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Featured researches published by G.J. van Kamp.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2000

Survival in Early Breast Cancer Patients Is Favorably Influenced by a Natural Humoral Immune Response to Polymorphic Epithelial Mucin

S. von Mensdorff-Pouilly; A.A. Verstraeten; P. Kenemans; Frank G.M. Snijdewint; Astrid Kok; G.J. van Kamp; Marinus A. Paul; P. J. van Diest; S. Meijer; J. Hilgers

PURPOSE Polymorphic epithelial mucin (PEM or MUC1) is being studied as a vaccine substrate for the immunotherapy of patients with adenocarcinoma. The present study analyzes the incidence of naturally occurring MUC1 antibodies in early breast cancer patients and relates the presence of these antibodies in pretreatment serum to outcome of disease. MATERIALS AND METHODS We measured immunoglobulin G (IgG) and immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies to MUC1 with an enzyme-linked immunoassay (PEM.CIg), which uses a MUC1 triple-tandem repeat peptide conjugated to bovine serum albumin, in pretreatment serum samples obtained from 154 breast cancer patients (52 with stage I disease and 102 with stage II) and 302 controls. The median disease-specific survival time of breast cancer patients was 74 months (range, 15 to 118 months). A positive test result was defined as MUC1 IgG or IgM antibody levels equal to or greater than the corresponding rounded-up median results obtained in the total breast cancer population. RESULTS A positive test result for both MUC1 IgG and IgM antibodies in pretreatment serum was associated with a significant benefit in disease-specific survival in stage I and II (P =.0116) breast cancer patients. Positive IgG and IgM MUC1 antibody levels had significant additional prognostic value to stage (P =.0437) in multivariate analysis. Disease-free survival probability did not differ significantly. However, stage II patients who tested positive for MUC1 IgG and IgM antibody and who relapsed had predominantly local recurrences or contralateral disease, as opposed to recurrences at distant sites in the patients with a negative humoral response (P =.026). CONCLUSION Early breast cancer patients with a natural humoral response to MUC1 have a higher probability of freedom from distant failure and a better disease-specific survival. MUC1 antibodies may control hematogenic tumor dissemination and outgrowth by aiding the destruction of circulating or seeded MUC1-expressing tumor cells. Vaccination of breast cancer patients with MUC1-derived (glyco)peptides in an adjuvant setting may favorably influence the outcome of disease.


European Journal of Cancer | 1996

Humoral immune response to polymorphic epithelial mucin (MUC-1) in patients with benign and malignant breast tumours

S. von Mensdorff-Pouilly; M.M. Gourevitch; P. Kenemans; A.A. Verstraeten; S.V. Litvinov; G.J. van Kamp; Sybren Meijer; J.B. Vermorken; J. Hilgers

To investigate the clinical significance of an immune response to the MUC-1 encoded polymorphic epithelial mucin (PEM) breast cancer, circulating immune complexes containing PEM (PEM.CIC) were measured in sera from 96 healthy women, in pretreatment serum samples from 40 patients with benign breast tumours and from 140 patients with breast cancer and in serum samples from 61 breast cancer patients with recurrent or progressive disease. PEM.CIC were measured using a sandwich enzyme-linked immunoassay, and PEM serum levels were measured with CA 15.3 IRMA (Centocor Inc., Malvern, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.). Cut-off levels used for PEM.CIC and CA 15.3 were 120 Optical Density Units (O.D.) x 10(3) and 30 U/ml, respectively. In benign tumours, positivity for PEM.CIC was 37.5% (15/40). 36 of the 140 patients (25.7%) in the breast cancer pretreatment group had elevated PEM.CIC values. In patients with advanced metastatic disease, positivity for PEM.CIC was 18% (11/61). PEM.CIC was elevated in 32% (24/74) of node-negative patients, but only in 20% (12/59) of node-positive patients and absolute values were higher in node-negative patients (Mann-Whitney U test, two-tailed P = 0.0168). There was an inverse correlation between positivity for PEM.CIC and extent of disease: while 3 of the 6 patients with a carcinoma in situ were positive, only 1 of the 15 patients with more than five nodes involved had elevated levels of PEM.CIC. All 7 patients with distant metastases at first diagnosis were PEM.CIC negative. 28 out of 133 patients had a recurrence during the observation period (median 55 months, range 27-84 months). 23 of these 28 patients (82%) were PEM.CIC negative at the moment of first diagnosis. None of the patients with pretreatment elevation of both PEM.CIC and CA 15.3 (n = 13) relapsed. Our preliminary clinical results suggest that a humoral immune response to PEM protects against disease progression, and further support the idea of using synthetic peptides or glycopeptides containing the immunogenic core of the mucin as cancer vaccines.


