Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Hesham Abdelbary is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Hesham Abdelbary.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Chemical targeting of the innate antiviral response by histone deacetylase inhibitors renders refractory cancers sensitive to viral oncolysis

Thi Lien-Anh Nguyên; Hesham Abdelbary; Meztli Arguello; Caroline J. Breitbach; Simon Leveille; Jean-Simon Diallo; Amber Yasmeen; Tarek A. Bismar; David Kirn; Theresa Falls; Valerie E. Snoulten; Barbara C. Vanderhyden; Joel Werier; Harold Atkins; Markus Vähä-Koskela; David F. Stojdl; John C. Bell; John Hiscott

Intratumoral innate immunity can play a significant role in blocking the effective therapeutic spread of a number of oncolytic viruses (OVs). Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDIs) are known to influence epigenetic modifications of chromatin and can blunt the cellular antiviral response. We reasoned that pretreatment of tumors with HDIs could enhance the replication and spread of OVs within malignancies. Here, we show that HDIs markedly enhance the spread of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) in a variety of cancer cells in vitro, in primary tumor tissue explants and in multiple animal models. This increased oncolytic activity correlated with a dampening of cellular IFN responses and augmentation of virus-induced apoptosis. These results illustrate the general utility of HDIs as chemical switches to regulate cellular innate antiviral responses and to provide controlled growth of therapeutic viruses within malignancies. HDIs could have a profoundly positive impact on the clinical implementation of OV therapeutics.


Nature Communications | 2013

Model-based rational design of an oncolytic virus with improved therapeutic potential

Fabrice Le Bœuf; Cory Batenchuk; Markus Vähä-Koskela; Sophie Breton; Dominic Roy; Chantal G Lemay; Julie Cox; Hesham Abdelbary; Theresa Falls; Girija Waghray; Harold Atkins; David F. Stojdl; Jean-Simon Diallo; Mads Kærn; John C. Bell

Oncolytic viruses are complex biological agents that interact at multiple levels with both tumour and normal tissues. Antiviral pathways induced by interferon are known to have a critical role in determining tumour cell sensitivity and normal cell resistance to infection with oncolytic viruses. Here we pursue a synthetic biology approach to identify methods that enhance antitumour activity of oncolytic viruses through suppression of interferon signalling. On the basis of the mathematical analysis of multiple strategies, we hypothesize that a positive feedback loop, established by virus-mediated expression of a soluble interferon-binding decoy receptor, increases tumour cytotoxicity without compromising normal cells. Oncolytic rhabdoviruses engineered to express a secreted interferon antagonist have improved oncolytic potential in cellular cancer models, and display improved therapeutic potential in tumour-bearing mice. Our results demonstrate the potential of this methodology in evaluating potential caveats of viral immune-evasion strategies and improving the design oncolytic viruses.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2011

Ex Vivo Infection of Live Tissue with Oncolytic Viruses

Jean-Simon Diallo; Dominic Roy; Hesham Abdelbary; Naomi De Silva; John C. Bell

Oncolytic Viruses (OVs) are novel therapeutics that selectively replicate in and kill tumor cells1. Several clinical trials evaluating the effectiveness of a variety of oncolytic platforms including HSV, Reovirus, and Vaccinia OVs as treatment for cancer are currently underway2-5. One key characteristic of oncolytic viruses is that they can be genetically modified to express reporter transgenes which makes it possible to visualize the infection of tissues by microscopy or bio-luminescence imaging6,7. This offers a unique advantage since it is possible to infect tissues from patients ex vivo prior to therapy in order to ascertain the likelihood of successful oncolytic virotherapy8. To this end, it is critical to appropriately sample tissue to compensate for tissue heterogeneity and assess tissue viability, particularly prior to infection9. It is also important to follow viral replication using reporter transgenes if expressed by the oncolytic platform as well as by direct titration of tissues following homogenization in order to discriminate between abortive and productive infection. The object of this protocol is to address these issues and herein describes 1. The sampling and preparation of tumor tissue for cell culture 2. The assessment of tissue viability using the metabolic dye alamar blue 3. Ex vivo infection of cultured tissues with vaccinia virus expressing either GFP or firefly luciferase 4. Detection of transgene expression by fluorescence microscopy or using an In Vivo Imaging System (IVIS) 5. Quantification of virus by plaque assay. This comprehensive method presents several advantages including ease of tissue processing, compensation for tissue heterogeneity, control of tissue viability, and discrimination between abortive infection and bone fide viral replication.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2013

Exploiting tumor epigenetics to improve oncolytic virotherapy

Nicole E. Forbes; Hesham Abdelbary; Mathieu Lupien; John C. Bell; Jean-Simon Diallo

Oncolytic viruses (OVs) comprise a versatile and multi-mechanistic therapeutic platform in the growing arsenal of anticancer biologics. These replicating therapeutics find favorable conditions in the tumor niche, characterized among others by increased metabolism, reduced anti-tumor/antiviral immunity, and disorganized vasculature. Through a self-amplification that is dependent on multiple cancer-specific defects, these agents exhibit remarkable tumor selectivity. With several OVs completing or entering Phase III clinical evaluation, their therapeutic potential as well as the challenges ahead are increasingly clear. One key hurdle is tumor heterogeneity, which results in variations in the ability of tumors to support productive infection by OVs and to induce adaptive anti-tumor immunity. To this end, mounting evidence suggests tumor epigenetics may play a key role. This review will focus on the epigenetic landscape of tumors and how it relates to OV infection. Therapeutic strategies aiming to exploit the epigenetic identity of tumors in order to improve OV therapy are also discussed.


