic impact of soft tissue or single visceral organ metastases and normal serum levels of LDH and albumin at time of enrollment in advanced melanoma trials. Improved survival over the prior decade probably reflects advances in diagnostic and palliative interventions.


British Journal of Haematology | 1998

Prognostic value of cytogenetics in multiple myeloma

Chumyong Seong; Kay Delasalle; Kimberly Hayes; Donna M. Weber; Meletios A. Dimopoulos; Jolynn Swantkowski; Yang Huh; Armand Glassman; Richard E. Champlin; Raymond Alexanian

Karyotypic studies of bone marrow were conducted in 79 previously untreated patients with multiple myeloma who received a standard programme of chemotherapy. An abnormal karyotype was observed in 46% of patients, virtually all showing multiple abnormalities consistent with a long period of preclinical clonal evolution. Patients with an abnormal pattern showed various aberrations with hyperdiploidy in 64%, pseudodiploidy in 5% and hypodiploidy in 31%. The number of chromosomes affected ranged from two to 19 (median 10), with at least one trisomy in 83%, one monosomy in 75%, and one translocation in 42% of patients. Lymphoma‐like karyotypes were present in 17% of patients with an abnormality but were not associated with atypical clinical features, such as an extramedullary mass, leukaemia, or increased serum lactate dehydrogenase. Monosomy or deletion of chromosome 13 was present in 47% of patients with an abnormal pattern, who lived for a shorter duration (median 10 months) than patients with other abnormalities (median 34 months) or with diploidy (median 35 months). The cause of the short survival of patients with monosomy or deletion of chromosome 13 was not clear, but further studies on the relationship with specific oncogenes are indicated.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 1996

Abnormal expression of MDM-2 in breast carcinomas

Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos; Taghi Manshouri; Mohammad A. Haidar; Yun Yang; Patrick McCown; Nelson G. Ordonez; Armand Glassman; Nour Sneige; Maher Albitar

MDM-2 is a cellular oncoprotein that binds to the p53 protein and abrogates its growth-suppressing function. At least seven MDM-2 mRNAs and five proteins (p90, p85, p76, p74, and p57) have been reported in tissue culture. MDM-2 gene amplification occurs in human sarcomas and high-grade gliomas. MDM-2 overexpression without gene amplification has been reported in leukemias and lymphomas. Here we report MDM-2 mRNA overexpression in 24 (73%) out of 33 cases of human breast carcinoma as compared with normal breast tissue. The MDM-2 overexpression was seen in the absence of MDM-2 gene amplification. MDM-2 protein expression was studied by western blot analysis in 21 of these cases of carcinoma. We found complete concordance between MDM-2 mRNA overexpression and MDM-2 protein levels. MDM-2 proteins were overexpressed in 15 of 21 breast carcinoma tissue samples but not in normal breast tissue controls. Ten of these fifteen cases overexpressed MDM-2 p57 protein, two cases overexpressed both p57 and p90, and three cases overexpressed only p90. MDM-2 overexpression was confirmed by immunohistochemistry. p53 overexpression was also studied by immunohistochemistry; 69% of breast carcinomas that overexpressed the MDM-2 mRNA had detectable nuclear p53 protein. These findings demonstrate that MDM-2 oncoprotein expression is altered in primary human breast carcinomas at both mRNA and protein levels. In addition, our results suggest that MDM-2 p57 protein represents the main MDM-2 protein altered in breast carcinomas.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2001

Cytogenetic Findings in Lymphoplasmacytic Lymphoma/Waldenström Macroglobulinemia Chromosomal Abnormalities Are Associated With the Polymorphous Subtype and an Aggressive Clinical Course

Adnan Mansoor; L. Jeffrey Medeiros; Donna M. Weber; Raymond Alexanian; Kimberly Hayes; Dan Jones; Raymond Lai; Armand Glassman; Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos

CD137 (ILA/4-1BB), a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor family, and its ligand are expressed on activated T lymphocytes and on antigen-presenting cells, respectively. Via bidirectional signal transduction, this receptor-ligand system regulates the activation, proliferation, and survival of T and B lymphocytes and monocytes. We used immunohistochemical studies on human tissue samples to determine in vivo CD137 expression in nonimmune tissue samples. Strong CD137 expression was found in blood vessel walls, on the endothelial layer, and on the vascular smooth muscle cells. But in 32 healthy tissue samples examined, none contained CD137-positive vessels. Also, in benign tumors (2/14) and in inflammatory tissues (2/9) only a minority had CD137-expressing vessels. However, malignant tumors had a significantly enhanced frequency of CD137-expressing blood vessels (11/34).We correlated bone marrow cytogenetic findings with morphologic and immunophenotypic data in 37 patients with lymphoplasmacytic lymphoma (LPL)/Waldenström macroglobulinemia (WM). Each LPL/WM case was classified as lymphoplasmacytoid (n = 18), lymphoplasmacytic (n = 10), or polymorphous (n = 9) using the Kiel criteria. Of 12 cases with chromosomal abnormalities, a single numeric abnormality was present in 4 and a complex karyotype in 8. The most common numeric abnormalities were and -8 in 3 cases each; the most common structural abnormality was del(6q) in 6 cases. Cytogenetic abnormalities were significantly less common in the lymphoplasmacytic and lymphoplasmacytoid groups (5/28 [18%]) compared with the polymorphous group (7/9 [78%]). Clinical follow-up was available for 28 patients for a median of 36 months. Six (67%) of 9 patients with aneuploid tumors, including 4 with polymorphous subtype, subsequently had clinical progression or developed high-grade lymphoma. In contrast, 4 (21%) of 19 patients with diploid tumors, including 1 of polymorphous type, developed clinical progression or high-grade lymphoma. We conclude that abnormal cytogenetic findings in LPL/WM correlate with the polymorphous subtype and poor prognosis.


British Journal of Haematology | 2004

Results of imatinib mesylate therapy in chronic myelogenous leukaemia with variant Philadelphia chromosome

Maha El-Zimaity; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Moshe Talpaz; Susan O'Brien; Francis J. Giles; Guillermo Garcia-Manero; Srdan Verstovsek; Deborah A. Thomas; Alessandra Ferrajoli; Kimberly Hayes; B. Nebiyou Bekele; Xian Zhou; Mary Beth Rios; Armand Glassman; Jorge Cortes

Five to 10 per cent of patients with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph)‐positive chronic myelogenous leukaemia (CML) have variant translocations involving chromosomes other than 9 and 22. We investigated the characteristics and outcome of patients with variant translocations treated with imatinib. Among 721 patients, 44 (6%) had variant translocations, involving one (n = 39) or two (n = 4) additional chromosomes. Nineteen patients (44%) were in chronic (12 previously untreated), 24 (55%) in accelerated and one (2%) in blastic phase. A major cytogenetic response was achieved in 14 (74%) patients treated in chronic phase and in 14 (58%) treated in accelerated phase. Six of 13 (46%) evaluable patients had deletion of derivative chromosome 9, and there was a trend for a lower response rate in these patients. We compared the 43 patients in chronic or accelerated phase to 678 patients with classic Ph treated with imatinib. The only significant difference in clinical characteristics was a higher frequency of accelerated phase among those with variant translocations (56%) compared with those with classic translocations (38%). No differences in outcome were evident. In a multivariate analysis, variant Ph translocations had no impact in response rate, overall survival or duration of response. We conclude that patients with variant Ph translocations have a similar prognosis to those with classic Ph translocations when treated with imatinib.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2001

Mature B-Cell Leukemias With More Than 55% Prolymphocytes A Heterogeneous Group That Includes an Unusual Variant of Mantle Cell Lymphoma

Ellen Schlette; Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos; Francis J. Giles; Armand Glassman; Kimberly Hayes; L. Jeffrey Medeiros

We studied 20 cases of mature B-cell leukemia with more than 55% prolymphocytes in peripheral blood or bone marrow, fulfilling the French-American-British criteria for B-cell prolymphocytic leukemia (PLL). Cases segregated into 3 groups: de novo PLL, 6; PLL occurring in patients with a previous well-established diagnosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (PLL-HxCLL), 10; and t(11;14)(q13;q32)-positive neoplasms, 4. All cases expressed monotypic immunoglobulin light chain, and most were positive for CD5. All t(11;14)-positive neoplasms were CD23- and uniquely positive for cyclin D1. Cytogenetic abnormalities were present in 19; in all 19, the karyotype was complex, indicating clonal evolution and genomic instability. The most frequent cytogenetic abnormality in de novo PLL involved chromosome 7 in 4 cases. Trisomy 12 or add(12p) was present in 4 cases of PLL-HxCLL. We conclude that mature B-cell leukemias with more than 55% prolymphocytes are a heterogeneous group that includes t(11;14)-positive neoplasms, which we suggest are best classified as mantle cell lymphoma. We also suggest that prolymphocytic morphologic features are a common end-stage of transformation for several B-cell neoplasms.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2004

Acute myeloid leukemia with t(6;9)(p23;q34) is associated with dysplasia and a high frequency of flt3 gene mutations