British Journal of Cancer | 1995

Polymorphic epithelial mucin (MUC-1)-containing circulating immune complexes in carcinoma patients

M.M. Gourevitch; S. von Mensdorff-Pouilly; S.V. Litvinov; P. Kenemans; G.J. van Kamp; A.A. Verstraeten; J. Hilgers

Circulating immune complexes (CICs) containing polymorphic epithelial mucin (PEM/MUC-1) were found in sera of 24.5% of 151 primary breast carcinoma patients and 18-21.4% of patients with advanced ovarian (n = 56) and breast carcinomas (n = 61), 37% of patients with benign breast tumours, but in only 2.1% of 96 healthy individuals. The incorporation of PEM into CICs affects the detection of circulating PEM in commercial immunoassays such as the CA 15-3 assay, as suggested by a negative correlation between levels of PEM-containing immune complexes (PEM-CICs) and CA 15-3 values, and confirmed by isolation of PEM from CA 15-3-negative sera containing high levels of PEM-CICs. The amounts of PEM masked by human antibodies correspond to significant values of the CA 15-3 assay when monitoring patients for carcinoma. Most antibodies in PEM-CICs were of IgG class, suggesting their specific nature to the PEM epitopes.


Fetal Diagnosis and Therapy | 2001

Maternal Serum CA125 and CA15-3 Antigen Levels in Normal and Pathological Pregnancy

G.G. Bon; P. Kenemans; A.A. Verstraeten; S. Go; P.A. Philipi; G.J. van Kamp; H.P. van Geijn; J. M. G. van Vugt

Objective: To evaluate the value of maternal serum CA125 and CA15-3 concentrations for discriminating pathological from normal pregnancies. Methods: Serum samples from 120 women, in whom pregnancy outcome was pathological, i.e. spontaneous abortion, fetal death, intrauterine growth retardation, chromosomal and structural abnormalities, and (pre)eclampsia, were assessed for CA125 and CA15-3 and compared with levels found in 350 women with a normal pregnancy outcome matched for age and duration of pregnancy. Results: Maternal CA125 serum values were significantly higher in the first and the third trimester of pregnancy (median 23.0 and 21.0 U/ml; p < 0.00001 and p < 0.001, respectively), compared to those in the second trimester (median 14.0 U/ml), but not significantly different from those obtained in pathological pregnancies. Maternal serum CA15-3 values were significantly higher during the third trimester (median 26.0 U/ml) compared to the first and second trimester of pregnancy (median 14.0 and 15.0 U/ml; p < 0.0001); CA15-3 serum levels in normal and pathological pregnancies showed no significant difference. Conclusion: Maternal serum levels of CA125 are higher during the first and third trimester of pregnancy. CA15-3 maternal serum levels are higher during the third trimester compared to the first and second trimester. Maternal CA125 and CA15-3 serum levels showed no relation with a pathological outcome of pregnancy.


European Journal of Cancer | 1993

CA 125 Serum Levels in the Early Post-operative Period Do Not Reflect Tumour Reduction Obtained by Cytoreductive Surgery

C.A. Yedema; P. Kenemans; C.M.G. Thomas; L.F. Massuger; T. Wobbes; Rob A. Verstraeten; J. Hilgers; G.J. van Kamp

