J.G. Stewart
Georgia Regents University
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Featured researches published by J.G. Stewart.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017
Emmanuel S. Antonarakis; Scott T. Tagawa; Giuseppe Galletti; Daniel Worroll; Karla V. Ballman; Marie Vanhuyse; Guru Sonpavde; Scott North; Costantine Albany; Che-Kai Tsao; J.G. Stewart; Atef Zaher; Ted H. Szatrowski; Wei Zhou; Ada Gjyrezi; Shinsuke Tasaki; Luigi Portella; Yang Bai; Timothy B. Lannin; Shalu Suri; Conor N. Gruber; Erica D. Pratt; Brian J. Kirby; Mario A. Eisenberger; David M. Nanus; Fred Saad; Paraskevi Giannakakou
Purpose The TAXYNERGY trial ( ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01718353) evaluated clinical benefit from early taxane switch and circulating tumor cell (CTC) biomarkers to interrogate mechanisms of sensitivity or resistance to taxanes in men with chemotherapy-naïve, metastatic, castration-resistant prostate cancer. Patients and Methods Patients were randomly assigned 2:1 to docetaxel or cabazitaxel. Men who did not achieve ≥ 30% prostate-specific antigen (PSA) decline by cycle 4 (C4) switched taxane. The primary clinical endpoint was confirmed ≥ 50% PSA decline versus historical control (TAX327). The primary biomarker endpoint was analysis of post-treatment CTCs to confirm the hypothesis that clinical response was associated with taxane drug-target engagement, evidenced by decreased percent androgen receptor nuclear localization (%ARNL) and increased microtubule bundling. Results Sixty-three patients were randomly assigned to docetaxel (n = 41) or cabazitaxel (n = 22); 44.4% received prior potent androgen receptor-targeted therapy. Overall, 35 patients (55.6%) had confirmed ≥ 50% PSA responses, exceeding the historical control rate of 45.4% (TAX327). Of 61 treated patients, 33 (54.1%) had ≥ 30% PSA declines by C4 and did not switch taxane, 15 patients (24.6%) who did not achieve ≥ 30% PSA declines by C4 switched taxane, and 13 patients (21.3%) discontinued therapy before or at C4. Of patients switching taxane, 46.7% subsequently achieved ≥ 50% PSA decrease. In 26 CTC-evaluable patients, taxane-induced decrease in %ARNL (cycle 1 day 1 v cycle 1 day 8) was associated with a higher rate of ≥ 50% PSA decrease at C4 ( P = .009). Median composite progression-free survival was 9.1 months (95% CI, 4.9 to 11.7 months); median overall survival was not reached at 14 months. Common grade 3 or 4 adverse events included fatigue (13.1%) and febrile neutropenia (11.5%). Conclusion The early taxane switch strategy was associated with improved PSA response rates versus TAX327. Taxane-induced shifts in %ARNL may serve as an early biomarker of clinical benefit in patients treated with taxanes.
Medical Physics | 2014
A. Al-Basheer; J Hunag; J Kaminski; B.G. Dasher; J. Howington; J.G. Stewart; D Martin; F.P. Kong; J. Jin
PURPOSE Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) usually achieves higher conformity of radiation doses to targets and less delivery time than Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy (IMRT). We hypothesized that VMAT will increase integral dose (ID) to patients which will decrease the count of white blood count (WBC) lymphocytes, and consequently has a subsequent impact on the immune system. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the ID to patients undergoing IMRT and VMAT for Head and Neck cancers and its impact on the immune system. METHODS As a pilot study, 30 head and neck patients who received 9-fields IMRT or 3-arcs Radip-Arcbased VMAT were included in this study. Ten of these patients who received the VMAT plans were re-planned using IMRT with the same objectives. ID was calculated for all cases. All patients also had a baseline WBC obtained prior to treatment, and 3 sets of labs drawn during the course of radiation treatment. RESULTS For the 10 re-planned patients, the mean ID was 13.3 Gy/voxel (range 10.2-17.5 Gy/voxel) for the 9-fields IMRT plans, and was 15.9 Gy/voxel (range 12.4-20.9 Gy/voxel) for the 3-Arc VMAT plan (p=0.01). The integral dose was significant correlated with reducing WBC count during RT even when controlling for concurrent chemotherapy (R square =0.56, p=0.008). CONCLUSION Although VMAT can deliver higher radiation dose conformality to targets, this benefit is achieved generally at the cost of greater integral doses to normal tissue outside the planning target volume (PTV). Lower WBC counts during RT were associated with higher Integral doses even when controlling for concurrent chemotherapy. This study is ongoing in our Institution to exam the impact of integral doses and WBC on overall survival.