The Scientific World Journal | 2014

Using Targeted Virotherapy to Treat a Resistant Ewing Sarcoma Model: From the Bedside to the Bench and Back

Hesham Abdelbary; Christopher W. Brown; Joel Werier; John C. Bell

Metastatic Ewing sarcoma (EWS) is often resistant to current multimodal chemotherapeutic regimens. Oncolytic virus therapy (OV) is a novel therapeutic platform whereby viruses can selectively infect as well as replicate in and kill tumor cells, while sparing normal tissues. The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy of the biotherapeutic oncolytic agent, vesicular stomatitis virus (VSVΔM51), to kill EWS cells that are resistant to conventional therapy. Our hypothesis is that systemic delivery of VSVΔM51 can demonstrate tumor-specific killing of resistant EWS cells, as well as a significant decrease of tumor burden in EWS bearing mice. Methods. A biopsy sample was obtained from a patient with metastatic EWS and was used to establish a novel EWS cell line. In vitro assays evaluated the oncolytic effect of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSVΔM51) on this cell line. EWS xenograft mice model bearing either lung or subcutaneous tumors was established to evaluate the antitumor specific oncolytic effect of VSVΔM51 after local and systemic delivery. Results. The established EWS cell line shared similar molecular and genetic traits to the patients original tumor specimen. VSVΔM51 effectively infected and killed EWS cells in vitro. In vivo, VSVΔM51 selectively infected and killed EWS and led to significant delay in tumor growth. Conclusion. This study has been designed to implement a translational link between the bedside and the bench, where a specific challenging clinical scenario guided this basic science research. This research demonstrated that a sarcoma, which is resistant to current conventional standard therapies, is still susceptible to an alternative therapeutic platform, such as OV. Adding OV to the armamentarium of sarcoma treatment can enhance the future therapeutic approach towards these cancer patients.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2014

High-throughput Titration of Luciferase-expressing Recombinant Viruses

Vanessa Garcia; Ramya Krishnan; Colin Davis; Cory Batenchuk; Fabrice Le Boeuf; Hesham Abdelbary; Jean-Simon Diallo

Standard plaque assays to determine infectious viral titers can be time consuming, are not amenable to a high volume of samples, and cannot be done with viruses that do not form plaques. As an alternative to plaque assays, we have developed a high-throughput titration method that allows for the simultaneous titration of a high volume of samples in a single day. This approach involves infection of the samples with a Firefly luciferase tagged virus, transfer of the infected samples onto an appropriate permissive cell line, subsequent addition of luciferin, reading of plates in order to obtain luminescence readings, and finally the conversion from luminescence to viral titers. The assessment of cytotoxicity using a metabolic viability dye can be easily incorporated in the workflow in parallel and provide valuable information in the context of a drug screen. This technique provides a reliable, high-throughput method to determine viral titers as an alternative to a standard plaque assay.


Canadian Journal of Surgery | 2018

Tertiary care centre adherence to unified guidelines for management of periprosthetic joint infections: a gap analysis

Mitchel D. Armstrong; Alberto Carli; Hesham Abdelbary; Stéphane Poitras; Peter Lapner; Paule E. Beaulé

BACKGROUND The success rate of surgical treatment for periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) remains inconsistent in the literature. Variability in PJI clinical guidelines and surgeon adherence to guidelines could affect treatment success. The objectives of this study were to appraise current recommendations for PJI management and develop a unified clinical standard of care, to perform a gap analysis of PJI cases in a tertiary institution to determine the rate of guideline adherence, and to determine if adherence to unified PJI guidelines affected 2-year treatment outcomes. METHODS We appraised the PJI guidelines from 3 academic medical societies, and consistent statements were aggregated. We retrospectively reviewed all PJI cases in a tertiary care institution. We defined PJI based on Musculoskeletal Infection Society PJI criteria. Surgeon adherence to preoperative, intraoperative, surgical and medical management guidelines was calculated, and we evaluated the association between guideline adherence and 2-year treatment outcomes. RESULTS The institutional rate of PJI was 1.13% (38 of 3368). Treatment success was 57.8% at 2 years. Unified guideline adherence percentages varied substantially: 92% of patients had preoperative erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein, 97% had intraoperative tissue cultures, 42% had appropriate preoperative arthrocentesis, and 74% underwent guideline-appropriate surgery. Performing appropriate preoperative arthrocentesis significantly correlated with positive treatment outcomes at 2 years (p = 0.028). CONCLUSION Adherence to PJI guidelines varies considerably, indicating that clinicians are either unaware of them or do not recognize their value for PJI treatment. This study shows the need for institution-based PJI treatment pathways that are consistent with published guidelines and the need to monitor adherence.


Molecular Therapy | 2010

A high-throughput pharmacoviral approach identifies novel oncolytic virus sensitizers.

Jean-Simon Diallo; Fabrice Le Boeuf; Frances W. Lai; Julie Cox; Markus Vähä-Koskela; Hesham Abdelbary; Heather MacTavish; Katherine Waite; Theresa Falls; Jenny Wang; Ryan Brown; Jan E. Blanchard; Eric D. Brown; David Kirn; John Hiscott; Harry Atkins; Brian D. Lichty; John C. Bell


Archive | 2008

Amplification of cancer-specific oncolytic viral infection by histone deacetylase inhibitors

John C. Bell; John Hiscott; Hesham Abdelbary; Thi Lien-Anh Nguyen; Jean-Simon Diallo


Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume | 2018

Pelvic Positioning in the Supine Position Leads to More Consistent Cup Orientation after Total Hip Arthroplasty

George Grammatopoulos; M Cochran; Johanna Dobransky; Hesham Abdelbary; Harinderjit Gill; Wade Gofton; Paul E. Beaulé

Collaboration


Dive into the Hesham Abdelbary's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John C. Bell

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jean-Simon Diallo

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Theresa Falls

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David F. Stojdl

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fabrice Le Boeuf

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Harold Atkins

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge