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Dive into the research topics where Dennis D. Weisenburger is active.

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Featured researches published by Dennis D. Weisenburger.


Nature | 2000

Distinct types of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma identified by gene expression profiling.

Ash A. Alizadeh; Michael B. Eisen; R. Eric Davis; Izidore S. Lossos; Andreas Rosenwald; Jennifer C. Boldrick; Hajeer Sabet; Truc Tran; Xin Yu; John Powell; Liming Yang; Gerald E. Marti; Troy Moore; James I. Hudson; Lisheng Lu; David B. Lewis; Robert Tibshirani; Gavin Sherlock; Wing C. Chan; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; James O. Armitage; Roger A. Warnke; Ronald Levy; Wyndham H. Wilson; Michael R. Grever; John C. Byrd; David Botstein; Patrick O. Brown; Louis M. Staudt

Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), the most common subtype of non-Hodgkins lymphoma, is clinically heterogeneous: 40% of patients respond well to current therapy and have prolonged survival, whereas the remainder succumb to the disease. We proposed that this variability in natural history reflects unrecognized molecular heterogeneity in the tumours. Using DNA microarrays, we have conducted a systematic characterization of gene expression in B-cell malignancies. Here we show that there is diversity in gene expression among the tumours of DLBCL patients, apparently reflecting the variation in tumour proliferation rate, host response and differentiation state of the tumour. We identified two molecularly distinct forms of DLBCL which had gene expression patterns indicative of different stages of B-cell differentiation. One type expressed genes characteristic of germinal centre B cells (‘germinal centre B-like DLBCL’); the second type expressed genes normally induced during in vitro activation of peripheral blood B cells (‘activated B-like DLBCL’). Patients with germinal centre B-like DLBCL had a significantly better overall survival than those with activated B-like DLBCL. The molecular classification of tumours on the basis of gene expression can thus identify previously undetected and clinically significant subtypes of cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

New approach to classifying non-Hodgkin's lymphomas: clinical features of the major histologic subtypes. Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma Classification Project.

James O. Armitage; Dennis D. Weisenburger

Increasing knowledge about the biology of the non-Hodgkins lymphomas has led to new approaches in classification. Rather than grouping lymphomas simply based on cell size, cell shape, and growth pattern, it is now possible to identify distinctive clinicopathologic entities. In many cases, the existence of specific immunologic and/or genetic features has confirmed the existence of these distinctive types of lymphoma. Since patients will be given these diagnoses by pathologists, it is important that clinicians be knowledgeable with regard to their clinical characteristics. The findings for the 13 most common lymphoma types that will be encountered in clinical practice are presented here.


Nature | 2010

Chronic active B-cell-receptor signalling in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma.

R. Eric Davis; Vu N. Ngo; Georg Lenz; Pavel Tolar; Ryan M. Young; Paul B. Romesser; Holger Kohlhammer; Laurence Lamy; Hong Zhao; Yandan Yang; Weihong Xu; Arthur L. Shaffer; George E. Wright; Wenming Xiao; John Powell; Jian Kang Jiang; Craig J. Thomas; Andreas Rosenwald; German Ott; Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink; Randy D. Gascoyne; Joseph M. Connors; Nathalie A. Johnson; Lisa M. Rimsza; Elias Campo; Elaine S. Jaffe; Wyndham H. Wilson; Jan Delabie; Erlend B. Smeland; Richard I. Fisher

A role for B-cell-receptor (BCR) signalling in lymphomagenesis has been inferred by studying immunoglobulin genes in human lymphomas and by engineering mouse models, but genetic and functional evidence for its oncogenic role in human lymphomas is needed. Here we describe a form of ‘chronic active’ BCR signalling that is required for cell survival in the activated B-cell-like (ABC) subtype of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL). The signalling adaptor CARD11 is required for constitutive NF-κB pathway activity and survival in ABC DLBCL. Roughly 10% of ABC DLBCLs have mutant CARD11 isoforms that activate NF-κB, but the mechanism that engages wild-type CARD11 in other ABC DLBCLs was unknown. An RNA interference genetic screen revealed that a BCR signalling component, Bruton’s tyrosine kinase, is essential for the survival of ABC DLBCLs with wild-type CARD11. In addition, knockdown of proximal BCR subunits (IgM, Ig-κ, CD79A and CD79B) killed ABC DLBCLs with wild-type CARD11 but not other lymphomas. The BCRs in these ABC DLBCLs formed prominent clusters in the plasma membrane with low diffusion, similarly to BCRs in antigen-stimulated normal B cells. Somatic mutations affecting the immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motif (ITAM) signalling modules of CD79B and CD79A were detected frequently in ABC DLBCL biopsy samples but rarely in other DLBCLs and never in Burkitt’s lymphoma or mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma. In 18% of ABC DLBCLs, one functionally critical residue of CD79B, the first ITAM tyrosine, was mutated. These mutations increased surface BCR expression and attenuated Lyn kinase, a feedback inhibitor of BCR signalling. These findings establish chronic active BCR signalling as a new pathogenetic mechanism in ABC DLBCL, suggesting several therapeutic strategies.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2003