Cuaj-canadian Urological Association Journal | 2018
Daniel Yokom; J.G. Stewart; Nimira S. Alimohamed; Eric Winquist; Scott Barry; Stacey Hubay; Jean-Baptiste Lattouf; Helene Leonard; Carla Girolametto; Fred Saad; Srikala S. Sridhar
INTRODUCTION Cabazitaxel is one of several treatment options available for patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer who have progressed on docetaxel. Little is known about clinical factors that influence prognosis or treatment response for patients receiving cabazitaxel. Identifying prognostic and predictive factors could contribute to the optimal selection of patients for treatment after docetaxel. METHODS A retrospective review of patients enrolled on the cabazitaxel Canadian Early Access Program (C-EAP) was performed. Clinical factors were analyzed by univariable and multivariable Cox proportional hazards and logistic regression analysis to identify independent predictors of prognosis and response. RESULTS Forty-five patients from five centres in Canada were included in this study. On multivariable analysis, lower hemoglobin was associated with shorter survival. No other factors were independently associated with survival, prostate-specific antigen (PSA) response, or primary PSA progression. CONCLUSIONS Clinical factors predicting survival or treatment response were not identified for men with castration-resistant prostate cancer receiving cabazitaxel. Larger studies may be necessary to identify clinical factors and biomarkers that identify whether patients should or should not receive cabazitaxel.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
N.A. Madden; B.M. Rabatic; D. Zaenger; J.A. Marascio; E.M. Marchan; B.G. Dasher; W. Martin; J. Howington; M. Aletan; J.G. Stewart; M. Pishgou; A. Amoush; C.L. Ferguson; F.P. Kong; W.F. Mourad
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
N.A. Madden; B.M. Rabatic; D. Zaenger; J.A. Marascio; S. Shaaban; C.L. Ferguson; Theodore S. Johnson; E.M. Marchan; W. Martin; M. Pishgou; J. Howington; J.G. Stewart; M. Aletan; A. Amoush; K. Huang; A. Al-Basheer; B.G. Dasher; F.P. Kong; W.F. Mourad
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
B.M. Rabatic; D. Zaenger; N.A. Madden; J.A. Marascio; Jeffrey Campbell; Katharine N. Ciarrocca; Scott S. DeRossi; Darko Pucar; E.M. Marchan; J.G. Stewart; A. Amoush; S. Shaaban; Molly K Nettles; M. Pishgou; J. Kenneth Byrd; Arturo C. Solares; Frank Mott; F.P. Kong; C.L. Ferguson; W.F. Mourad
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
D. Zaenger; B.M. Rabatic; N.A. Madden; J.A. Marascio; E.M. Marchan; K. Huang; S. Shaaban; F.M. Kong; C.L. Ferguson; Shou-Ching Tang; A. Al-Basheer; Alexander Green; J. Howington; M. Pishgou; W. Martin; M. Aletan; Mohammed Firdos Ziauddin; J.G. Stewart; B.G. Dasher; W.F. Mourad
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
J.A. Marascio; B.M. Rabatic; D. Zaenger; N.A. Madden; E.M. Marchan; David McDermott; A.K. Misiura; S. Shaaban; B.G. Dasher; K. Huang; M. Pishgou; W. Martin; M. Aletan; J. Howington; A. Al-Basheer; A. Amoush; J.G. Stewart; F.P. Kong; C.L. Ferguson; W.F. Mourad
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2016
J.A. Marascio; N.A. Madden; D. Zaenger; B.M. Rabatic; David McDermott; A.K. Misiura; S. Shaaban; E.M. Marchan; K. Huang; A. Amoush; A. Al-Basheer; A. Green; B.G. Dasher; J. Howington; J.G. Stewart; W. Martin; M. Pishgou; C.L. Ferguson; F.M. Kong; W.F. Mourad
International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2016
N.A. Madden; J.A. Marascio; D. Zaenger; B.M. Rabatic; C. McDonough; Theodore S. Johnson; F.M. Kong; B.G. Dasher; W. Martin; J.G. Stewart; J. Howington; E.M. Marchan; S. Shaaban; K. Huang; A. Al-Basheer; A. Amoush; A. Green; M. Pishgou; C.L. Ferguson; W.F. Mourad