Hande H. Tuncer
Tufts Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hande H. Tuncer.
Leukemia Research | 2009
Laurent Boissel; Monica Betancur; Winfried S. Wels; Hande H. Tuncer; Klingemann Hg
An emerging treatment option for chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is to make cytotoxic immune cells express a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) that recognizes specific surface molecules on CLL cells. Here an mRNA coding for an anti-CD19 CAR was transfected into the NK-92 cell line by electroporation. In contrast to cDNA, mRNA resulted in high transfection efficiency (47.2 +/- 8% versus <5% for cDNA) with minimal effect on cell viability. NK-92 cells expressing anti-CD19 CAR killed previously resistant CD19+ B-ALL cell lines, as well as primary CLL cells and therefore may present a safe, cell-based, targeted treatment for patients with CLL.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2008
Laurent Boissel; Hande H. Tuncer; Monica Betancur; Adam Wolfberg; Klingemann Hg
Natural killer (NK) cell-mediated cytotoxicity can control leukemia relapse while protecting patients from graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) after allogeneic stem cell transplant. Cord blood (CB) is rich in NK cell progenitors with similar properties of proliferation and cytotoxicity as adult blood NK cells. Hence, it is attractive to expand and potentially utilize these cells for adoptive immunotherapy. In this study, CB mononuclear cells were CD3-depleted by immunomagnetic microbead selection to remove T cells. This CD3(dep) CB-MNC fraction was then plated for ex vivo expansion, with or without a feeder layer of irradiated umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (UC-MSC), with or without cytokines that have been shown to be critical for NK expansion: IL-2, IL-15, IL-3, and FLT-3L. At an average of 2 weeks of culture, there was significantly higher expansion (64.7 +/- 8.4-fold) of CD56(+)/CD3(-) NK cells in the presence of the UC-MSC feeder layer and cytokines compared to controls (no increase with feeder layer only and 6.4 +/- 1.5-fold increase with cytokines only, P < .05). Contact between CD3(dep) CB-MNC cells and UC-MSC augmented NK expansion. The combination of all 4 cytokines was superior to IL-2 alone or 2 cytokines combinations: mean 64.7 +/- 8.4-fold expansion with 4 cytokines combination versus IL-2 alone, IL-2 + FLT-3L, IL-2 + IL-15 or IL-2 + IL-3 (12.2 +/- 2.0, 14.4 +/- 2.4, 10.4 +/- 4.1, 25.2 +/- 8.1 respectively). We also observed that only fresh CD3(dep) CB-MNC preparations could be expanded reliably, whereas frozen and thawed CD3(dep) CB-MNC cells did not expand consistently (mean fold increase 6.5 +/- 3.2). Cytotoxicity of expanded NK cells was compared with NK cells from fresh and overnight IL-2 activated CD3(dep) CB-MNC. Whereas fresh cells displayed no discernible killing, strong cytotoxicity against K562, Raji, REH, and SUP-B15 cells lines was noted after overnight activation in IL-2. Cytotoxicity of expanded NK cells against Raji, REH, and SUP-B15 was lower, which, however, correlated with a predominant expansion of CD56(+)/CD16(-) cells known to have less cytolytic activity than CD56(+)/CD16(+). To test the transfection efficiency in NK cells, fresh or expanded CD3(dep) CB-MNC cells were electroporated with either DNA or mRNA constructs for GFP. DNA had a low transfection efficiency (<10%), whereas the one for mRNA reached 52%, but at the cost of significant cell death. Our results suggest that CB NK cell progenitors can be expanded to obtain large numbers by using an irradiated feeder of UC-MSC. They maintain an elevated cytotoxic profile, and may be genetically manipulated-all characteristics that make them suitable for cellular therapies.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2012
Hande H. Tuncer; Naveed Rana; Cannon Milani; Angela Darko; Samer A Al-Homsi
Recognition and management of gastrointestinal and hepatic complications of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation has gained increasing importance as indications and techniques of transplantation have expanded in the last few years. The transplant recipient is at risk for several complications including conditioning chemotherapy related toxicities, infections, bleeding, sinusoidal obstruction syndrome, acute and chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) as well as other long-term problems. The severity and the incidence of many complications have improved in the past several years as the intensity of conditioning regimens has diminished and better supportive care and GVHD prevention strategies have been implemented. Transplant clinicians, however, continue to be challenged with problems arising from human leukocyte antigen-mismatched and unrelated donor transplants, expanding transplant indications and age-limit. This review describes the most commonly seen transplant related complications, focusing on their pathogenesis, differential diagnosis and management.
