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Featured researches published by Gary Glober.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1999

Tumor downstaging and sphincter preservation with preoperative chemoradiation in locally advanced rectal cancer: the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center experience

Nora A. Janjan; Vincent S. Khoo; James L. Abbruzzese; Richard Pazdur; Ronelle A. DuBrow; Karen R. Cleary; Pamela K. Allen; Patrick M. Lynch; Gary Glober; Robert A. Wolff; Tyvin A. Rich; John M. Skibber

PURPOSE To evaluate the rates of tumor downstaging after preoperative chemoradiation for locally advanced rectal cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS Preoperative chemoradiotherapy (CTX/XRT) that delivered 45 Gy in 25 fractions over 5 weeks with continuous infusion 5-fluorouracil (300 mg/m2/day) was given to 117 patients. The pretreatment stage distribution, as determined by endorectal ultrasound (u), included uT2N0 in 2%, uT3N0 in 47%, uT3N1 in 49%, and uT4N0 in 2% of cases; endorectal ultrasound was not performed in 13% of cases (15 patients). Approximately 6 weeks after completion of CTX/XRT, surgery was performed. RESULTS The pathological tumor stages were Tis-2N0 in 26%, T2N1 in 5%, T3N0 in 21%, T3N1 in 15%, T4N0 in 5%, and T4NI in 1%; a complete response (CR) to preoperative CTX/XRT was pathologically confirmed in 32 (27%) of patients. Tumor downstaging occurred in 72 (62%) cases. Only 3% of cases had pathologic evidence of progressive disease. Pretreatment tumor size (< 5 cm vs. > or = 5 cm) was the only factor predictive of tumor downstaging (p < 0.04). A decrease of > 1 T-stage level was accomplished in 45% of those downstaged. Overall, a sphincter-saving (SP) procedure was possible in 59% of patients and an abdominoperineal resection (APR) was required in 41 % of cases. Factors predictive of SP included downstaging (p < 0.03), age > 40 years (p < 0.007), pretreatment tumor distance, 3 to 6 cm from the anal verge (p < 0.00001), tumor size <6 cm (p < 0.02), mobility (p < 0.004), tumor stage <T4 (p < 0.01), and uN negative (p < 0.008). SP was performed in 23 patients (72%) with a CR and in 48 (67%) of downstaged cases. Among the 69 tumors located < 6 cm from the anal verge, 29 (42%) were resected with a SP. The level of response was important for tumors located < 6 cm from the anal verge because a SP was performed in 9 of the 17 (53%) CRs in this group while only 20 of 52 patients (38%) had a SP when residual disease was present after CTX/XRT. For tumors located > 6 cm from the anal verge, SP was performed in 14 of the 15 (93%) patients with a CR and 32 of 33 (97%) of patients with residual disease (p < 0.00004). CONCLUSIONS Significant tumor downstaging results from preoperative chemoradiation allowing sphincter sparing surgery in over 40% of patients whose tumors were located < 6 cm from the anal verge and who otherwise would have required colostomy.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1999

Antibiotic Treatment of Gastric Lymphoma of Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue: An Uncontrolled Trial

Gideon Steinbach; Richard J. Ford; Gary Glober; Dory Sample; Frederick B. Hagemeister; Patrick M. Lynch; Peter McLaughlin; Maria Alma Rodriguez; Jorge Romaguera; Andreas H. Sarris; Anas Younes; Rajyalakshmi Luthra; John T. Manning; Constance M. Johnson; Sandeep Lahoti; Yu Shen; Jeffrey E. Lee; Rodger J. Winn; Robert M. Genta; David Y. Graham; Fernando Cabanillas

