Gordon K.H. Au
University of Hong Kong
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JAMA | 2008
Aaron J. Schetter; Suet Yi Leung; Jane J. Sohn; Krista A. Zanetti; Elise D. Bowman; Nozomu Yanaihara; Siu Tsan Yuen; Tsun Leung Chan; Dora L.W. Kwong; Gordon K.H. Au; Chang Gong Liu; George A. Calin; Carlo M. Croce; Curtis C. Harris
CONTEXT MicroRNAs have potential as diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic targets in cancer. No study has evaluated the association between microRNA expression patterns and colon cancer prognosis or therapeutic outcome. OBJECTIVE To identify microRNA expression patterns associated with colon adenocarcinomas, prognosis, or therapeutic outcome. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS MicroRNA microarray expression profiling of tumors and paired nontumorous tissues was performed on a US test cohort of 84 patients with incident colon adenocarcinoma, recruited between 1993 and 2002. We evaluated associations with tumor status, TNM staging, survival prognosis, and response to adjuvant chemotherapy. Associations were validated in a second, independent Chinese cohort of 113 patients recruited between 1991 and 2000, using quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assays. The final date of follow-up was December 31, 2005, for the Maryland cohort and August 16, 2004, for the Hong Kong cohort. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES MicroRNAs that were differentially expressed in tumors and microRNA expression patterns associated with survival using cancer-specific death as the end point. RESULTS Thirty-seven microRNAs were differentially expressed in tumors from the test cohort. Selected for validation were miR-20a, miR-21, miR-106a, miR-181b, and miR-203, and all 5 were enriched in tumors from the validation cohort (P < .001). Higher miR-21 expression was present in adenomas (P = .006) and in tumors with more advanced TNM staging (P < .001). In situ hybridization demonstrated miR-21 to be expressed at high levels in colonic carcinoma cells. The 5-year cancer-specific survival rate was 57.5% for the Maryland cohort and was 49.5% for the Hong Kong cohort. High miR-21 expression was associated with poor survival in both the training (hazard ratio, 2.5; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-5.2) and validation cohorts (hazard ratio, 2.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-3.9), independent of clinical covariates, including TNM staging, and was associated with a poor therapeutic outcome. CONCLUSIONS Expression patterns of microRNAs are systematically altered in colon adenocarcinomas. High miR-21 expression is associated with poor survival and poor therapeutic outcome.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
Anne W.M. Lee; W. H. Lau; Stewart Y. Tung; Daniel T.T. Chua; Rick Chappell; L. Xu; Lillian L. Siu; W.M. Sze; To-Wai Leung; Jonathan S. T. Sham; Roger K.C. Ngan; Stephen C.K. Law; T.K. Yau; Joseph Sk Au; Brian O'Sullivan; Ellie S.Y. Pang; Gordon K.H. Au; Joseph Lau
PURPOSE This randomized study compared the results achieved by concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CRT) versus radiotherapy (RT) alone for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) with advanced nodal disease. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with nonkeratinizing/undifferentiated NPC staged T1-4N2-3M0 were randomized to CRT or RT. Both arms were treated with the same RT technique and dose fractionation. The CRT patients were given cisplatin 100 mg/m2 on days 1, 22, and 43, followed by cisplatin 80 mg/m2 and fluorouracil 1,000 mg/m2/d for 96 hours starting on days 71, 99, and 127. RESULTS From 1999 to January 2004, 348 eligible patients were randomly assigned; the median follow-up was 2.3 years. The two arms were well-balanced in all prognostic factors and RT parameters. The CRT arm achieved significantly higher failure-free survival (72% v 62% at 3-year, P = .027), mostly as a result of an improvement in locoregional control (92% v 82%, P = .005). However, distant control did not improve significantly (76% v 73%, P = .47), and the overall survival rates were almost identical (78% v 78%, P = .97). In addition, the CRT arm had significantly more acute toxicities (84% v 53%, P < .001) and late toxicities (28% v 13% at 3-year, P = .024). CONCLUSION Preliminary results confirmed that CRT could significantly improve tumor control, particularly at locoregional sites. However, there was significant increase in the risk of toxicities and no early gain in overall survival. Longer follow-up is needed to confirm the ultimate therapeutic ratio.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004
Dora L.W. Kwong; Jonathan S.T. Sham; Gordon K.H. Au; Daniel T.T. Chua; Philip W.K. Kwong; Ashley C. K. Cheng; P.M. Wu; Martin Law; Carol Kwok; C. C. Yau; Koon-Yat Wan; Raymond Tsz-Tong Chan; Damon D.K. Choy
PURPOSE To study the efficacy of concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CRT) and adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with Hos stage T3 or N2/N3 NPC or neck node > or = 4 cm were eligible. Patients were randomly assigned to have radiotherapy (RT) or CRT with uracil and tegafur and to have AC or no AC after RT/CRT. AC comprised alternating cisplatin, fluorouracil, vincristine, bleomycin, and methotrexate for six cycles. There were four treatment groups: A, RT; B, CRT; C, RT and AC; D, CRT and AC. For CRT versus RT, groups B and D were compared with groups A and C. For AC versus no AC, groups C and D were compared with groups A and B. RESULTS Three-year failure-free survival (FFS) and overall survival (OS) for CRT versus RT were 69.3% versus 57.8% and 86.5% versus 76.8%, respectively (P =.14 and.06; n = 110 v 109). Distant metastases rate (DMR) was significantly reduced with CRT (14.8% v 29.4%; P =.026). Locoregional failure rates (LRFR) were similar (20% v 27.6%; P =.39). Three-year FFS and OS for AC versus no AC were 62.5% versus 65% and 80.4% versus 83.1%, respectively (P =.83 and.69; n = 111 v 108). DMR and LRFR were not reduced with AC (P =.34 and.15, respectively). Cox model showed CRT to be a favorable prognostic factor for OS (hazard ratio, 0.42; P =.009). CONCLUSION An improvement in OS with CRT was observed but did not achieve statistical significance. The improvement seemed to be associated with a significant reduction in DMR. AC did not improve outcome.
Cancer | 2004
Dora L.W. Kwong; Edmond H.N. Pow; Jonathan S.T. Sham; Anne S. McMillan; Lucullus H.T. Leung; W. Keung Leung; Daniel T.T. Chua; Ashley C. K. Cheng; Po M. Wu; Gordon K.H. Au
Xerostomia is a uniform complication after radiotherapy (RT) for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC). Dosimetric studies suggested that intensity‐modulated RT (IMRT) can spare part of the parotid glands from high‐dose radiation. Disease control and salivary function after IMRT for early‐stage NPC was studied prospectively.
Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2010
Anne W.M. Lee; Stewart Y. Tung; Daniel T.T. Chua; Roger K.C. Ngan; Rick Chappell; Raymond Tung; Lillian L. Siu; Wing-Fung Ng; Wing-Kin Sze; Gordon K.H. Au; Stephen C.K. Law; Brian O'Sullivan; T.K. Yau; To-Wai Leung; Joseph S. K. Au; W.M. Sze; Cheuk-Wai Choi; K. K. Fung; Joseph Lau; W. H. Lau
BACKGROUND Current practice of adding concurrent-adjuvant chemotherapy to radiotherapy (CRT) for treating advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma is based on the Intergroup-0099 Study published in 1998. However, the outcome for the radiotherapy-alone (RT) group in that trial was substantially poorer than those in other trials, and there were no data on late toxicities. Verification of the long-term therapeutic index of this regimen is needed. METHODS Patients with nonkeratinizing nasopharyngeal carcinoma staged T1-4N2-3M0 were randomly assigned to RT (176 patients) or to CRT (172 patients) using cisplatin (100 mg/m(2)) every 3 weeks for three cycles in concurrence with radiotherapy, followed by cisplatin (80 mg/m(2)) plus fluorouracil (1000 mg per m(2) per day for 4 days) every 4 weeks for three cycles. Primary endpoints included overall failure-free rate (FFR) (the time to first failure at any site) and progression-free survival. Secondary endpoints included overall survival, locoregional FFR, distant FFR, and acute and late toxicity rates. All statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS The two treatment groups were well balanced in all patient characteristics, tumor factors, and radiotherapy parameters. Adding chemotherapy statistically significantly improved the 5-year FFR (CRT vs RT: 67% vs 55%; P = .014) and 5-year progression-free survival (CRT vs RT: 62% vs 53%; P = .035). Cumulative incidence of acute toxicity increased with chemotherapy by 30% (CRT vs RT: 83% vs 53%; P < .001), but the 5-year late toxicity rate did not increase statistically significantly (CRT vs RT: 30% vs 24%; P = .30). Deaths because of disease progression were reduced statistically significantly by 14% (CRT vs RT: 38% vs 24%; P = .008), but 5-year overall survival was similar (CRT vs RT: 68% vs 64%; P = .22; hazard ratio of CRT = 0.81, 95% confidence interval = 0.58 to 1.13) because deaths due to toxicity or incidental causes increased by 7% (CRT vs RT: 1.7% vs 0, and 8.1% vs 3.4%, respectively; P = .015). CONCLUSIONS Adding concurrent-adjuvant chemotherapy statistically significantly reduced failure and cancer-specific deaths when compared with radiotherapy alone. Although there was no statistically significant increase in major late toxicity, increase in noncancer deaths narrowed the resultant gain in overall survival.
Cancer | 1988
Anne W.M. Lee; John H.C. Ho; Vincent K. C. Tse; Y.F Poon; Gordon K.H. Au; W. H. Lau; William Foo; S. H. Ng; Christopher C. H. Tse
This is a preliminary report of 102 patients with clinical diagnosis of late temporal lobe necrosis after radical radiation therapy for nasopharyngeal carcinoma during 1964 to 1983. Histologic verification was available in 12 cases. All but three patients had been treated in our institute using schedules with doses larger than the conventional 200 cGy per fraction. The incidence rate was 1.03%. In our 80 patients with only one course of external irradiation, the doses to the temporal lobes ranged from 1665 to 2127 ret, or 1286 to 1778 brain tolerance unit (btu). The latent interval ranged from 9 months to 16 years. The median observation period is 33 months. The symptomatology, working diagnosis, treatment, and outcome are described. Surgery was hazardous because of the bilaterality of the involvement and exploration for mere verification of diagnosis was unjustified in typical cases. Treatment with corticosteroid achieved durable objective response in 25 (35%) of 72 patients. The importance of early detection and corticosteroid treatment is discussed.
Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2005
Kwok Hung Yu; Sing Fai Leung; Stewart Y. Tung; Benny Zee; Daniel T.T. Chua; Wai Man Sze; Stephen C.K. Law; Michael K.M. Kam; To Wai Leung; Jonathan S.T. Sham; Anne W.M. Lee; Joseph Sk Au; Edwin P. Hui; Wing Kin Sze; Ashley C. K. Cheng; T.K. Yau; Roger K.C. Ngan; Frank C.S. Wong; Gordon K.H. Au; Anthony T.C. Chan
The purpose of this article is to report the overall survival (OS) outcome of patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) with local failure who received salvage treatment and to identify prognostic factors for OS.
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1998
Daniel T.T. Chua; Jonathan S.T. Sham; Dora L.W. Kwong; William I. Wei; Gordon K.H. Au; D. Choy
PURPOSE To study the treatment outcome in patients with locally recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma as restaged by computed tomography (CT). PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred forty patients with CT restaged locally recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma were reviewed. Patients were restaged at recurrence according to the AJCC stage classification with the following distribution: T1-T2:30%, T3:19%, T4:51%. Ninety-seven patients received reirradiation; among these 62 had external irradiation, 34 had brachytherapy, and 1 had both. Twelve patients received surgery. Thirty-one patients were treated with palliative intent and received either chemotherapy or supportive treatment only. Overall survival (OAS) and performance-adjusted survival (PAS, defined as surviving with a Karnofsky performance score [KPS] > 50) were calculated by Kaplan-Meier method. Multivariate analysis was performed using the Cox model. RESULTS The median survival for all patients was 23.8 months. After reirradiation, the 3-yr and 5-yr OAS rates were 46% and 36%, respectively. The corresponding PAS rates were 40% and 28%. The 3-yr OAS rates for recurrent T1-2, T3, and T4 disease after reirradiation were 71%, 42%, and 30%; the corresponding 5-yr OAS rates were 57%, 42%, 17%. The 3-yr and 5-yr OAS rates in patients receiving palliative treatments only were 19% and 0%, respectively. The 3-yr OAS rate after surgery was 42%. In the multivariate analysis, older age, recurrent T3-4 disease, and palliative treatment were unfavorable factors in predicting overall survival, whereas recurrent T3-4 disease, baseline KPS < 70, and palliative treatment were unfavorable factors in predicting PAS. A high complication rate was observed after reirradiation, with 34% of patients developing neurological sequel. CONCLUSION Aggressive treatment for locally recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma is warranted especially for those with disease confined to the nasopharynx. Survival after retreatment for more extensive disease remains poor but was still superior to supportive treatment only. Early diagnosis of local recurrence allows prompt administration of treatment and is associated with better outcome. Future studies should aim at improving the therapeutic ratio in the retreatment of recurrent disease especially in patients with more extensive local recurrence.
Cancer | 1996
Daniel T.T. Chua; Jonathan S.T. Sham; Dora L.W. Kwong; D. Choy; Gordon K.H. Au; P. M. Wu
This study was conducted to evaluate the prognostic value of paranasopharyngeal extension in local control and distant metastasis in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
European Journal of Cancer | 2011
Anne W.M. Lee; Stewart Y. Tung; Roger K.C. Ngan; Rick Chappell; Daniel T.T. Chua; Tai-Xiang Lu; Lillian L. Siu; Terence Tan; Lucy L.K. Chan; W.T. Ng; To-Wai Leung; Yiu-Tung Fu; Gordon K.H. Au; Chong Zhao; Brian O'Sullivan; Eng-Huat Tan; W. H. Lau
BACKGROUND The current standard treatment for locoregionally advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) was conventional-fractionation radiotherapy plus concurrent-adjuvant chemotherapy as recommended by the Intergroup-0099 Study. This combined analysis of the NPC-9901 and the NPC-9902 Trials aims to provide more comprehensive data to evaluate the efficacy of the Intergroup-0099 regimen and the contributing factors. METHODS Eligible patients with stage III-IVB non-keratinizing NPC were randomly assigned to radiotherapy-alone (RT(i) group: 218 patients) or chemoradiotherapy (CRT(i) group: 223 patients) using cisplatin (100mg/m(2)) for three cycles in concurrence with radiotherapy, followed by cisplatin (80 mg/m(2)) plus fluorouracil (1000 mg/m(2)/day for 4 days) for three cycles. The median follow-up was 6.1 years. FINDINGS Comparison by intention-to-treat showed that the CRT(i) group achieved significant improvement in overall failure-free rate (FFR), locoregional-FFR and cancer-specific survival (p ≤ 0.019); but the improvements for distant-FFR and overall survival (OS) were statistically insignificant (p ≥ 0.14). Further exploratory studies based on actual treatment showed that an additional improvement achieved was a significant gain in OS (CRT(a) versus RT(a) group: 72% versus 63% at 5-year, p=0.037). Multivariate analyses showed that the dose of cisplatin during the concurrent phase had significant impact on locoregional-FFR and OS, while that of fluorouracil during the adjuvant phase was significant for distant-FFR. The 5-year locoregional-FFR for patients who received 0-1, 2 and 3 concurrent cycles were 79%, 88% and 88%, respectively; the corresponding distant-FFR by adjuvant cycles were 68%, 78% and 77%, respectively. INTERPRETATION Our results support the current practice of adding concurrent cisplatin plus adjuvant cisplatin-fluorouracil to radiotherapy for treating patients with locoregionally advanced NPC. The concurrent phase is important for locoregional control and survival, cisplatin 200mg/m(2) in two concurrent cycles might be adequate. Additional chemotherapy using fluorouracil-containing combination contributed to improving distant control.