Transfusion | 2007
Hande H. Tuncer; Robert A. Oster; Shu T. Huang; Marisa B. Marques
BACKGROUND: Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura‐hemolytic uremic syndrome (TTP‐HUS) is a diagnosis of exclusion when a patient presents with the sine qua non findings of thrombocytopenia and microangiopathic hemolytic anemia without an identifiable cause. Although most patients respond to therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), a significant number of patients relapse. The aim was to determine if clinical, laboratory, and/or treatment features could predict response and/or relapse.
Vox Sanguinis | 2009
J. F. Staropoli; Christopher P. Stowell; Hande H. Tuncer; Marisa B. Marques
Background and Objectives ABO blood group accounts for up to 40% of the variability in plasma von Willebrand factor (VWF) levels, which vary in the rank order AB > B > A > O > Bombay. This may be due in part to the influence of ABO‐associated oligosaccharides on the proteolysis of VWF by the metalloprotease ADAMTS13, which is markedly deficient in thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP). Using ABO blood group as a surrogate for baseline VWF levels as well as susceptibility to proteolysis by ADAMST13, we set out to determine whether ABO blood group influences the clinical course of TTP.
American Journal of Hematology | 2018
Anthony R. Mato; Lindsey E. Roeker; John N. Allan; John M. Pagel; Danielle M. Brander; Brian T. Hill; Bruce D. Cheson; Richard R. Furman; Nicole Lamanna; Constantine S. Tam; Sasanka Handunnetti; Ryan Jacobs; Frederick Lansigan; Erica B. Bhavsar; Paul M. Barr; Mazyar Shadman; Alan P Skarbnik; Andre Goy; Douglas F. Beach; Jakub Svoboda; Jeffrey J. Pu; Alison Sehgal; Clive S. Zent; Hande H. Tuncer; Stephen J. Schuster; Peter V. Pickens; Nirav N. Shah; Joanna Rhodes; Chaitra Ujjani; Chadi Nabhan
Ibrutinib demonstrated superior response rates and survival for treatment‐naïve chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) patients in a pivotal study that excluded patients younger than 65 (<65) and/or with chromosome 17p13 deletion (del[17p13]). We examined outcomes and toxicities of CLL patients who would have been excluded from the pivotal study, specifically <65 and/or those with del[17p13]. This multicenter, retrospective cohort study examined CLL patients treated with front‐line ibrutinib at 20 community and academic centers, categorizing them based on key inclusion criteria for the RESONATE‐2 trial: <65 vs ≥65 and present vs absent del[17p13]. Of 391 included patients, 57% would have been excluded from the pivotal study. Forty‐one percent of our cohort was <65, and 30% had del(17p13). Patients <65 were more likely to start 420 mg of ibrutinib daily; those who started at reduced doses had inferior PFS. The most common adverse events were arthralgias, fatigue, rash, bruising, and diarrhea. Twenty‐four percent discontinued ibrutinib at 13.8 months median follow‐up; toxicity was the most common reason for discontinuation, though progression and/or transformation accounted for a larger proportion of discontinuations in <65 and those with del(17p13). Response rates were similar for <65 and those with del(17p13). However, patients with del(17p13) had inferior PFS and OS. Ibrutinib in the front‐line setting has extended beyond the population in which it was initially studied and approved. This study highlights and compares important differences in ibrutinib dosing, treatment interruptions, toxicities, reasons for discontinuation, and survival outcomes in two important patient populations not studied in RESONATE‐2.
Case reports in hematology | 2018
Hanyin Wang; Hande H. Tuncer
The value of combination therapy for refractory ITP is not well defined. We present the case of a 29-year-old male with severe ITP refractory to initial standard therapy including steroids, IVIG, and subsequent splenectomy, who was treated with the combination therapy of rituximab, romiplostim, and mycophenolate and eventually developed thrombocytosis requiring plateletpheresis. Our case highlights the importance of the need to understand predictors of response to standard upfront treatment of acute ITP.
Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2007
Robb Friedman; Monica Betancur; Laurent Boissel; Hande H. Tuncer; Curtis L. Cetrulo; Klingemann Hg
Journal of Clinical Apheresis | 2006
Marisa B. Marques; Hande H. Tuncer
American Journal of Hematology | 2005
Marisa B. Marques; Hande H. Tuncer; Stephen G. Divers; Allyson C. Baker; D. Keith Harrison