Christopher P. Venner
Cross Cancer Institute
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Featured researches published by Christopher P. Venner.
Blood | 2012
Christopher P. Venner; Thirusha Lane; Darren Foard; Lisa Rannigan; Simon D.J. Gibbs; Jennifer H. Pinney; Carol J. Whelan; Helen J. Lachmann; Julian D. Gillmore; Philip N. Hawkins; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar
Bortezomib has shown great promise in the treatment of amyloid light-chain (AL) amyloidosis. We present our experience of 43 patients with AL amyloidosis who received cyclophosphamide, bortezomib, and dexamethasone (CVD) upfront or at relapse. Of these, 74% had cardiac involvement and 46% were Mayo Cardiac Stage III. The overall hematologic response rate was 81.4%, including complete response (CR) in 41.9% and very good partial response with >90% decrease in difference between involved/uninvolved light chain (VGPR-dFLC) in 51.4%. Patients treated upfront had higher rates of CR (65.0%) and VGPR-dFLC (66.7%). The estimated 2-year progression-free survival was 66.5% for patients treated upfront and 41.4% for relapsed patients. Those attaining a CR or VGPR-dFLC had a significantly better progression-free survival (P=.002 and P=.026, respectively). The estimated 2-year overall survival was 97.7% (94.4% in Mayo Stage III patients). CVD is a highly effective regimen producing durable responses in AL amyloidosis; the deep clonal responses may overcome poor prognosis in advanced-stage disease.
Journal of the American Heart Association | 2013
Jennifer H. Pinney; Carol J. Whelan; Aviva Petrie; Jason Dungu; Sanjay M. Banypersad; Pt Sattianayagam; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar; Simon D.J. Gibbs; Christopher P. Venner; Nancy Wassef; Carolyn A. McCarthy; Janet A. Gilbertson; Dorota Rowczenio; Philip N. Hawkins; Julian D. Gillmore; Helen J. Lachmann
Background Cardiac amyloidosis is a fatal disease whose prognosis and treatment rely on identification of the amyloid type. In our aging population transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRwt) is common and must be differentiated from other amyloid types. We report the clinical presentation, natural history, and prognostic features of ATTRwt compared with cardiac‐isolated AL amyloidosis and calculate the probability of disease diagnosis of ATTRwt from baseline factors. Methods and Results All patients with biopsy‐proven ATTRwt (102 cases) and isolated cardiac AL (36 cases) seen from 2002 to 2011 at the UK National Amyloidosis Center were included. Median survival from the onset of symptoms was 6.07 years in the ATTRwt group and 1.7 years in the AL group. Positive troponin, a pacemaker, and increasing New York Heart Association (NYHA) class were associated with worse survival in ATTRwt patients on univariate analysis. All patients with isolated cardiac AL and 24.1% of patients with ATTRwt had evidence of a plasma cell dyscrasia. Older age and lower N‐terminal pro‐B‐type natriuretic peptide (NT pro‐BNP) were factors significantly associated with ATTRwt. Patients aged 70 years and younger with an NT pro‐BNP <183 pmol/L were more likely to have ATTRwt, as were patients older than 70 years with an NT pro‐BNP <1420 pmol/L. Conclusions Factors at baseline associated with a worse outcome in ATTRwt are positive troponin T, a pacemaker, and NYHA class IV symptoms. The age of the patient at diagnosis and NT pro‐BNP level can aid in distinguishing ATTRwt from AL amyloidosis.
British Journal of Haematology | 2013
Jennifer H. Pinney; Colette J. Smith; Jessi B. Taube; Helen J. Lachmann; Christopher P. Venner; Simon D.J. Gibbs; Jason Dungu; Sanjay M. Banypersad; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar; Carol J. Whelan; Philip N. Hawkins; Julian D. Gillmore
Epidemiological studies of systemic amyloidosis are scarce and the burden of disease in England has not previously been estimated. In 1999, the National Health Service commissioned the National Amyloidosis Centre (NAC) to provide a national clinical service for all patients with amyloidosis. Data for all individuals referred to the NAC is held on a comprehensive central database, and these were compared with English death certificate data for amyloidosis from 2000 to 2008, obtained from the Office of National Statistics. Amyloidosis was stated on death certificates of 2543 individuals, representing 0·58/1000 recorded deaths. During the same period, 1143 amyloidosis patients followed at the NAC died, 903 (79%) of whom had amyloidosis recorded on their death certificates. The estimated minimum incidence of systemic amyloidosis in the English population in 2008, based on new referrals to the NAC, was 0·4/100 000 population. The incidence peaked at age 60–79 years. Systemic AL amyloidosis was the most common type with an estimated minimum incidence of 0·3/100 000 population. Although there are various limitations to this study, the available data suggest the incidence of systemic amyloidosis in England exceeds 0·8/100 000 of the population.
