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Dive into the research topics where Daniel P. Normolle is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel P. Normolle.


BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2006

Dose escalation of a curcuminoid formulation

Christopher D. Lao; Mack T. Ruffin; Daniel P. Normolle; Dennis D. Heath; Sandra I. Murray; Joanne Motiño Bailey; Martha E. Boggs; James A. Crowell; Cheryl L. Rock; Dean E. Brenner

BackgroundCurcumin is the major yellow pigment extracted from turmeric, a commonly-used spice in India and Southeast Asia that has broad anticarcinogenic and cancer chemopreventive potential. However, few systematic studies of curcumins pharmacology and toxicology in humans have been performed.MethodsA dose escalation study was conducted to determine the maximum tolerated dose and safety of a single dose of standardized powder extract, uniformly milled curcumin (C3Complex™, Sabinsa Corporation). Healthy volunteers were administered escalating doses from 500 to 12,000 mg.ResultsSeven of twenty-four subjects (30%) experienced only minimal toxicity that did not appear to be dose-related. No curcumin was detected in the serum of subjects administered 500, 1,000, 2,000, 4,000, 6,000 or 8,000 mg. Low levels of curcumin were detected in two subjects administered 10,000 or 12,000 mg.ConclusionThe tolerance of curcumin in high single oral doses appears to be excellent. Given that achieving systemic bioavailability of curcumin or its metabolites may not be essential for colorectal cancer chemoprevention, these findings warrant further investigation for its utility as a long-term chemopreventive agent.


Gastroenterology | 2009

α-Fetoprotein, Des-γ Carboxyprothrombin, and Lectin-Bound α-Fetoprotein in Early Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Jorge A. Marrero; Ziding Feng; Yinghui Wang; Mindie H. Nguyen; Alex S. Befeler; Lewis R. Roberts; K. Rajender Reddy; Denise M. Harnois; Josep M. Llovet; Daniel P. Normolle; Jackie Dalhgren; David Chia; Anna S. Lok; Paul D. Wagner; Sudhir Srivastava; Myron Schwartz

BACKGROUND & AIMS Alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) is widely used as a surveillance test for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among patients with cirrhosis. Des-gamma carboxy-prothrombin (DCP) and lectin-bound AFP (AFP-L3%) are potential surveillance tests for HCC. The aims of this study were to determine performance of DCP and AFP-L3% for the diagnosis of early HCC; whether they complement AFP; and what factors affect DCP, AFP-L3%, or AFP levels. METHODS We conducted a large phase 2 biomarker case-control study in 7 academic medical centers in the United States. Controls were patients with compensated cirrhosis and cases were patients with HCC. AFP, DCP, and AFP-L3% levels were measured blinded to clinical data in a central reference laboratory. RESULTS A total of 836 patients were enrolled: 417 (50%) were cirrhosis controls and 419 (50%) were HCC cases, of which 208 (49.6%) had early stage HCC (n = 77 very early, n = 131 early). AFP had the best area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (0.80, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.77-0.84), followed by DCP (0.72, 95% CI: 0.68-0.77) and AFP-L3% (0.66, 95% CI: 0.62-0.70) for early stage HCC. The optimal AFP cutoff value was 10.9 ng/mL leading to a sensitivity of 66%. When only those with very early HCC were evaluated, the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for AFP was 0.78 (95% CI: 0.72-0.85) leading to a sensitivity of 65% at the same cutoff. CONCLUSIONS AFP was more sensitive than DCP and AFP-L3% for the diagnosis of early and very early stage HCC at a new cutoff of 10.9 ng/mL.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Dose Escalation in Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer Using Three-Dimensional Conformal Radiation Therapy: Update of a Phase I Trial

James A. Hayman; Mary K. Martel; Randall K. Ten Haken; Daniel P. Normolle; Robert F. Todd; J.Fred Littles; Molly A. Sullivan; Peter W. Possert; Andrew T. Turrisi; Allen S. Lichter

PURPOSE High-dose radiation may improve outcomes in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC). By using three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy and limiting the target volume, we hypothesized that the dose could be safely escalated. MATERIALS AND METHODS A standard phase I design was used. Five bins were created based on the volume of normal lung irradiated, and dose levels within bins were chosen based on the estimated risk of radiation pneumonitis. Starting doses ranged from 63 to 84 Gy given in 2.1-Gy fractions. Target volumes included the primary tumor and any nodes >or= 1 cm on computed tomography. Clinically uninvolved nodal regions were not included purposely. More recently, selected patients received neoadjuvant cisplatin and vinorelbine. RESULTS At the time of this writing, 104 patients had been enrolled. Twenty-four had stage I, four had stage II, 43 had stage IIIA, 26 had stage IIIB, and seven had locally recurrent disease. Twenty-five received chemotherapy, and 63 were assessable for escalation. All bins were escalated at least twice. Although grade 2 radiation pneumonitis occurred in five patients, grade 3 radiation pneumonitis occurred in only two. The maximum-tolerated dose was only established for the largest bin, at 65.1 Gy. Dose levels for the four remaining bins were 102.9, 102.9, 84 and 75.6 Gy. The majority of patients failed distantly, though a significant proportion also failed in the target volume. There were no isolated failures in clinically uninvolved nodal regions. CONCLUSION Dose escalation in NSCLC has been accomplished safely in most patients using three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy, limiting target volumes, and segregating patients by the volume of normal lung irradiated.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000

Escalated Focal Liver Radiation and Concurrent Hepatic Artery Fluorodeoxyuridine for Unresectable Intrahepatic Malignancies

Laura A Dawson; Cornelius J. McGinn; Daniel P. Normolle; Randall K. Ten Haken; Suzette Walker; William D. Ensminger; Theodore S. Lawrence

PURPOSE To evaluate the response, time to progression, survival, and impact of radiation (RT) dose on survival in patients with intrahepatic malignancies treated on a phase I trial of escalated focal liver RT. PATIENTS AND METHODS From April 1996 to January 1998, 43 patients with unresectable intrahepatic hepatobiliary cancer (HB; 27 patients) and colorectal liver metastases (LM; 16 patients) were treated with high-dose conformal RT. The median tumor size was 10 x 10 x 8 cm. The median RT dose was 58.5 Gy (range, 28.5 to 90 Gy), 1.5 Gy twice daily, with concurrent continuous-infusion hepatic arterial fluorodeoxyuridine (0.2 mg/kg/d) during the first 4 weeks of RT. RESULTS The response rate in 25 assessable patients was 68% (16 partial and one complete response). With a median potential follow-up period of 26.5 months, the median times to progression for all tumors, LM, and HB were 6, 8, and 3 months, respectively. The median survival times of all patients, patients with LM, and patients with HB were 16, 18, and 11 months, respectively. On multivariate analyses, escalated RT dose was independently associated with improved progression-free and overall survival. The median survival of patients treated with 70 Gy or more has not yet been reached (16.4+ months), compared with 11.6 months in patients treated with lower RT doses (P =.0003). CONCLUSION The excellent response rate, prolonged intrahepatic control, and improved survival in patients treated with RT doses of 70 Gy or more motivate continuation of dose-escalation studies for patients with intrahepatic malignancies.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Survival and Failure Patterns of High-Grade Gliomas After Three-Dimensional Conformal Radiotherapy

June L. Chan; Susan W. Lee; Benedick A. Fraass; Daniel P. Normolle; Harry S. Greenberg; Larry Junck; Stephen S. Gebarski; Howard M. Sandler

PURPOSE The goal of three-dimensional (3-D) conformal radiation is to increase the dose delivered to tumor while minimizing dose to surrounding normal brain. Previously it has been shown that even escalated doses of 70 to 80 Gy have failure patterns that are predominantly local. This article describes the failure patterns and survival seen with high-grade gliomas given 90 Gy using a 3-D conformal intensity-modulated radiation technique. PATIENTS AND METHODS From April 1996 to April 1999, 34 patients with supratentorial high-grade gliomas were treated to 90 Gy. For those that recurred, failure patterns were defined in terms of percentage of recurrent tumor located within the high-dose region. Recurrences with more than 95% of their volume within the high-dose region were considered central; those with 80% to 95%, 20% to 80%, and less than 20% were considered in-field, marginal, and distant, respectively. RESULTS The median age was 55 years, and median follow-up was 11.7 months. At time of analysis, 23 (67.6%) of 34 patients had developed radiographic evidence of recurrence. The patterns of failure were 18 (78%) of 23 central, three (13%) of 23 in-field, two (9%) of 23 marginal, and zero (0%) of 23 distant. The median survival was 11.7 months, with 1-year survival of 47.1% and 2-year survival of 12.9%. No significant treatment toxicities were observed. CONCLUSION Despite dose escalation to 90 Gy, the predominant failure pattern in high-grade gliomas remains local. This suggests that close margins used in highly conformal treatments do not increase the risk of marginal or distant recurrences. Our results indicate that intensification of local radiotherapy with dose escalation is feasible and deserves further evaluation for high-grade gliomas.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Phase I Trial of Radiation Dose Escalation With Concurrent Weekly Full-Dose Gemcitabine in Patients With Advanced Pancreatic Cancer

