Borys Hrinczenko
Michigan State University
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Featured researches published by Borys Hrinczenko.
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2015
Ralph Zinner; Coleman K. Obasaju; David R. Spigel; Robert W. Weaver; J. Thaddeus Beck; David Waterhouse; Manuel R. Modiano; Borys Hrinczenko; Petros Nikolinakos; Jingyi Liu; Andrew Koustenis; Katherine B. Winfree; Symantha Melemed; Susan C. Guba; Waldo I. Ortuzar; Durisala Desaiah; Joseph Treat; Ramaswamy Govindan; Helen J. Ross
Introduction: PRONOUNCE compared the efficacy and safety of pemetrexed+carboplatin followed by pemetrexed (Pem+Cb) with paclitaxel+carboplatin+bevacizumab followed by bevacizumab (Pac+Cb+Bev) in patients with advanced nonsquamous non–small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Methods: Patients ≥18 years of age with stage IV nonsquamous NSCLC (American Joint Committee on Cancer v7.0), and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0/1 were randomized (1:1) to four cycles of induction Pem+Cb (pemetrexed, 500 mg/m2, carboplatin, area under the curve = 6) followed by Pem maintenance or Pac+Cb+Bev (paclitaxel, 200 mg/m2, carboplatin, area under the curve = 6, and bevacizumab, 15 mg/kg) followed by Bev maintenance in the absence of progressive disease or discontinuation. The primary objective was progression-free survival (PFS) without grade 4 toxicity (G4PFS). Secondary end points were PFS, overall survival (OS), overall response rate (ORR), disease control rate (DCR), and safety. Resource utilization was also assessed. Results: Baseline characteristics of the patients randomized to Pem+Cb (N = 182) and Pac+Cb+Bev (N = 179) were well balanced between the arms. Median (months) G4PFS was 3.91 for Pem+Cb and 2.86 for Pac+Cb+Bev (hazard ratio = 0.85, 90% confidence interval, 0.7–1.04; p = 0.176); PFS, OS, ORR, or DCR did not differ significantly between the arms. Significantly more drug-related grade 3/4 anemia (18.7% versus 5.4%) and thrombocytopenia (24.0% versus 9.6%) were reported for Pem+Cb. Significantly more grade 3/4 neutropenia (48.8% versus 24.6%), grade 1/2 alopecia (28.3% versus 8.2%), and grade 1/2 sensory neuropathy were reported for Pac+Cb+Bev. Number of hospitalizations and overall length of stay did not differ significantly between the arms. Conclusions: Pem+Cb did not produce significantly better G4PFS compared with Pac+Cb+Bev. Pem+Cb was not superior in PFS, OS, ORR, or DCR compared with Pac+Cb+Bev. Both regimens were well tolerated, although, toxicity profiles differed.
Journal of Oncology Practice | 2017
Joseph Kannarkatt; Joe Joseph; Peter C. Kurniali; Anas Al-Janadi; Borys Hrinczenko
The decision to treat a patient with stage II colon cancer with adjuvant chemotherapy can be challenging. Although the benefit of treatment is clear in most patients with stage III disease, the decision to provide chemotherapy after surgical resection in stage II disease must be made on an individual basis. Several trials have demonstrated the small but absolute benefits of receiving adjuvant chemotherapy for stage II colon cancer for disease-free survival and overall survival. In an attempt to better understand the role of chemotherapy, several studies were performed that identified high-risk characteristics that can be used prognostically and predictively to aid in the clinical decision making process. ASCO, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network, and the European Society of Medical Oncology have published guidelines describing these high-risk characteristics. Since then, several other molecular markers have emerged that may offer more information on a given patients risk for recurrence. The decision to treat a patient with stage II colon cancer must be made on an individual basis, considering the risks and benefits of treatment. In this short review, we will present the available evidence and offer possible directions for future study.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2014
Peter C. Kurniali; Borys Hrinczenko; Anas Al-Janadi
Colon cancer is the second leading cause of cancer mortality in the United States with a median age at diagnosis of 69 years. Sixty percent are diagnosed over the age of 65 years and 36% are 75 years or older. At diagnosis, approximately 58% of patients will have locally advanced and metastatic disease, for which systemic chemotherapy has been shown to improve survival. Treatment of cancer in elderly patients is more challenging due to multiple factors, including disabling co-morbidities as well as a decline in organ function. Cancer treatment of elderly patients is often associated with more toxicities that may lead to frequent hospitalizations. In locally advanced disease, fewer older patients receive adjuvant chemotherapy despite survival benefit and similar toxicity when compared to their younger counterparts. A survival benefit is also observed in the palliative chemotherapy setting for elderly patients with metastatic disease. When treating elderly patients with colon cancer, one has to consider drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Since chronological age is a poor marker of a patients functional status, several methods of functional assessment including performance status and activities of daily living (ADL) or instrumental ADL, or even a comprehensive geriatric assessment, may be used. There is no ideal chemotherapy regimen that fits all elderly patients and so a regimen needs to be tailored for each individual. Important considerations when treating elderly patients include convenience and tolerability. This review will discuss approaches to the management of elderly patients with locally advanced and metastatic colon cancer.
