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Featured researches published by Dov Kadmon.


The Journal of Urology | 2001

OPTIMAL COMBINATIONS OF SYSTEMATIC SEXTANT AND LATERALLY DIRECTED BIOPSIES FOR THE DETECTION OF PROSTATE CANCER

John L. Gore; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Brian J. Miles; Dov Kadmon; Ning Jiang; Thomas M. Wheeler; Kevin M. Slawin

PURPOSE The standard sextant protocol for obtaining transrectal ultrasound guided biopsy of the prostate has been shown to underestimate the presence of prostate cancer. Studies have demonstrated an increased cancer detection rate with additional laterally directed biopsies. We compared the sensitivity of individual biopsy cores and evaluated combinations of these cores to identify an optimal biopsy strategy. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 396 consecutive patients underwent biopsy of the lateral peripheral zone in addition to standard sextant biopsy. The cancer detection rate for each biopsy core was calculated. The sensitivity of different combinations of biopsy cores was compared with those of standard sextant biopsies and with a 12 core biopsy protocol that combined the standard sextant biopsy with a complete set of laterally directed cores. RESULTS Cancer was detected in 160 of 396 (40.3%) patients. Of the possible combinations of biopsy cores a strategy that included laterally directed cores at the base, mid gland and apex of the prostate with mid lobar base and apical cores detected 98.5% of cancers. The detection rate of this 10 core biopsy regimen was significantly better than that of the standard sextant protocol (p < or =0.001), and was equivalent to that of the 12 core regional biopsy (p > or =0.302). CONCLUSIONS The standard sextant protocol failed to detect a large proportion of cancers located laterally in the peripheral zone. A 10 core biopsy regimen that combined laterally directed cores at the base, mid gland and apex of the prostate with mid lobar biopsy cores at the base and apex maximizes the sensitivity of transrectal ultrasound guided systematic biopsy.


The Journal of Urology | 1991

Elevated Plasma Chromogranin-A Concentrations in Prostatic Carcinoma

Dov Kadmon; Timothy C. Thompson; Garrett R. Lynch; Peter T. Scardino

Chromogranin-A is considered a sensitive immunohistochemical tissue marker in neuroendocrine prostatic carcinoma. We report that the plasma chromogranin-A level was elevated in 48% of 25 patients with stage D2 prostate cancer, and suggest that this marker can be used to monitor the clinical course of these patients.


Urology | 1999

Treatment with finasteride preserves usefulness of prostate-specific antigen in the detection of prostate cancer: results of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial

Gerald L. Andriole; Harry A. Guess; Jonathan I. Epstein; H. Wise; Dov Kadmon; E. D. Crawford; Perry B. Hudson; C. L. Jackson; Nicholas A. Romas; L. Patterson; Thomas J. Cook; Joanne Waldstreicher

OBJECTIVES To evaluate prostate cancer detection and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) among men with benign prostatic hyperplasia treated with finasteride. METHODS Three thousand forty men 45 to 78 years of age with PSA less than 10 ng/mL and no history of prostate cancer were randomized in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to finasteride (n = 1524) or placebo (n = 1516) for up to 4 years. A prerandomization biopsy negative for prostate cancer was obtained in 98% of patients with a screening PSA of 4.0 ng/mL or more, and an end-of-study biopsy was requested of all such patients without a recent second negative biopsy or a prostate cancer diagnosis. RESULTS Overall, 644 patients (21%) underwent biopsy and 201 (6.6%) underwent transurethral resection of the prostate. Prostate cancer was diagnosed in 4.7% of men on finasteride and 5.1% on placebo (P = 0.7). Elevated PSA prompted diagnosis in 35% of cases on finasteride and 34% on placebo. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve for last PSA was 0.84 on finasteride and 0.79 on placebo (P = 0.07). Use of an upper limit of normal for last PSA of 2.0 ng/mL for finasteride and 4.0 ng/mL for placebo yielded similar sensitivity (66% versus 70%, P = 0.6), higher specificity (82% versus 74%, P < 0.0001), and a higher likelihood ratio (3.6 versus 2.7, P < 0.05) for finasteride than for placebo. CONCLUSIONS In men treated with finasteride, multiplying PSA by 2 and using normal ranges for untreated men preserves the usefulness of PSA for prostate cancer detection.


Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases | 2005

The emerging role of the PI3-K-Akt pathway in prostate cancer progression

Likun Li; Michael Ittmann; Gustavo Ayala; M. J. Tsai; Robert J. Amato; Thomas M. Wheeler; Brian J. Miles; Dov Kadmon; Timothy C. Thompson

The PI3-K-Akt pathway plays a central role in the development and progression of prostate cancer and other malignancies. We review original studies and summarize relevant sections of previous reviews concerning the relationships between abnormalities in the PI3-K-Akt pathway and prostate cancer progression. We discuss laboratory and clinical data that indicate gene perturbation and dysregulation of PI3-K-Akt pathway is common in prostate cancer and other malignancies. We further discuss the critical role of the PI3-K-Akt pathway in the oncogenic signaling network and provide examples that establish the PI3-K-Akt pathway as a focal point for the future development of informative biomarkers and effective therapies for prostate cancer.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Cancer-Related Axonogenesis and Neurogenesis in Prostate Cancer

Gustavo Ayala; Hong Dai; Michael Powell; Rile Li; Yi Ding; Thomas M. Wheeler; David Shine; Dov Kadmon; Timothy C. Thompson; Brian J. Miles; Michael Ittmann; David R. Rowley

Purpose: Perineural invasion is the only interaction between cancer cells and nerves studied to date. It is a symbiotic relationship between cancer and nerves that results in growth advantage for both. In this article, we present data on a novel biological phenomenon, cancer-related axonogenesis and neurogenesis. Experimental Design: We identify spatial and temporal associations between increased nerve density and preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions of the human prostate. Results: Nerve density was increased in cancer areas as well as in preneoplastic lesions compared with controls. Two- and three-dimensional reconstructions of entire prostates confirmed axonogenesis in human tumors. Furthermore, patients with prostate cancer had increased numbers of neurons in their prostatic ganglia compared with controls, corroborating neurogenesis. Finally, two in vitro models confirmed that cancer cells, particularly when interacting with nerves in perineural invasion, induce neurite outgrowth in prostate cancer. Neurogenesis is correlated with features of aggressive prostate cancer and with recurrence in prostate cancer. We also present a putative regulatory mechanism based on semaphorin 4F (S4F). S4F is overexpressed in cancers cells in the perineural in vitro model. Overexpression of S4F in prostate cancer cells induces neurogenesis in the N1E-115 neurogenesis assay and S4F inhibition by small interfering RNA blocks this effect. Conclusions: This is the first description of cancer-related neurogenesis and its putative regulatory mechanism.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2000

Phase I/II trial evaluating combined radiotherapy and in situ gene therapy with or without hormonal therapy in the treatment of prostate cancer--a preliminary report.

Bin S. Teh; Estuardo Aguilar-Cordova; Kenneth Kernen; Chieng Chung Chou; Moshe Shalev; Maria T. Vlachaki; Brian J. Miles; Dov Kadmon; Wei Yuan Mai; James Caillouet; Maria Davis; Gustavo Ayala; Thomas M. Wheeler; Jett Brady; L. Steve Carpenter; Hsin H. Lu; J. Kam Chiu; Shiao Y. Woo; Timothy C. Thompson; E. Brian Butler