Mauricio P. Oyarzo; Pei Lin; Armand Glassman; Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos; Rajyalakshmi Luthra; L. Jeffrey Medeiros

We report 12 cases of t(6;9)(p23;q34)-positive acute myeloid leukemia (AML), all classified using the criteria of the World Health Organization classification. There were 10 women and 2 men with a median age of 51 years (range, 20-76 years). Dysplasia was present in all cases (9 previously untreated), and basophilia was present in 6 (50%). Immunophenotypic studies showed that the blasts were positive for CD9, CD13, CD33, CD38, CD117, and HLA-DR in all cases assessed. CD34 was positive in 11 (92%) of 12, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase was positive in 7 (64%) of 11 cases. The t(6;9) was the only cytogenetic abnormality detected in 7 cases (58%), and 5 cases had additional chromosomal abnormalities. Of 8 cases assessed, 7 (88%) had flt3 gene mutations. We conclude that t(6;9)-positive AML cases have distinctive morphologic features, an immunophenotype suggesting origin from an early hematopoietic progenitor cell, and a high frequency of flt3 gene mutations.


Cancer | 2002

Characteristics and outcome of patients with Philadelphia chromosome negative, bcr/abl negative chronic myelogenous leukemia.

Francesco Onida; Greg Ball; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Terry L. Smith; Armand Glassman; Maher Albitar; Barbara Scappini; Mary Beth Rios; Michael J. Keating; Miloslav Beran

Up to 5% of patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) do not have the Philadelphia (Ph) translocation t(9;22)(q34;q11) or a bcr/abl molecular rearrangement. Although the diagnostic criteria of this entity are still under debate, there is general agreement that patients with Ph negative, bcr/abl negative CML have a severe clinical course that is not affected significantly by current treatment options.


Leukemia | 2002

Comparison of competitive-nested PCR and real-time PCR in detecting BCR-ABL fusion transcripts in chronic myeloid leukemia patients.

Jie Qiang Guo; Huei-Kai Lin; H. Kantarjian; Moshe Talpaz; Richard E. Champlin; Michael Andreeff; Armand Glassman; Ralph B. Arlinghaus

Real-time RT-PCR has great advantages for estimating transcript levels in a variety of situations. These include relative rapid assay times (hours), reliability and ease of performing replicate analyses. In contrast, competitive PCR is a very labor-intensive procedure requiring a few days to generate useful data. We compared the same samples from CML patients by both methods. Importantly, we used the Bcr-Abl junction plasmid DNA, which is used as a competitor in the manual competitive PCR assay, to generate a standard curve for the real-time assay. This permitted reporting the real-time data as the number of BCR-ABL transcripts per μg of total RNA, which is the same format used for the competitive PCR assay. In this study, a total of 435 peripheral blood and marrow samples from 285 CML patients were analyzed by RT-PCR; these patients were undergoing therapy by STI-571, interferon, and bone marrow transplantation treatment. Most samples also had assay values for the Philadelphia chromosome (Ph), FISH and Western blotting for the Bcr-Abl oncoprotein. Our findings indicated that the real-time assay was less sensitive than the manual competitive RT-PCR assay (t = 5.118; P < 0.001). Of interest, the transcript levels in cell line mixtures with various ratios of K562/KG-1 (BCR-ABL positive/negative) cells were also significantly higher with the competitive RT-PCR assays than real-time RT-PCR, except for levels of BCR-ABL below 200 transcripts per μg of RNA. In both patient and cell line experiments, dividing the BCR-ABL transcripts by the total ABL transcripts virtually eliminated the difference between real-time BCR-ABL transcript values and quantitative competitive BCR-ABL transcript values, indicating that both BCR-ABL and ABL transcripts were underestimated by the real-time assay. In addition, the increased sensitivity of the nested, competitive RT-PCR was readily apparent in patients with minimal residual disease, which by the real-time were negative in the majority of patients but were positive by nested, competitive RT-PCR in 44.6% (n = 29) of samples analyzed (n = 65). These findings indicate that real-time RT-PCR, when normalized for the total ABL transcripts, can be used to monitor CML patients during therapy, but we suggest that nested, competitive RT-PCR be used to determine BCR-ABL/ABL transcript ratios at low transcript values or especially when real-time analyses are negative.

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Kimberly Hayes

Singapore General Hospital

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Hagop M. Kantarjian

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Maher Albitar

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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L. Jeffrey Medeiros

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Michael J. Keating

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Carlos E. Bueso-Ramos

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Pei Lin

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Carol E. Bennett

Medical University of South Carolina

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