Molecular Diagnosis of Primary Mediastinal B Cell Lymphoma Identifies a Clinically Favorable Subgroup of Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma Related to Hodgkin Lymphoma

Andreas Rosenwald; George E. Wright; Karen Leroy; Xin-You Yu; Philippe Gaulard; Randy D. Gascoyne; Wing C. Chan; Tong Zhao; Corinne Haioun; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Erlend B. Smeland; Stein Kvaløy; Harald Holte; Jan Delabie; Elias Campo; Emili Montserrat; Armando López-Guillermo; German Ott; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; Joseph M. Connors; Rita M. Braziel; Thomas M. Grogan; Richard I. Fisher; Thomas P. Miller; Michael LeBlanc; Michael Chiorazzi

Using current diagnostic criteria, primary mediastinal B cell lymphoma (PMBL) cannot be distinguished from other types of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) reliably. We used gene expression profiling to develop a more precise molecular diagnosis of PMBL. PMBL patients were considerably younger than other DLBCL patients, and their lymphomas frequently involved other thoracic structures but not extrathoracic sites typical of other DLBCLs. PMBL patients had a relatively favorable clinical outcome, with a 5-yr survival rate of 64% compared with 46% for other DLBCL patients. Gene expression profiling strongly supported a relationship between PMBL and Hodgkin lymphoma: over one third of the genes that were more highly expressed in PMBL than in other DLBCLs were also characteristically expressed in Hodgkin lymphoma cells. PDL2, which encodes a regulator of T cell activation, was the gene that best discriminated PMBL from other DLBCLs and was also highly expressed in Hodgkin lymphoma cells. The genomic loci for PDL2 and several neighboring genes were amplified in over half of the PMBLs and in Hodgkin lymphoma cell lines. The molecular diagnosis of PMBL should significantly aid in the development of therapies tailored to this clinically and pathogenetically distinctive subgroup of DLBCL.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010

Tumor-Associated Macrophages and Survival in Classic Hodgkin's Lymphoma

Christian Steidl; Tang Lee; Sohrab P. Shah; Pedro Farinha; Guangming Han; Tarun Nayar; Allen Delaney; Steven J.M. Jones; Javeed Iqbal; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Martin Bast; Andreas Rosenwald; Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink; Lisa M. Rimsza; Elias Campo; Jan Delabie; Rita M. Braziel; James R. Cook; Ray Tubbs; Elaine S. Jaffe; Georg Lenz; Joseph M. Connors; Louis M. Staudt; Wing C. Chan; Randy D. Gascoyne

BACKGROUND Despite advances in treatments for Hodgkins lymphoma, about 20% of patients still die from progressive disease. Current prognostic models predict the outcome of treatment with imperfect accuracy, and clinically relevant biomarkers have not been established to improve on the International Prognostic Score. METHODS Using gene-expression profiling, we analyzed 130 frozen samples obtained from patients with classic Hodgkins lymphoma during diagnostic lymph-node biopsy to determine which cellular signatures were correlated with treatment outcome. We confirmed our findings in an independent cohort of 166 patients, using immunohistochemical analysis. RESULTS Gene-expression profiling identified a gene signature of tumor-associated macrophages that was significantly associated with primary treatment failure (P=0.02). In an independent cohort of patients, we found that an increased number of CD68+ macrophages was correlated with a shortened progression-free survival (P=0.03) and with an increased likelihood of relapse after autologous hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (P=0.008), resulting in shortened disease-specific survival (P=0.003). In multivariate analysis, this adverse prognostic factor outperformed the International Prognostic Score for disease-specific survival (P=0.003 vs. P=0.03). The absence of an elevated number of CD68+ cells in patients with limited-stage disease defined a subgroup of patients with a long-term disease-specific survival of 100% with the use of current treatment strategies. CONCLUSIONS An increased number of tumor-associated macrophages was strongly associated with shortened survival in patients with classic Hodgkins lymphoma and provides a new biomarker for risk stratification.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Concurrent expression of MYC and BCL2 in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma treated with rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone

Nathalie A. Johnson; Graham W. Slack; Kerry J. Savage; Joseph M. Connors; Susana Ben-Neriah; Sanja Rogic; David W. Scott; King Tan; Christian Steidl; Laurie H. Sehn; Wing C. Chan; Javeed Iqbal; Georg Lenz; George E. Wright; Lisa M. Rimsza; Carlo Valentino; Patrick Brunhoeber; Thomas M. Grogan; Rita M. Braziel; James R. Cook; Raymond R. Tubbs; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Elias Campo; Andreas Rosenwald; German Ott; Jan Delabie; Christina Holcroft; Elaine S. Jaffe; Louis M. Staudt; Randy D. Gascoyne

PURPOSE Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is curable in 60% of patients treated with rituximab plus cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (R-CHOP). MYC translocations, with or without BCL2 translocations, have been associated with inferior survival in DLBCL. We investigated whether expression of MYC protein, with or without BCL2 protein expression, could risk-stratify patients at diagnosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS We determined the correlation between presence of MYC and BCL2 proteins by immunohistochemistry (IHC) with survival in two independent cohorts of patients with DLBCL treated with R-CHOP. We further determined if MYC protein expression correlated with high MYC mRNA and/or presence of MYC translocation. RESULTS In the training cohort (n = 167), MYC and BCL2 proteins were detected in 29% and 44% of patients, respectively. Concurrent expression (MYC positive/BCL2 positive) was present in 21% of patients. MYC protein correlated with presence of high MYC mRNA and MYC translocation (both P < .001), but the latter was less frequent (both 11%). MYC protein expression was only associated with inferior overall and progression-free survival when BCL2 protein was coexpressed (P < .001). Importantly, the poor prognostic effect of MYC positive/BCL2 positive was validated in an independent cohort of 140 patients with DLBCL and remained significant (P < .05) after adjusting for presence of high-risk features in a multivariable model that included elevated international prognostic index score, activated B-cell molecular subtype, and presence of concurrent MYC and BCL2 translocations. CONCLUSION Assessment of MYC and BCL2 expression by IHC represents a robust, rapid, and inexpensive approach to risk-stratify patients with DLBCL at diagnosis.


Nature | 2012

Burkitt lymphoma pathogenesis and therapeutic targets from structural and functional genomics

Roland Schmitz; Ryan M. Young; Michele Ceribelli; Sameer Jhavar; Wenming Xiao; Meili Zhang; George E. Wright; Arthur L. Shaffer; Daniel J. Hodson; Eric Buras; Xuelu Liu; John Powell; Yandan Yang; Weihong Xu; Hong Zhao; Holger Kohlhammer; Andreas Rosenwald; Philip M. Kluin; Hans Konrad Müller-Hermelink; German Ott; Randy D. Gascoyne; Joseph M. Connors; Lisa M. Rimsza; Elias Campo; Elaine S. Jaffe; Jan Delabie; Erlend B. Smeland; Martin Ogwang; Steven J. Reynolds; Richard I. Fisher

Burkitt’s lymphoma (BL) can often be cured by intensive chemotherapy, but the toxicity of such therapy precludes its use in the elderly and in patients with endemic BL in developing countries, necessitating new strategies. The normal germinal centre B cell is the presumed cell of origin for both BL and diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), yet gene expression analysis suggests that these malignancies may use different oncogenic pathways. BL is subdivided into a sporadic subtype that is diagnosed in developed countries, the Epstein–Barr-virus-associated endemic subtype, and an HIV-associated subtype, but it is unclear whether these subtypes use similar or divergent oncogenic mechanisms. Here we used high-throughput RNA sequencing and RNA interference screening to discover essential regulatory pathways in BL that cooperate with MYC, the defining oncogene of this cancer. In 70% of sporadic BL cases, mutations affecting the transcription factor TCF3 (E2A) or its negative regulator ID3 fostered TCF3 dependency. TCF3 activated the pro-survival phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase pathway in BL, in part by augmenting tonic B-cell receptor signalling. In 38% of sporadic BL cases, oncogenic CCND3 mutations produced highly stable cyclin D3 isoforms that drive cell cycle progression. These findings suggest opportunities to improve therapy for patients with BL.