Gastric low-grade B-cell lymphoma is related to Helicobacter pylori infection according to histopathologic, epidemiologic, and clinical characteristics. Although normal gastric mucosa does not contain organized lymphoid tissue, lymphoid follicles develop with H. pylori infection (1) and with autoimmune diseases, such as the Sjgren syndrome (2). Low-grade B-cell lymphoma has been postulated to arise within this mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) and is often called low-grade MALT lymphoma (3, 4). The incidence of gastric low- and high-grade MALT lymphoma is increased in populations with a high prevalence of H. pylori infection, and H. pylori infection has been reported in up to 90% of patients with low-grade MALT lymphoma (4-6). In addition, investigators have shown that growth of this tumor may depend on antigenic stimulation by H. pylori: They demonstrated that the proliferation of lymphoma B cells in cell culture can be stimulated by H. pylori-specific T cells and related cytokines in the presence of H. pylori (7). On the basis of these findings, trials of antibiotic treatment of gastric low-grade MALT lymphoma have been initiated, and the regression of lymphoma after cure of H. pylori infection has been reported in a high proportion of patients with low tumor burden (8-13). Data on patients with significant tumor infiltration are still forthcoming (13, 14). Because MALT lymphoma has only recently been approached as a distinct clinicopathologic entity (15, 16), its natural history and clinical course are not fully defined. Current data suggest that it is often an indolent tumor with long periods of mild activity and confinement to the stomach. Patients often present with nonspecific upper intestinal discomfort, ulcer-associated symptoms, or gastric bleeding. The endoscopic appearance may suggest benign gastritis, and extensive biopsies may be required for diagnosis. Progression to significant tumor mass, dissemination, or transformation to high-grade, aggressive lymphoma occur in an undefined subset of patients, who may present with early satiety or weight loss. Spontaneous remissions are rare (17-20). Because low-grade MALT lymphoma is an uncommon, often indolent form of cancer with few clinical findings and because the risk for progression to high-grade MALT lymphoma is still unknown (15, 16), definitive data on cure require long-term follow-up of large cohorts from standardized clinical trials. This report presents an interim analysis of an ongoing trial designed to determine the long-term response of low-grade gastric MALT lymphoma to antibiotic treatment and to define criteria for treatment and follow-up. Methods Patients Patients with gastric MALT lymphoma restricted to the stomach and perigastric lymph nodes (modified Ann Arbor stage I and II N1) were eligible for the study. The University of Texas, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center (MDACC), Internal Review Board approved the study, and all patients provided written informed consent. The National Cancer Institute and the institutional review boards of participating institutions approved the multi-institutional protocol. To enable a follow-up period of at least 18 months, only patients treated before May 1997 were included in this analysis. Study Design and Treatment The interim data are derived from an ongoing, prospective, uncontrolled treatment trial with third-party patient registry. Patients were studied at four participating centers. Pathologic diagnosis and resolution of MALT lymphoma were confirmed at MDACC, and all but one patient were examined endoscopically at MDACC. Study design included 1) tumor staging with bilateral bone marrow biopsies and aspirates and computed tomography of the abdomen and pelvis done at baseline and yearly; 2) endoscopy at baseline, at weeks 6 to 8, at 3- to 4-month intervals thereafter until resolution of MALT lymphoma was seen on two consecutive endoscopies, at 6-month intervals thereafter for 2 years, and then yearly thereafter; and 3) endoscopic ultrasonography at baseline and at each endoscopy until resolution of masses or infiltration of the muscularis propria, if present (defined as thickness>2 mm or obliteration of wall architecture), and then at 6- to 12-month intervals. The treatment protocol consisted of two of the following three oral antibiotic regimens1] amoxicillin, 750 mg three times daily, and clarithromycin, 500 mg three times daily; 2) tetracycline, 500 mg four times daily, and clarithromycin, 500 mg three times daily; or 3) tetracycline, 500 mg four times daily, and metronidazole, 500 mg three times dailyadministered sequentially for 21 days at baseline and at 8 weeks along with a proton-pump inhibitor (lansoprazole, 30 mg twice daily [n=29], or omeprazole, 20 mg twice daily [n=5]), and bismuth subsalicylate, two tablets four times daily. Patients who were allergic to penicillin received the tetracycline-based regimens. Tumor Staging Tumors were staged endoscopically to separate superficial