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2016
Junhong Guo; Hua Wang; Borys Hrinczenko; Robert G. Salomon
γ-Hydroxy-α,β-unsaturated aldehydes, generated by oxidative damage of polyunsaturated phospholipids, form pyrrole derivatives that incorporate the ethanolamine phospholipid (EP) amino group such as 2-pentylpyrrole (PP)-EP and 2-(ω-carboxyalkyl)pyrrole (CAP)-EP derivatives: 2-(ω-carboxyethyl)pyrrole (CEP)-EP, 2-(ω-carboxypropyl)pyrrole (CPP)-EP, and 2-(ω-carboxyheptyl)pyrrole (CHP)-EP. Because EPs occur in vivo in various forms, a complex mixture of pyrrole-modified EPs with different molecular weights is expected to be generated. To provide a sensitive index of oxidative stress, all of the differences in mass related to the glycerophospholipid moieties were removed by releasing a single CAP-ethanolamine (ETN) or PP-ETN from each mixture by treatment with phospholipase D. Accurate quantization was achieved using the corresponding ethanolamine-d4 pyrroles as internal standards. The product mixture obtained by phospholipolysis of total blood phospholipids from sickle cell disease (SCD) patients was analyzed by LC-MS/MS. The method was applied to measure CAP-EP and PP-EP levels in blood plasma from clinical monitoring of SCD patients. We found uniformly elevated blood levels of CEP-EP (63.9 ± 9.7 nM) similar to mean levels in blood from age-related macular degeneration (AMD) patients (56.3 ± 37.1 nM), and 2-fold lower levels (27.6 ± 3.6 nM, n = 5) were detected in plasma from SCD patients hospitalized to treat a sickle cell crisis, although mean levels remain higher than those (12.1 ± 10.5 nM) detected in blood from healthy controls. Plasma levels of CPP-EPs from SCD clinic patients were 4-fold higher than those of SCD patients hospitalized to treat a sickle cell crisis (45.1 ± 10.9 nM, n = 5 versus 10.9 ± 3.4 nM, n = 6; p < 0.002). PP-EP concentration in plasma from SCD clinic patients is nearly 4.8-fold higher than its level in plasma samples from SCD patients hospitalized to treat a sickle cell crisis (7.06 ± 4.05 vs 1.48 ± 0.92 nM; p < 0.05). Because CAP-EPs promote angiogenesis and platelet activation, the elevated levels present in SCD blood can contribute to the hypercoaguability and vaso-occlusive events that are critical pathophysiologic features of SCD.
Journal of investigative medicine high impact case reports | 2014
Yousef Zakharia; Joshua Mansour; Srinivasa Vasireddi; Kais Zakharia; Eduard Fatakhov; Christopher F Koch; Borys Hrinczenko
In the present case, a 49-year-old white female presented to the clinic with a 2-month history of nausea, vomiting, and right upper quadrant pain. On examination a 3-cm mass on the right anterior scalene muscle was noted. A computed tomography scan was performed revealing a 8.7 × 7.7 × 6.1 cm retroperitoneal mass with possible invasion of the inferior vena cava and right renal and left common iliac veins. An excisional biopsy was performed with pathology compatible with spindle cell sarcoma. The patient was then sent for follow-up at the sarcoma clinic as an outpatient. However, before chemotherapy was to be started the patient would be admitted to the hospital with progressively worse nausea and vomiting. At that time the patient’s lab work showed lactic acidosis, acute renal failure, hyperuricemia, hyperphosphatemia, and hypocalcemia, which met the Cairo–Bishop criteria for tumor lysis syndrome (TLS). The patient was admitted to the intensive care unit and kidney dialysis initiated. The patient would become progressively obtunded at which time the family opted for hospice care. The patient eventually succumbed peacefully 3 days after her last admission. In this case report, we briefly review the literature on TLS in solid tumors, and we present a rare case of spontaneous TLS in a retroperitoneal sarcoma.