Cornelius J. McGinn; Mark M. Zalupski; Imad Shureiqi; John M. Robertson; Frederic E. Eckhauser; David C. Smith; Diane Brown; Gwen Hejna; Myla Strawderman; Daniel P. Normolle; Theodore S. Lawrence

PURPOSE The primary objective of this phase I trial was to determine the maximum-tolerated dose of radiation that could be delivered to the primary tumor concurrent with full-dose gemcitabine in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS Thirty seven patients with unresectable (n = 34) or incompletely resected pancreatic cancer (n = 3) were treated. Gemcitabine was administered as a 30-minute intravenous infusion at a dose of 1,000 mg/m(2) on days 1, 8, and 15 of a 28-day cycle. Radiation therapy was initiated on day 1 and directed at the primary tumor alone, without prophylactic nodal coverage. The starting radiation dose was 24 Gy in 1.6-Gy fractions. Escalation was achieved by increasing the fraction size in increments of 0.2 Gy, keeping the duration of radiation constant at 3 weeks. A second cycle of gemcitabine alone was intended after a 1-week rest. RESULTS Two of six assessable patients experienced dose-limiting toxicity at the final planned dose level of the trial (42 Gy in 2.8-Gy fractions), one with grade 4 vomiting and one with gastric/duodenal ulceration. Two additional patients at this dose level experienced late gastrointestinal toxicity that required surgical management. CONCLUSION The final dose investigated (42 Gy) is not recommended for further study considering the occurrence of both acute and late toxicity. However, a phase II trial of this novel gemcitabine-based chemoradiotherapy approach, at a radiation dose of 36 Gy in 2.4-Gy fractions, is recommended on the basis of tolerance, patterns of failure, and survival data.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Phase II Trial of High-Dose Conformal Radiation Therapy With Concurrent Hepatic Artery Floxuridine for Unresectable Intrahepatic Malignancies

Edgar Ben-Josef; Daniel P. Normolle; William D. Ensminger; Suzette Walker; Daniel Tatro; Randall K. Ten Haken; James A. Knol; Laura A Dawson; Charlie Pan; Theodore S. Lawrence

PURPOSE A phase II trial was conducted to determine if high-dose radiation with concurrent hepatic arterial floxuridine would improve survival in patients with unresectable intrahepatic malignancies. PATIENTS AND METHODS Three-dimensional conformal high-dose radiation therapy was delivered concurrently with hepatic arterial floxuridine in 128 patients. The radiation dose was based on a normal-tissue complication probability model and subjected the patient to an estimated maximum risk of radiation-induced liver disease of 10% to 15%. The study design provided more than 80% power to detect a two-fold increase in median survival compared with historical controls at a 5% significance level. RESULTS The median radiation dose delivered was 60.75 Gy (1.5-Gy fractions bid). At a median follow-up time of 16 months (26 months in patients who were alive) the median survival was 15.8 months (95% CI, 12.6 to 18.3 months), significantly longer than in the historical control. The actuarial 3-year survival was 17%. The total dose was the only significant predictor of survival. Primary hepatobiliary tumors had a significantly greater tendency to remain confined to the liver than did colorectal cancer metastases. Overall toxicity was acceptable, with 27 patients (21%) and 11 patients (9%) developing grade 3 and 4 toxicity, respectively, and one treatment-related death. CONCLUSION The results suggest that, compared with historical controls, high-dose focal liver irradiation with hepatic artery floxuridine prolongs survival in patients with unresectable chemotherapy-refractory metastatic colorectal cancer and primary hepatobiliary tumors. This provides a rationale for intensification of local therapy for unresectable hepatobiliary cancers and integration of this regimen with newer systemic therapy for patients with colorectal cancer.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2008

Pharmacokinetics of Curcumin Conjugate Metabolites in Healthy Human Subjects

Shaiju K. Vareed; Madhuri Kakarala; Mack T. Ruffin; James A. Crowell; Daniel P. Normolle; Zora Djuric; Dean E. Brenner