gastritis from significant ulcers and infiltration and from mass lesions. A modified Ann Arbor staging system that incorporated changes proposed by Blackledge, Musshoff, and Rohatiner and their coworkers was used initially (21-23). The TNM (tumor, node, metastasis) classification of the American Joint Committee on Cancer and Union Internationale Contre le Cancer (24, 25), which corresponds to the modified Ann Arbor staging, was subsequently adapted and applied (Table 1). The extent of tumor (T) infiltration through the stomach wall and to adjacent organs corresponds to T staging of gastric cancer. Modified Ann Arbor stage I corresponds to stage I T1-4 N0 M0. Modified Ann Arbor stage II1 (22) (involvement of perigastric lymph nodes) corresponds to stage II T1-4 N1 M0. Modified Ann Arbor stage II2 (22) (involvement of distant lymph nodes caudal to the diaphragm, including para-aortic and retroperitoneal lymph nodes) corresponds to stage II T1-4 N2 M0. Ann Arbor stage III (lymph node involvement on both sides of the diaphragm) is designated by stage III T1-4 N3 M0. Ann Arbor stage IV (organ metastasis or involvement of a second extranodal site) is designated by stage IV T1-4 N0-3 M1. Table 1. Staging of Gastric Lymphoma of Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue Criteria for Response Response to treatment was evaluated at 3- to 4-month intervals beginning with the fifth month after treatment. Treatment was considered to have failed if patients did not meet criteria for improvement; these patients were removed from the study. In stage I T2, I T3, and II N1 tumors, improvement was defined as regression to a lower stage, 30% reduction in abnormal wall thickness, or 30% reduction in the size of the tumor mass (product of the greatest diameters). These patients remained in the study if sequential improvement was evident at each 3-month interval. Patients with persistent mucosal disease (stage I T1) documented by histopathology were formally reviewed at 12-month intervals; a consensus on withdrawal from or continuation in the study was based on clinical considerations, current knowledge, and patient preference. Initially, patients with persistent stage I T1 disease were withdrawn from the study at 12 months (n=2). Subsequently, patients with persistent stage I T1 disease were observed for more than 36 months if improvement was documented at 12-month intervals. Criteria for improvement in stage I T1 disease included reduction in the number of affected gastric sites or affected biopsy specimens or improved histologic score (8), endoscopic appearance of progressive atrophy and scarring, or resolution of abnormal wall thickness on endoscopic ultrasonography. Complete remission was defined as the absence of histopathologic evidence of lymphoma and an endoscopic appearance of gastritis or better. Partial remission was defined as a reduction in endoscopic stage in stage I T2 disease or at least 50% reduction in the size of the mass lesions in stage I T3 or II T3 N1 disease. In stage I T1 disease, partial remission was defined as at least 75% reduction in the number of gastric sites or biopsy specimens showing lymphoma. Treatment was considered to have failed in patients who met criteria for failure or who were withdrawn from the study before complete remission occurred. Endoscopy and Biopsies The gastric mapping protocol included 2 or more maximum-capacity biopsies from each of 7 to 12 areas of the gastric map (26) and at least 6 biopsies from 2 or more of the most abnormal areas. The more extensive mapping was done at baseline and at clinically relevant time points. Studies, done at defined intervals, included routine histopathology, H. pylori testing by Genta stain, rapid urease test (CLO-test, Delta West, Bentley, Australia) or serology, Southern blot or polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for immunoglobulin gene rearrangement analysis, and immunoglobulin light-chain immunocytochemistry. Diagnostic Criteria Low-grade B-cell MALT lymphoma was diagnosed by established histologic criteria [15, 27], including 1) a dense diffuse infiltrate of marginal-zone centrocyte-like B cells with round to slightly irregular nuclear contours, often with abundant pale cytoplasm; 2) presence of lymphoepithelial lesions, characterized by infiltration and disruption of gastric glands or crypts by groups of neoplastic lymphoid cells; and 3) absence of any areas where large cells predominate. Minor criteria supporting but not essential for diagnosis included presence of immunoglobulin light-chain restriction; presence of residual secondary follicle centers with or without intact mantles; and presence of follicular colonization, defined as replacement of follicle centers by neoplastic lymphoid cells. Immunophenotypic expression of pan-B-cell antigens, such as CD20, and lack of expression of CD5 or CD10 supported the diagnosis. Patients with foci of large-cell transformation were excluded from the study. Southern Blot and Polymerase Chain Reaction High-molec


