Clifford Hudis
State University of New York Upstate Medical University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Clifford Hudis.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2006
Arti Hurria; Carol Rosen; Clifford Hudis; Enid Zuckerman; Katherine S. Panageas; Mark S. Lachs; Matthew Witmer; Wilfred G. van Gorp; Monica Fornier; Gabriella D'Andrea; Mark M. Moasser; Chau Dang; Catherine Van Poznak; Anju Hurria; Jimmie C. Holland
OBJECTIVES: To report on the longitudinal cognitive functioning of older women receiving adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer.
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2006
Arti Hurria; Anju Hurria; Enid Zuckerman; Katherine S. Panageas; Monica Fornier; Gabriella D'Andrea; Chau Dang; Mark M. Moasser; Mark Robson; Andrew D. Seidman; Violante Currie; Catherine VanPoznak; Maria Theodoulou; Mark S. Lachs; Clifford Hudis
OBJECTIVES: To examine the toxicity experienced by a cohort of older women receiving adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer and the longitudinal effect on their functional status and quality of life (QOL).
npj Breast Cancer | 2016
Minetta C. Liu; Brandelyn N. Pitcher; Elaine Mardis; Sherri R. Davies; Paula N. Friedman; Jacqueline Snider; Tammi L. Vickery; Jerry P. Reed; Katherine DeSchryver; Baljit Singh; William J. Gradishar; Edith A. Perez; Silvana Martino; Marc L. Citron; Larry Norton; Clifford Hudis; L Carey; Philip S. Bernard; Torsten O. Nielsen; Charles M. Perou; Matthew J. Ellis; William T. Barry
PAM50 intrinsic breast cancer subtypes are prognostic independent of standard clinicopathologic factors. CALGB 9741 demonstrated improved recurrence-free (RFS) and overall survival (OS) with 2-weekly dose-dense (DD) versus 3-weekly therapy. A significant interaction between intrinsic subtypes and DD-therapy benefit was hypothesized. Suitable tumor samples were available from 1,471 (73%) of 2,005 subjects. Multiplexed gene-expression profiling generated the PAM50 subtype call, proliferation score, and risk of recurrence score (ROR-PT) for the evaluable subset of 1,311 treated patients. The interaction between DD-therapy benefit and intrinsic subtype was tested in a Cox proportional hazards model using two-sided alpha=0.05. Additional multivariable Cox models evaluated the proliferation and ROR-PT scores as continuous measures with selected clinical covariates. Improved outcomes for DD therapy in the evaluable subset mirrored results from the complete data set (RFS; hazard ratio=1.20; 95% confidence interval=0.99–1.44) with 12.3-year median follow-up. Intrinsic subtypes were prognostic of RFS (P<0.0001) irrespective of treatment assignment. No subtype-specific treatment effect on RFS was identified (interaction P=0.44). Proliferation and ROR-PT scores were prognostic for RFS (both P<0.0001), but no association with treatment benefit was seen (P=0.14 and 0.59, respectively). Results were similar for OS. The prognostic value of PAM50 intrinsic subtype was greater than estrogen receptor/HER2 immunohistochemistry classification. PAM50 gene signatures were highly prognostic but did not predict for improved outcomes with DD anthracycline- and taxane-based therapy. Clinical validation studies will assess the ability of PAM50 and other gene signatures to stratify patients and individualize treatment based on expected risks of distant recurrence.
npj Breast Cancer | 2016
Karen A. Cadoo; Devika Gajria; Emily Suh; Sujata Patil; Maria Theodoulou; Larry Norton; Clifford Hudis; Tiffany A. Traina
Capecitabine is widely used in the management of metastatic breast cancer; however, drug delivery is limited by gastrointestinal and other toxicity. We employed mathematical modeling to rationally design an optimized dose and schedule for capecitabine of 2,000u2009mg twice daily, flat dosing, 7 days on, 7 days off. Preclinical data suggested increased efficacy and tolerability with this novel dosing, and three early-phase clinical trials have suggested a favorable toxicity profile. To further define the tolerability of this regimen, we conducted a systematic review of the gastrointestinal adverse events of patients on these studies. This review demonstrated a favorable gastrointestinal toxicity profile with capecitabine in this novel schedule when given as single agent or in combination therapy with either bevacizumab or lapatinib. No patients discontinued therapy for gastrointestinal toxicity, and there were no grade 4 or 5 gastrointestinal toxicities reported. Grade 3 or greater diarrhea occurred in two (2%); grade 2 or greater mucositis, constipation, and vomiting were reported in three (4%) patients. We conclude that capecitabine administered on a 7 days on, 7 days off schedule has limited gastrointestinal toxicity. Our methodology was based on an analysis of individual patient toxicity data from one phase I single-agent capecitabine and two phase II capecitabine combination studies (with bevacizumab and lapatinib, respectively), focusing specifically on gastrointestinal toxicity.
Archive | 2001
Maura N. Dickler; Clifford Hudis
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
S. I. Bearman; Stephanie Green; Julie Gralow; William E. Barlow; Clifford Hudis; Antonio C. Wolff; James N. Ingle; Gabriel N. Hortobagyi; Robert B. Livingston; Silvana Martino
Archive | 2017
Clifford Hudis; Shanu Modi
Archive | 2011
Mary Lou Smith; George Somlo; John H. Ward; Antonio C. Wolff; Richard Zellars; Robert W. Carlson; D. Craig Allred; Benjamin O. Anderson; Harold J. Burstein; W. Bradford Carter; Stephen B. Edge; John K. Erban; William B. Farrar; Andres Forero; Sharon H. Giordano; Lori J. Goldstein; William J. Gradishar; Daniel F. Hayes; Clifford Hudis; Britt-Marie Ljung; David Mankoff; P. Kelly Marcom; Ingrid A. Mayer; Beryl McCormick; Lori J. Pierce; Elizabeth C. Reed; Jasgit Sachdev
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
Arti Hurria; Carol Rosen; Enid Zuckerman; Jimmie C. Holland; Katherine S. Panageas; Matthew Witmer; W. van Gorp; Larry Norton; Clifford Hudis
Archive | 2003
Marc L. Citron; Donald A. Berry; Constance Cirrincione; Clifford Hudis; William J. Gradishar; Nancy E. Davidson; Silvana Martino; R. B. Livingston; James N. Ingle; Edith A. Perez; John T. Carpenter; David D. Hurd; James F. Holland; Barbara Leigh Smith; Carolyn I. Sartor; Eleanor Leung; Jeffrey S. Abrams; Richard L. Schilsky; Hyman B. Muss; Larry Norton