PURPOSE To report the preliminary results of a Phase I/II study combining radiotherapy and in situ gene therapy (adenovirus/herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene/valacyclovir) with or without hormonal therapy in the treatment of prostate cancer. METHODS AND MATERIALS Arm A: low-risk patients (T1-T2a, Gleason score <7, pretreatment PSA <10) were treated with combined radio-gene therapy. A mean dose of 76 Gy was delivered to the prostate with intensity-modulated radiotherapy. Arm B: high-risk patients (T2b-T3, Gleason score >or=7, pretreatment PSA >or=10) were treated with combined radio-gene therapy and hormonal therapy. Hormonal therapy was comprised of a 4-month leuprolide injection and 2-week use of flutamide. Arm C: Stage D1 (positive pelvic lymph node) patients received the same regimen as Arm B, with the additional 45 Gy to the pelvic lymphatics. Treatment-related toxicity was assessed using Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program common toxicity score and Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) toxicity score. RESULTS Thirty patients (13 in Arm A, 14 in Arm B, and 3 in Arm C) completed the trial. Median follow-up was 5.5 months. Eleven patients (37%) developed flu-like symptoms (Cancer Therapy Evaluation Program Grade 1) of fatigue and chills/rigors after gene therapy injection but recovered within 24 h. Four patients (13%) and 2 patients (7%) developed Grade 1 and 2 fever, respectively. There was no patient with weight loss. One patient in Arm B developed Grade 3 elevation in liver enzyme, whereas 11 and 2 patients developed Grade 1 and 2 abnormal liver function tests. There was no Grade 2 or above hematologic toxicity. Three patients had transient rise in creatinine. There was no RTOG Grade 3 or above lower gastrointestinal toxicity. Toxicity levels were as follows: 4 patients (13%), Grade 2; 6 patients (20%), Grade 1; and 20 patients (67%), no toxicity. There was 1 patient with RTOG Grade 3 genitourinary toxicity, 12 patients (40%) with Grade 2, 8 patients (27%) with Grade 1, and 9 patients (30%) with no toxicity. No patient dropped out from the trial or had to withhold treatment because of severe toxicity. CONCLUSIONS This is the first trial of its kind in the field of prostate cancer that aims to expand the therapeutic index of radiotherapy by combining in situ gene therapy. Initial experience has demonstrated the safety of this approach. There is no added toxicity to each therapy used alone. Long-term follow-up and larger cohort studies are warranted to evaluate long-term toxicity and efficacy.


Human Gene Therapy | 2001

Prostate-Specific Antigen Response and Systemic T Cell Activation After In Situ Gene Therapy in Prostate Cancer Patients Failing Radiotherapy

Brian J. Miles; Moshe Shalev; Estuardo Aguilar-Cordova; Terry L. Timme; Hon-Man Lee; Guang Yang; Howard L. Adler; Kenneth Kernen; Christina K. Pramudji; Takefumi Satoh; Yehoshua Gdor; Chengzhen Ren; Gustavo Ayala; Thomas M. Wheeler; E.B. Butler; Dov Kadmon; Timothy C. Thompson

In an extended phase I/II study we evaluated 36 prostate cancer patients with local recurrence after radiotherapy who received single or repeated cycles of replication-deficient adenoviral vector (ADV)-mediated herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) plus ganciclovir (GCV) in situ gene therapy with respect to serum PSA levels, alterations in immune cells, and numbers of apoptotic cells in needle biopsies. An initial cycle of HSV-tk plus GCV gene therapy caused a significant prolongation of the mean serum PSA-doubling time (PSADT) from 15.9 to 42.5 months (p = 0.0271) and in 28 of the injected patients (77.8%) there was a mean PSA reduction (PSAR) of 28%. It took a mean of 8.5 months for the PSA to return to the initial PSA (TR-PSA) value. A repeated cycle of gene therapy failed to significantly extend PSADT but did result in significant increases in PSAR (29.4%) and TR-PSA (10.5 months). Moderately increased serum adenovirus antibody titers were generally observed 2 weeks after initial vector injection. Also at this time there was a statistically significant increase in the mean percent of CD8(+) T cells positive for the HLA-DR marker of activation in peripheral blood (p = 0.0088). Studies using prostate biopsies obtained at the same time point demonstrated that vector DNA was detectable by PCR in most samples yet all patients remained positive for prostate cancer in at least one biopsy core. Further analysis demonstrated a correlation between the level of CD8(+) cells and the number of apoptotic cells in biopsies containing cancer cells (p = 0.042). We conclude that repeated cycles of in situ HSV-tk plus GCV gene therapy can be administered to prostate cancer patients who failed radiotherapy and have a localized recurrence. Biological responses to this experimental therapy including increases in PSADT, PSAR, and TR-PSA, and activated CD8(+) T cells present in the peripheral blood, were demonstrated. Interestingly, the density of CD8(+) cells in posttreatment biopsies correlated with the number of apoptotic cells.