Gastroenterology | 1996

Cell Kinetic Analysis of Intact Rat Colonic Crypts by Confocal Microscopy and Immunofluorescence

Hideyuki Konishi; Gideon Steinbach; Walter N. Hittelman; Kinya Fujita; J. Jack Lee; Gary Glober; Bernard Levin; Michael Andreeff; Angela Goodacre; Nicholas H. A. Terry

BACKGROUND & AIMS Precise quantitative and spatial analysis of cell cycle-related biomarkers in colonic crypts is often vital for studies of colon carcinogenesis and cancer prevention. To overcome the limitations of histology, confocal laser microscopy of microdissected whole crypts was used to quantitate S phase and mitotic cells. METHODS Microdissected distal colonic crypts were studied in a modified rat starvation refeeding model. S phase cells were labeled in vivo with 5-bromodeoxyuridine. Mitotic cells were labeled with MPM2 (antibody to mitosis-specific epitope) and also assessed for chromatin morphology with propidium iodide. Sequential optical crypt sections, produced by confocal microscopy, were digitally imaged. S phase labeling indices per whole crypt were also compared with those derived by conventional immunohistochemistry. RESULTS S phase and mitotic cells were clearly discriminated without background staining. The labeled S phase cell number and fraction per whole crypt were significantly decreased with starvation and increased with refeeding. Variability in the labeling index between whole crypts analyzed by confocal microscopy was significantly smaller than between histological crypt sections. Consequently, the intervention contributed to 92.2% of the total variability of the labeling index in whole crypts but only to 59% of the variability in histological sections. CONCLUSIONS Major limitations of histology are overcome by crypt microdissection and confocal microscopic analysis. The total crypt cell population as well as labeled M phase and S phase cells can be imaged, localized, and quantitated with improved precision.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 1999

Recurrent bleeding from a duodenal plasmacytoma treated successfully with embolization of the gastroduodenal artery.

Iqbal Siddique; Konstantinos A. Papadakis; Donna M. Weber; Gary Glober

Recurrent bleeding from a duodenal plasmacytoma treated successfully with embolization of the gastroduodenal artery


Journal of Chronic Diseases | 1985

The effect of partial gastrectomy on lipoproteins and other characteristics.

Gary Glober; George G. Rhoads; Francis Liu; Abraham Kagan

Among 6860 50-77 year old men of Japanese ancestry examined in Honolulu 291 were known to have had a gastrectomy for benign gastric (189) or duodenal (102) ulcer, and 132 had documented peptic ulcer disease treated medically. Total serum cholesterol averaged 12 mg% lower in the surgical group than in the general population (p less than 0.01) while the medically treated men had intermediate values. Fasting lipoprotein determinations done in a sub-sample showed that the lower total cholesterol in the surgical group was due to depressed LDL, while HDL was higher in the operated men than in either the general population or the medically treated patients (p less than 0.01). The surgical patients were heavier users of cigarettes, beer and coffee and averaged about 10 lb. lighter than either the medically treated patients or the rest of the population. However, in multivariate analysis these differences did not not account for the differences in lipoproteins. A small decrement in blood pressure in the surgical patients as compared to the rest of the population became non-significant when weight and others factors were taken into account.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1967

The Use of Radioisotope Scanning in Medical Diagnosis: Applications in Diseases of Brain, Lung, Liver, and Heart

Milo M. Webber; William E. Bloomer; Paul H. Crandall; James Drinkard; Gary Glober; Harry H. Herbst; Delores E. Johnson; Fred A. Killeffer; Rex N. Mcalpin; Martin A. Pops; W. Eugene Stern; Leonard A. Swanson; George V. Taplin; William A. Weidner

Excerpt Dr. Milo M. Webber: This conference, arranged by Dr. Leslie R. Bennett, Head of the Division of Nuclear Medicine, focuses attention on some of the developments in the use of radioisotope sc...


Oncologist | 2000

SPIKES—A Six-Step Protocol for Delivering Bad News: Application to the Patient with Cancer

Walter F. Baile; Robert Buckman; Renato Lenzi; Gary Glober; Estela A. Beale; Andrzej P. Kudelka


Oncology | 1999

Discussing disease progression and end-of-life decisions.

Walter F. Baile; Gary Glober; Renato Lenzi; Estela A. Beale; Andrzej P. Kudelka


Cancer Research | 1979

Fecal bile acids in two Japanese populations with different colon cancer risks.

Howard F. Mower; Ralph M. Ray; Robert Shoff; Grant N. Stemmermann; Abraham M. Y. Nomura; Gary Glober; Sigetosi Kamiyama; Akio Shimada; Hiroshi Yamakawa


Journal of Nutrition | 1996

Calcium Supplementation Modifies the Relative Amounts of Bile Acids in Bile and Affects Key Aspects of Human Colon Physiology

Joanne R. Lupton; Gideon Steinbach; Wen-Chi Chang; Barbara C. O'Brien; Stella Wiese; Cynthia Stoltzfus; Gary Glober; Michael J. Wargovich; R. Sue McPherson; Rodger J. Winn

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Andrzej P. Kudelka

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Estela A. Beale

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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J. Jack Lee

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Kinya Fujita

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Nicholas H. A. Terry

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Patrick M. Lynch

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Renato Lenzi

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Walter F. Baile

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Walter N. Hittelman

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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