In order to assess whether CA 125 serum levels reflect the outcome of cytoreductive surgery, CA 125 antigen levels were determined prior to and after debulking surgery in 50 ovarian cancer patients and compared to CA 125 serum levels before and after surgery in a control group of 140 patients undergoing laparotomy for various malignant or benign diseases. A significant CA 125 decrease in the first post-operative week was seen in 56% of ovarian cancer patients whereas 26% remained stable and 18% showed a significant increase after surgery. Although removal of tumour had been complete in all 14 stage I-II ovarian carcinomas, only 2 of these patients showed a subsequent significant CA 125 decrease after cytoreductive surgery, while 4 patients showed a significant increase. Such increases of CA 125 following surgery were also seen in uterine carcinomas (30%), in gastrointestinal carcinomas (75%) and in patients after laparotomy for benign gynaecological diseases (23%). CA 125 pre-treatment levels were significantly lower in patients with post-operative increases than in patients with stable or decreasing CA 125 patterns. Patients with stable CA 125 levels also had lower CA 125 pretreatment levels compared to patients with a post-operative CA 125 decrease. Post-operative increases were observed for at least 2 weeks after debulking in the case of ovarian cancer. Pre-operative levels of these patients were either within the normal range or moderately elevated. Serial measurements during surgery in partial debulking showed a rapid CA 125 decline within 24 h followed by increasing CA 125 values thereafter. Our data indicate that CA 125 serum levels in the direct post-operative period do not always reflect the outcome of cytoreductive surgery. There appears to be an effect on CA 125 levels caused by the abdominal surgical procedure itself. Consequently, CA 125 levels after abdominal surgery should be interpreted with caution.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2002

Molecular evidence for putative tumour suppressor genes on chromosome 13q specific to BRCA1 related ovarian and fallopian tube cancer

A P M Jongsma; Jurgen M. J. Piek; Ronald P. Zweemer; R Verheijen; J W T Klein Gebbinck; G.J. van Kamp; Ian Jacobs; P.A Shaw; P. J. van Diest; P. Kenemans

Background/Aims: Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on chromosome 13q has been reported to occur frequently in human ovarian cancer, and indications have been found that chromosome 13 may also play a specific role in the inherited form of ovarian cancer. The aim of this study was to define regions on chromosome 13 that may harbour additional tumour suppressor genes involved in the tumorigenesis of BRCA1 related ovarian and fallopian tube cancer. Materials/methods: DNA extracted from paraffin wax blocks of 36 BRCA1 associated ovarian and fallopian tube carcinomas was analysed by LOH polymerase chain reaction using seven highly polymorphic microsatellite markers spanning chromosome 13q. Results: High LOH frequencies were found on loci 13q11, 13q14, 13q21, 13q22–31, 13q32, and 13q32–4, suggesting the presence of putative tumour suppressor genes on the long arm of chromosome 13 that may play a role in the pathogenesis of BRCA1 related ovarian and fallopian tube cancer. LOH patterns appeared to be independent of the type of BRCA1 mutation, stage, and grade. Although in some cases there were indications for loss of larger parts of chromosome 13, in most cases losses were fairly randomly distributed over chromosome 13 with retained parts in between lost parts. Microsatellite instability was found in six cases. Conclusion: Several loci on chromosome 13q show high frequencies of LOH in BRCA1 related ovarian and fallopian tube cancer, and may therefore harbour putative tumour suppressor genes involved in the carcinogenesis of this particular type of hereditary cancer.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1970

A rapid and simple method for separation and quantitation of ribonucleosides

R.C. van den Bos; G.J. van Kamp; Rudi J. Planta

Abstract A simple and rapid method for the quantitative determination of ribonucleosides is described. It is based on gel filtration on polyacrylamide gels at high pH (10.6). The method is particularly useful in the quantitative analysis of ribonucleic acid end groups.


Seminars in Cancer Biology | 1999

CA 125: fundamental and clinical aspects☆

R.H.M. Verheijen; S. von Mensdorff-Pouilly; G.J. van Kamp; P. Kenemans


Clinical Chemistry | 1993

Heterologous double-determinant immunoradiometric assay CA 125 II: reliable second-generation immunoassay for determining CA 125 in serum.

P. Kenemans; G.J. van Kamp; P Oehr; Rob A. Verstraeten


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1997

Oral 17β-Estradiol Continuously Combined with Dydrogesterone Lowers Serum Lipoprotein(a) Concentrations in Healthy Postmenopausal Women1

V. Mijatovic; P. Kenemans; J. C. Netelenbos; Era Peters-Muller; G.J. van Kamp; Ga Voetberg; P. H. M. van de Weijer; M.J. van der Mooren

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P. Kenemans

VU University Medical Center

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J. Hilgers

VU University Amsterdam

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G.G. Bon

VU University Amsterdam

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V. Mijatovic

VU University Amsterdam

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Astrid Kok

VU University Medical Center

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