Cancer Research | 2015
Teresa A. Lehman; Mohammed Shaik; Ramakrishna Modali; Borys Hrinczenko
Introduction: Breastfeeding (BF) decreases and oral contraceptive (OCP) increases the incidence of breast cancer (BC). However, their role in the recurrence of breast cancer (rBC) has not been established. The aim of our study was to examine the association of maternal factors in the rBC. Methods: Data were obtained from the Global Epidemiological Study (GES), an IRB approved multinational biorepository and database to assess disease risk factors. Pts provided their personal history, age, BMI, age of first pregnancy, BF, number of children breastfed, radiation exposure (RE), years of OCP use, benign breast disease (BD), hysterectomy, hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and rBC. The t-test and chi-square test were used for continuous and categorical variables, respectively. The association [adjusted odds ratio (aOR)] between rBC and each risk factor was obtained using logistic regression after adjusting for all the variables including stage of cancer. Results: A total of 2546 patients were surveyed, of which 218 patients had rBC later in life. The average age of pts with recurrence was 54 yrs and those without rBC was 56 yrs. Of the total, 73.5% had BF, 25% had used OCP, 17.3% used HRT, 5.6% had RE, 16.6% had a hysterectomy, and 16% had BD. In multivariate analysis, age, BF, OCP and RE each had significant impacts on the rBC. Pts who did not BF had a 3-fold increased risk of recurrence compared to those who breastfed at least 3 children [aOR of 2.9 (1.7-4.9)]. Pts who did not use OCPs were 53% less likely to have rBC compared to those who used OCPs [aOR of 0.47 (0.32-0.69)]. A statistically significant dose-effect for number of children breastfed and rBC, and years of OCPs usage and rBC was found. BMI, HRT, hysterectomy, BD, and age at first pregnancy did not have an effect on rBC. Conclusion: Our study suggests that breastfeeding decreases the risk of recurrence of breast cancer, while OCP usage increases the risk of recurrence of breast cancer. Further studies are needed to validate our results. Citation Format: Teresa A. Lehman, Mohammed Shaik, Ramakrishna V. Modali, Borys Hrinczenko. Effects of breastfeeding and oral contraception use on the risk of breast cancer recurrence: A multinational study. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 860. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-860
British journal of medicine and medical research | 2015
Mohammad Omaira; Avanti Mehrotra; Margaret J. Fankhauser; Borys Hrinczenko; Nikolay V. Dimitrov
Lipedema is a disfiguring disorder with abnormal and progressive deposition of adipose tissue in the hips and lower extremities almost exclusively occurring in women. There is a hereditary tendency and a substantial variability in disease severity. Lipedema is often misdiagnosed as lymphedema or morbid obesity. The etiology and pathogenesis are not understood. Early diagnosis and treatment are critical to minimize physical and psychological morbidity. The diagnosis is usually made by history and clinical examination. Non-invasive imaging techniques such as computed tomography or magnetic resonance can differentiate lipedema from other causes of edematous lower extremities. Lymphoscintigraphy may be helpful in cases which are associated with lymphedema (lipo-lymphedema). Management with manual lymphatic drainage and compression therapy are considered the most appropriate treatment. Use of conventional liposuction is controversial since it may further damage the lymphatic vessels. Newer techniques such as tumescent micro annular laser assisted liposuction and water jet-assisted liposuction have shown some promising results. Variety of other surgical procedures combined with manual lymphatic drainage and tailored post-surgical care are under investigation.
Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2018
Luc Dirix; István Takács; Guy Jerusalem; Petros Nikolinakos; Hendrik Tobias Arkenau; Andres Forero-Torres; Ralph V. Boccia; Marc E. Lippman; Robert Somer; Martin Smakal; Leisha A. Emens; Borys Hrinczenko; William Jeffery Edenfield; Jayne Gurtler; Anja von Heydebreck; Hans Juergen Grote; Kevin M. Chin; Erika Paige Hamilton
Oncology Reviews | 2011
Anas Al-Janadi; Borys Hrinczenko; Vijay Chaudhary; Shalini Chitneni; Sarah Ali; Jennifer Saultz; Nikolay V. Dimitrov
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2018
Hirva Mamdani; Laith I. Abushahin; Bryan J. Schneider; Rozina A. Chowdhery; Borys Hrinczenko; Ahran Lee; Susan M. Perkins; Kenneth A. Kesler; Shadia I. Jalal