Background: Curcumin is a polyphenol, found in the spice turmeric, that has promising anticancer properties, but previous studies suggest that absorption of curcumin may be limited. Methods: This study examined the pharmacokinetics of a curcumin preparation in healthy human volunteers 0.25 to 72 h after a single oral dose. Curcumin was administered at doses of 10 g (n = 6) and 12 g (n = 6). Subjects were randomly allocated to dose level for a total of six subjects at each dose level. Serum samples were assayed for free curcumin, for its glucuronide, and for its sulfate conjugate. The data were fit to a one-compartment absorption and elimination model. Results: Using a high-performance liquid chromatography assay with a limit of detection of 50 ng/mL, only one subject had detectable free curcumin at any of the 14 time points assayed, but curcumin glucuronides and sulfates were detected in all subjects. Based on the pharmacokinetic model, the area under the curve for the 10 and 12 g doses was estimated (mean ± SE) to be 35.33 ± 3.78 and 26.57 ± 2.97 μg/mL × h, respectively, whereas Cmax was 2.30 ± 0.26 and 1.73 ± 0.19 μg/mL. The Tmax and t1/2 were estimated to be 3.29 ± 0.43 and 6.77 ± 0.83 h. The ratio of glucuronide to sulfate was 1.92:1. The curcumin conjugates were present as either glucuronide or sulfate, not mixed conjugates. Conclusion: Curcumin is absorbed after oral dosing in humans and can be detected as glucuronide and sulfate conjugates in plasma. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2008;17(6):1411–7)


Cancer Research | 2010

Mechanism of Radiosensitization by the Chk1/2 Inhibitor AZD7762 Involves Abrogation of the G2 Checkpoint and Inhibition of Homologous Recombinational DNA Repair

Meredith A. Morgan; Leslie A. Parsels; Lili Zhao; Joshua D. Parsels; Mary A. Davis; Maria C. Hassan; Sankari Arumugarajah; Linda Hylander-Gans; Deborah Morosini; Diane M. Simeone; Christine E. Canman; Daniel P. Normolle; Sonya Zabludoff; Jonathan Maybaum; Theodore S. Lawrence

The median survival for patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer treated with gemcitabine and radiation is approximately 1 year. To develop improved treatment, we have combined a Chk1/2-targeted agent, AZD7762, currently in phase I clinical trials, with gemcitabine and ionizing radiation in preclinical pancreatic tumor models. We found that in vitro AZD7762 alone or in combination with gemcitabine significantly sensitized MiaPaCa-2 cells to radiation. AZD7762 inhibited Chk1 autophosphorylation (S296 Chk1), stabilized Cdc25A, and increased ATR/ATM-mediated Chk1 phosphorylation (S345 Chk1). Radiosensitization by AZD7762 was associated with abrogation of the G(2) checkpoint as well as with inhibition of Rad51 focus formation, inhibition of homologous recombination repair, and persistent gamma-H2AX expression. AZD7762 was also a radiation sensitizer in multiple tumor xenograft models. In both MiaPaCa-2- and patient-derived xenografts, AZD7762 significantly prolonged the median time required for tumor volume doubling in response to gemcitabine and radiation. Together, our findings suggest that G(2) checkpoint abrogation and homologous recombination repair inhibition both contribute to sensitization by Chk1 inhibition. Furthermore, they support the clinical use of AZD7762 in combination with gemcitabine and radiation for patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer.


The Journal of Urology | 1988

Clinical and Cystometric Characteristics of Continent and Incontinent Noninstitutionalized Elderly

Ananias C. Diokno; Morton B. Brown; Bruce M. Brock; A. Regula Herzog; Daniel P. Normolle

A survey of the clinical and cystometric characteristics of continent and incontinent elderly subjects living in a community has not been reported previously. Household respondents identified initially from a random probability sample were invited to undergo a free clinic evaluation followed by an invitation to free urodynamic testing. Of the 1,955 household respondents 456 women and 298 men attended the clinic. From this group 169 women and 94 men accepted the urodynamic invitation. Cystometric studies reveal a significant difference between the over-all prevalence of uninhibited detrusor contraction between genders, 7.9 per cent for women and 35 per cent for men. The occurrence of uninhibited detrusor contractions is more prevalent among incontinent than continent subjects and this difference is marginally significant. There is no significant association between uninhibited detrusor contractions and symptoms of difficult bladder emptying, irritative symptoms, voiding frequency, nocturia and urodynamic diagnosis of outlet obstruction (normal or high pressure and poor flow) but there were significant associations with responses to questions about the delay in getting to a toilet. The mean bladder capacities of men and women do not differ significantly between the different age groups but the capacity is significantly smaller for those with uninhibited detrusor contractions. The post-void residual urine volume shows no association with the continence status. These findings raise questions regarding our conventional thinking as to the etiology of uninhibited detrusor contractions, especially in men, and of urinary incontinence in general.

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Yue Cao

University of Michigan

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Christina Tsien

Washington University in St. Louis

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