American Journal of Pathology | 2003

Disruption of the Caveolin-1 Gene Impairs Renal Calcium Reabsorption and Leads to Hypercalciuria and Urolithiasis

Guangwen Cao; Guang Yang; Terry L. Timme; Takashi Saika; Luan D. Truong; Takefumi Satoh; Alexei Goltsov; Sang Hee Park; Taoyan Men; Nobuyuki Kusaka; Weihua Tian; Chengzhen Ren; Hongyu Wang; Dov Kadmon; Wei Wen Cai; A. Craig Chinault; Timothy B. Boone; Allan Bradley; Timothy C. Thompson

Using LoxP/Cre technology, we generated a knockout mouse homozygous for a null mutation in exon 2 of Cav1. In male Cav1-/- animals, we observed a dramatic increase in the incidence of urinary calcium stone formation. In 5-month-old male mice, the incidence of early urinary calculi was 67% in Cav1-/- mice compared to 19% in Cav1+/+ animals. Frank stone formation was observed in 13% of Cav1-/- males but was not seen in Cav1+/+ mice. Urine calcium concentration was significantly higher in Cav1-/- male mice compared to Cav1+/+ mice. In Cav1-/- mice, distal convoluted tubule cells were completely devoid of Cav1 and the localization of plasma membrane calcium ATPase was disrupted. Functional studies confirmed that active calcium absorption was significantly reduced in Cav1-/- compared to Cav1+/+ male mice. These results demonstrate that disruption of the Cav1 gene promotes the progressive steps required for urinary calcium stone formation and establish a new mouse model for urinary stone disease.


Cancer Research | 2008

Tumor Cell–Secreted Caveolin-1 Has Proangiogenic Activities in Prostate Cancer

Salahaldin A. Tahir; Guang Yang; Alexei Goltsov; Masami Watanabe; Ken Ichi Tabata; Josephine Addai; El Moataz Abdel Fattah; Dov Kadmon; Timothy C. Thompson

Caveolin, a major structural component of specialized plasma membrane invaginations (caveolae) that participate in diverse cellular activities, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several human diseases, including cancer. We showed in earlier studies that caveolin-1 (cav-1) is consistently and strongly overexpressed in metastatic prostate cancer and is secreted in a biologically active form by virulent prostate cancer cells. Using both in vitro and in vivo model systems, we now present evidence supporting a proangiogenic role for cav-1 in prostate cancer development and progression. Recombinant cav-1 (rcav-1) was taken up by cav-1(-/-) endothelial cells through either a lipid raft/caveolae- or clathrin-dependent mechanism, leading to specific angiogenic activities (tubule formation, cell migration, and nitric oxide production) that were mediated by rcav-1 stimulation of the PI3K-Akt-eNOS signaling module. Pathologic angiogenesis induced by cav-1 in prostate cancer-bearing mice correlated with an increased frequency, number, and size of lung metastases. We propose that in addition to its antiapoptotic role, cav-1 secreted by prostate cancer cells functions critically as a proangiogenic factor in metastatic progression of this tumor. These new insights into cav-1 function in prostate cancer may provide a base for the design of clinically applicable therapeutic strategies.


Prostate Cancer and Prostatic Diseases | 2010

The role of caveolin-1 in prostate cancer: Clinical implications

Timothy C. Thompson; Salahaldin A. Tahir; Likun Li; Masami Watanabe; Koji Naruishi; Guang Yang; Dov Kadmon; Christopher J. Logothetis; Patricia Troncoso; Chengzhen Ren; Alexei Goltsov; Sanghee Park

Caveolin-1 (cav-1) is reportedly overexpressed in prostate cancer cells and is associated with disease progression. Specific oncogenic activities of cav-1 associated with Akt activation also occur in prostate cancer. A membrane-associated protein, cav-1, is nonetheless secreted by prostate cancer cells; results of recent studies showed that secreted cav-1 can stimulate cell survival and angiogenic activities, defining a role for cav-1 in the prostate cancer microenvironment. Serum cav-1 levels were also higher in prostate cancer patients than in control men without prostate cancer, and the preoperative serum cav-1 concentration had prognostic potential in men undergoing radical prostatectomy. Secreted cav-1 is therefore a potential biomarker and therapeutic target for prostate cancer.

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Brian J. Miles

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Gustavo Ayala

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Thomas M. Wheeler

Baylor College of Medicine

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Terry L. Timme

Baylor College of Medicine

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Bin S. Teh

Houston Methodist Hospital

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Peter T. Scardino

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Anna Frolov

Baylor College of Medicine

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