Blood | 2009

Clinical differences between nasal and extranasal natural killer/T-cell lymphoma: a study of 136 cases from the International Peripheral T-Cell Lymphoma Project

Wing Y. Au; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Tanin Intragumtornchai; Shigeo Nakamura; Won Seog Kim; Ivy Sng; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Raymond Liang

Among 1153 new adult cases of peripheral/T-cell lymphoma from 1990-2002 at 22 centers in 13 countries, 136 cases (11.8%) of extranodal natural killer (NK)/T-cell lymphoma were identified (nasal 68%, extranasal 26%, aggressive/unclassifiable 6%). The disease frequency was higher in Asian than in Western countries and in Continental Asia than in Japan. There were no differences in age, sex, ethnicity, or immunophenotypic profile between the nasal and extranasal cases, but the latter had more adverse clinical features. The median overall survival (OS) was better in nasal compared with the extranasal cases in early- (2.96 vs 0.36 years, P < .001) and late-stage disease (0.8 vs 0.28 years, P = .031). The addition of radiotherapy for early-stage nasal cases yielded survival benefit (P = .045). Among nasal cases, both the International Prognostic Index (P = .006) and Korean NK/T-cell Prognostic Index (P < .001) were prognostic. In addition, Ki67 proliferation greater than 50%, transformed tumor cells greater than 40%, elevated C-reactive protein level (CRP), anemia (< 11 g/dL) and thrombocytopenia (< 150 x 10(9)/L) predicts poorer OS for nasal disease. No histologic or clinical feature was predictive in extranasal disease. We conclude that the clinical features and treatment response of extranasal NK/T-cell lymphoma are different from of those of nasal lymphoma. However, the underlying features responsible for these differences remain to be defined.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Inactivating mutations and overexpression of BCL10, a caspase recruitment domain-containing gene, in MALT lymphoma with t(1;14)(p22;q32)

Quangeng Zhang; Reiner Siebert; Minhong Yan; Bernd Hinzmann; Xiaoli Cui; Liquan Xue; Karen M. Rakestraw; Clayton W. Naeve; Georg Beckmann; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Warren G. Sanger; Hadwiga Nowotny; Michael Vesely; Evelyne Callet-Bauchu; Gilles Salles; Vishva M. Dixit; André Rosenthal; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Stephan W. Morris

Mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphomas most frequently involve the gastrointestinal tract and are the most common subset of extranodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL). Here we describe overexpression of BCL10 , a novel apoptotic signalling gene that encodes an amino-terminal caspase recruitment domain (CARD; ref. 2), in MALT lymphomas due to the recurrent t(1;14)(p22;q32) (ref. 3). BCL10 cDNAs from t(1;14)-positive MALT tumours contained a variety of mutations, most resulting in truncations either in or carboxy terminal to the CARD. Wild-type BCL10 activated NF-κB but induced apoptosis of MCF7 and 293 cells. CARD-truncation mutants were unable to induce cell death or activate NF-κB, whereas mutants with C-terminal truncations retained NF-κB activation but did not induce apoptosis. Mutant BCL10 overexpression might have a twofold lymphomagenic effect: loss of BCL10 pro-apoptosis may confer a survival advantage to MALT B-cells, and constitutive NF-κB activation may provide both anti-apoptotic and proliferative signals mediated via its transcriptional targets.


Human Pathology | 1985

Multicentric angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia: a clinicopathologic study of 16 cases.

Dennis D. Weisenburger; Bharat N. Nathwani; Carl D. Winberg; Henry Rappaport

A clinicopathologic analysis of 16 cases of multicentric angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (MAFH) was performed. Histologically, the disease was characterized by recognizable lymph node architecture that was at least partially intact, by paracortical hyperplasia with prominent vascular proliferation, and by numerous evenly distributed, apparently benign germinal centers of various types, usually including some typical hyaline-vascular centers. At the onset of the disease, 12 patients had the plasma cell (PC) type of MAFH, three patients had the hyaline-vascular (HV) type, and one patient presented with PC and HV types at separate sites. Transitions between the PC and HV types were observed in two cases. Immunologic studies demonstrated polyclonal populations of plasma cells in the lymph nodes of all patients and the absence of suppressor T lymphocytes in the one patient tested. Clinically, the patients had constitutional symptoms, multicentric lymphadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly in many cases, and abnormal laboratory findings, including anemia, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, and bone marrow plasmacytosis. The 16 patients were placed in four different clinical groups based on presentation and course: stable disease, chronic relapsing disease, aggressive disease, and development of malignant lymphoma. Ten of the 16 patients died (median survival, 26 months; range, eight to 170 months). Multicentric angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia appears to be a variant of classic angiofollicular lymph node hyperplasia (Castlemans disease) and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality.

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James O. Armitage

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Julie M. Vose

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Wing C. Chan

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Timothy C. Greiner

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Philip J. Bierman

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Warren G. Sanger

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Elias Campo

University of Barcelona

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Martin Bast

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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