Haematologica | 2014
Arnaud Jaccard; Raymond L. Comenzo; Parameswaran Hari; Philip N. Hawkins; Murielle Roussel; Pierre Morel; Margarette Macro; Jean Luc Pellegrin; Estibaliz Lazaro; Dania Mohty; P. Mercié; Olivier Decaux; Julian D. Gillmore; David Lavergne; Frank Bridoux; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar; Christopher P. Venner
Bortezomib is an active agent in AL amyloidosis and responses to this drug in combination with cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone are both rapid and deep. Here we present an international, multicenter series of 60 patients with Mayo Clinic stage III cardiac amyloidosis to assess the impact of this regimen in improving outcomes in this poor-risk group. The median follow-up for the entire cohort is 11.8 months. The overall response rate was 68%. In a landmark analysis, examining patients who survived more than 3 months, the overall response rate was 86%. A cardiac response was seen in 32% of patients. The estimated 1-year survival rate for the whole cohort was 57% and 24 patients (40%) died while on therapy. Although unable to save the poorest risk patients, the combination of bortezomib, cyclophosphamide and dexamethasone can achieve a high number of hematologic and cardiac responses, likely improving overall survival and justifying a prospective trial.
Leukemia | 2014
Christopher P. Venner; Julian D. Gillmore; Sajitha Sachchithanantham; Shameem Mahmood; Thirusha Lane; Darren Foard; Lisa Rannigan; Sdj Gibbs; Jh Pinney; Carol J. Whelan; Helen J. Lachmann; Philip N. Hawkins; Ad Wechalekar
Despite improvements in therapy amyloid light-chain (AL) amyloidosis, there are few studies comparing different regimens. Here we present a matched comparison with 69 patients in each cohort examining upfront therapy with cyclophosphamide, bortezomib and dexamethasone (CVD) vs cyclophosphamide, thalidomide and dexamethasone (CTD). On an intention-to-treat basis, the overall response rates were 71.0% vs 79.7% in the CVD and CTD arms, respectively, (P=0.32). A higher complete response (CR) rate was observed in the CVD arm (40.5%) vs CTD (24.6%), P=0.046. One-year overall survival (OS) was 65.2% and 66.7% for CVD and CTD, respectively (P=0.87). The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 28.0 and 14.0 m for CVD and CTD, respectively (P=0.039). In a landmark analysis assessing outcomes performed at 6 months, the CR rate with CVD was 59.6% vs 34.0% for CTD (P=0.03). The 1-year OS was 96% with CVD and 92% with CTD (P=0.40). The median PFS with CVD was not reached and was 19.2 m with CTD, P=0.028). In summary, both regimens are unable to overcome the high rate of early deaths in AL amyloidosis. However, CVD correlates with improved depth of response and superior PFS supporting its use in the frontline setting. Further optimisation and better supportive-care strategies are required to increase the proportion of patients fully benefiting from therapy.
American Journal of Transplantation | 2013
Jh Pinney; Helen J. Lachmann; Pt Sattianayagam; Sdj Gibbs; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar; Christopher P. Venner; Carol J. Whelan; Janet A. Gilbertson; Dorota Rowczenio; Philip N. Hawkins; Julian D. Gillmore
Renal transplantation remains contentious in patients with systemic amyloidosis due to the risk of graft loss from recurrent amyloid and progressive disease. Outcomes were sought among all patients attending the UK National Amyloidosis Centre who received a renal transplant (RTx) between January 1978 and May 2011. A total of 111 RTx were performed in 104 patients. Eighty‐nine percent of patients with end‐stage renal disease (ESRD) due to hereditary lysozyme and apolipoprotein A‐I amyloidosis received a RTx. Outcomes following RTx were generally excellent in these diseases, reflecting their slow natural history; median graft survival was 13.1 years. Only 20% of patients with ESRD due to AA, AL and fibrinogen amyloidosis received a RTx. Median graft survival was 10.3, 5.8 and 7.3 years in these diseases respectively, and outcomes were influenced by fibril precursor protein supply. Patient survival in AL amyloidosis was 8.9 years among those who had achieved at least a partial clonal response compared to 5.2 years among those who had no response (p = 0.02). Post‐RTx chemotherapy was administered successfully to four AL patients. RTx outcome is influenced by amyloid type. Suppression of the fibril precursor protein is desirable in the amyloidoses that have a rapid natural history.
The Lancet Haematology | 2015
Shameem Mahmood; Frank Bridoux; Christopher P. Venner; Sajitha Sachchithanantham; Janet A. Gilbertson; Dorota Rowczenio; Thomas Wagner; Rabya Sayed; Ketna Patel; Marianna Fontana; Carol J. Whelan; Helen J. Lachmann; Philip N. Hawkins; Julian D. Gillmore; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar
BACKGROUND Localised immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis, involving one type of tissue, is rare. Little systematic data exists regarding clinical presentations, course or outcomes, or risk of progression to systemic amyloidosis. We aimed to report clinical features and outcomes of a large series of patients with localised light-chain amyloidosis. METHODS We examined data for all patients with localised amyloidosis who were diagnosed, assessed, and followed at the UK National Amyloidosis Centre (NAC) between Jan 2, 1980, and Dec 15, 2011, from the NAC database and written records. The inclusion criteria was the presence of biopsy sample proven localised amyloidosis classified as biopsy proven amyloid deposition confined to one site or tissue proven by histology of the tissue examined), without any evidence of vital organ involvement, which was defined as cardiac, renal, or liver involvement or peripheral or autonomic neuropathy and treatment naive. FINDINGS We identified 606 patients with biopsy proven localised amyloidosis (likely light-chain type in 98%) from 5050 newly diagnosed patients with all types of amyloidosis. Median age was 59·5 years (IQR 50·2-74·5). The most common sites included bladder (95; 16%), laryngeal or tonsillar (92; 15%), cutaneous (84; 14%), and pulmonary nodular (47; 8%). 121 (20%) had a monoclonal immunoglobulin or abnormal circulating free light chains. At median follow-up of 74·4 months (IQR 37·2-132·0), seven (1%) patients progressed to systemic immunoglobin light-chain amyloidosis. 270 (51%) patients had one repeated treatment intervention and 112 (21%) had more than one repeated treatment interventions (predominantly localised debulking). The estimated 5-year overall survival was 90·6% (95% CI 87·7-92·9) and 10-year overall survival was 80·3% (75·1-84·1). In patients aged 70 years or older, median overall survival was 12·1 years (95% CI 10·5-13·7). INTERPRETATION Localised immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis has an excellent prognosis with no apparent effect on life expectancy. Evolution into systemic immunoglobulin light chain amyloidosis is very rare. FUNDING None.
Cell Biology and Toxicology | 2017
Michael P. Chu; Jitra Kriangkum; Christopher P. Venner; Irwindeep Sandhu; Joanne Hewitt; Andrew R. Belch; Linda M. Pilarski
Cancer heterogeneity is a significant factor in response to treatment and escape leading to relapse. Within an individual cancer, especially blood cancers, there exists multiple subclones as well as distinct clonal expansions unrelated to the clinically detected, dominant clone. Over time, multiple subclones and clones undergo emergence, expansion, and extinction. Although sometimes this intra-clonal and inter-clonal heterogeneity can be detected and/or quantified in tests that measure aggregate populations of cells, frequently, such heterogeneity can only be detected using single cell analysis to determine its frequency and to detect minor clones that may subsequently emerge to become drug resistant and dominant. Most genetic/genomic tests look at the pooled tumor population as a whole rather than at its individual cellular components. Yet, minor clones and cancer stem cells are unlikely to be detected against the background of expanded major clones. Because selective pressures are likely to govern much of what is seen clinically, single cell analysis allows identification of otherwise cryptic compartments of the malignancy that may ultimately mediate progression and relapse. Single cell analysis can track intra- or inter-clonal heterogeneity and provide useful clinical information, often before changes in the disease are detectable in the clinic. To a very limited extent, single cell analysis has already found roles in clinical care. Because inter- and intra-clonal heterogeneity likely occurs more frequently than can be currently appreciated on a clinical level, future use of single cell analysis is likely to have profound clinical utility.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
Sajitha Sachchithanantham; Murielle Roussel; Giovanni Palladini; Catherine Klersy; Shameem Mahmood; Christopher P. Venner; Simon D.J. Gibbs; Julian D. Gillmore; Helen J. Lachmann; Philip N. Hawkins; Arnaud Jaccard; Giampaolo Merlini; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar
PURPOSE Immunoglobulin M (IgM)-related light chain (AL) amyloidosis, which accounts for 6% to 10% of all AL amyloidosis cases, is a rare and poorly studied clinical entity. Its natural history and management is not clearly defined. Prognostic and response criteria for AL amyloidosis in general have not been validated in this population. PATIENTS AND METHODS We retrospectively gathered data for 250 patients diagnosed with IgM AL amyloidosis from three European amyloidosis centers. Clinical features, hematologic response, and overall survival (OS) were analyzed. The current staging and response criteria in non-IgM AL amyloidosis was applied to this series to assess its utility in this patient cohort. RESULTS Patients with IgM AL amyloidosis have a significant IgM paraprotein (median, 10 g/L), less frequent lambda light chain isotype, and evaluable difference between involved and uninvolved free light chains (dFLCs; > 50 mg/L) in only two thirds of patients. Bone marrow showed clear non-Hodgkin lymphoma as the underlying disorder in 54% of patients. Cardiac involvement (45%) is less common but there is more frequent lymph node (20%) and neuropathic (28%) involvement compared with non-IgM AL. Fifty-seven percent of patients achieved a hematologic response (14% very good partial response/complete response [VGPR/CR]), with median OS not reached for patients achieving VGPR/CR, 64 months for PR, and 28 months for nonresponders (P < .001). On multivariate analysis, cardiac involvement, advanced Mayo disease stage, neuropathic involvement, and liver involvement were independent factors that had an impact on survival. Combining abnormal N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) and troponin T with liver involvement and the presence of neuropathy gives a better risk model: median OS of patients with none, one, or two or more abnormal factors was 90, 33, and 16 months, respectively. CONCLUSION IgM AL amyloidosis is a distinct clinical entity. Low-risk disease can be defined by combining cardiac involvement with novel prognostic markers. Deeper hematologic responses translate into improved outcomes, yet deep responses remain dismally poor, which highlights the urgent need for novel therapies.
British Journal of Haematology | 2014
Shameem Mahmood; Christopher P. Venner; Sajitha Sachchithanantham; Thirusha Lane; Lisa Rannigan; Darren Foard; Jh Pinney; Simon D.J. Gibbs; Carol J. Whelan; Helen J. Lachmann; Julian D. Gillmore; Philip N. Hawkins; Ashutosh D. Wechalekar
The outcomes and responses to treatment remain poorly studied among patients with systemic AL amyloidosis who require further treatment following prior novel agent‐based therapy. We report here treatment with lenalidomide‐dexamethasone in 84 AL amyloidosis patients with relapsed/refractory clonal disease following prior treatment with thalidomide (76%) and/or bortezomib (68%). On an intention‐to‐treat (ITT) basis, the overall haematological response rate was 61%, including 20% complete responses. The median overall survival (OS) has not been reached; 2‐year OS and progression‐free survival (PFS) was 84% and 73%, respectively. Achieving a free light chain (FLC) response was an independent good prognostic factor for OS in multivariate analysis. There was no impact of prior thalidomide or bortezomib therapy on response rate, OS or PFS. 16% achieved an organ response at 6 months, with a marked improvement in organ responses in patients on long term therapy (median duration 11 months) and 55% achieving renal responses by 18 months. Lenalidomide/dexamethasone therapy achieves good haematological responses in patients with AL amyloidosis with relapsed/refractory clonal disease. The rate of renal responses among patients who received prolonged treatment was unexpectedly high, raising the possibility that immunomodulatory effects of lenalidomide therapy might enhance the otherwise slow natural regression of amyloid deposits.