Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where James Symanowski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by James Symanowski.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Phase III Study of Pemetrexed in Combination With Cisplatin Versus Cisplatin Alone in Patients With Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma

Nicholas J. Vogelzang; James J. Rusthoven; James Symanowski; Claude Denham; E. Kaukel; Pierre Ruffie; Ulrich Gatzemeier; Michael Boyer; Salih Emri; Christian Manegold; Clet Niyikiza; Paolo Paoletti

PURPOSE Patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma, a rapidly progressing malignancy with a median survival time of 6 to 9 months, have previously responded poorly to chemotherapy. We conducted a phase III trial to determine whether treatment with pemetrexed and cisplatin results in survival time superior to that achieved with cisplatin alone. PATIENTS AND METHODS Chemotherapy-naive patients who were not eligible for curative surgery were randomly assigned to receive pemetrexed 500 mg/m2 and cisplatin 75 mg/m2 on day 1, or cisplatin 75 mg/m2 on day 1. Both regimens were given intravenously every 21 days. RESULTS A total of 456 patients were assigned: 226 received pemetrexed and cisplatin, 222 received cisplatin alone, and eight never received therapy. Median survival time in the pemetrexed/cisplatin arm was 12.1 months versus 9.3 months in the control arm (P =.020, two-sided log-rank test). The hazard ratio for death of patients in the pemetrexed/cisplatin arm versus those in the control arm was 0.77. Median time to progression was significantly longer in the pemetrexed/cisplatin arm: 5.7 months versus 3.9 months (P =.001). Response rates were 41.3% in the pemetrexed/cisplatin arm versus 16.7% in the control arm (P <.0001). After 117 patients had enrolled, folic acid and vitamin B12 were added to reduce toxicity, resulting in a significant reduction in toxicities in the pemetrexed/cisplatin arm. CONCLUSION Treatment with pemetrexed plus cisplatin and vitamin supplementation resulted in superior survival time, time to progression, and response rates compared with treatment with cisplatin alone in patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma. Addition of folic acid and vitamin B12 significantly reduced toxicity without adversely affecting survival time.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Phase II Study of Pemetrexed With and Without Folic Acid and Vitamin B12 as Front-Line Therapy in Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma

Giorgio V. Scagliotti; Dong-M. Shin; Hedy L. Kindler; Michael J. Vasconcelles; Christian Manegold; Howard A. Burris; Ulrich Gatzemeier; Johannes Blatter; James Symanowski; James J. Rusthoven

PURPOSE This phase II clinical study evaluated the efficacy of pemetrexed for the treatment of malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with a histologically proven diagnosis of MPM, chemotherapy-naive measurable lesions, and adequate organ function received pemetrexed (500 mg/m2) intravenously over 10 minutes every 3 weeks. After a protocol change, most patients also received folic acid and vitamin B12 supplementation to improve safety. RESULTS A total of 64 patients were enrolled. Nine (14.1%) of the 64 patients had a partial response. The Kaplan-Meier estimate for median overall survival was 10.7 months. Forty-three patients received vitamin supplementation for all courses of therapy, and 21 patients did not. Seven of the nine responders were vitamin supplemented. The median overall survival was 13.0 months for supplemented patients and 8.0 months for nonsupplemented patients. Vitamin-supplemented patients completed more cycles of therapy than nonsupplemented patients (median, six v two cycles, respectively). Grade 3/4 neutropenia (23.4%) and grade 3/4 leukopenia (18.8%) were the most common laboratory toxicities. Fatigue and febrile neutropenia were the most commonly reported nonlaboratory events (grade 3, 6.3%; grade 4, 0.0% each). The incidence of these toxicities was generally lower in the supplemented patients. CONCLUSION Single-agent pemetrexed for MPM resulted in a moderate response rate (14.1%) and median overall survival of 10.7 months. Patients supplemented with folic acid and vitamin B12 tolerated treatment better (less toxicity and more cycles of treatment) and had a 5-month greater median overall survival than nonsupplemented patients. These results indicate that patients with MPM could benefit from single-agent pemetrexed treatment combined with vitamin supplementation.


Cancer Prevention Research | 2011

A Framework for Evaluating Biomarkers for Early Detection: Validation of Biomarker Panels for Ovarian Cancer

Claire Zhu; Paul F. Pinsky; Daniel W. Cramer; David F. Ransohoff; Patricia Hartge; Ruth M. Pfeiffer; Nicole Urban; Gil Mor; Robert C. Bast; Lee E. Moore; Anna Lokshin; Martin W. McIntosh; Steven J. Skates; Allison F. Vitonis; Zhen Zhang; David C. Ward; James Symanowski; Aleksey Lomakin; Eric T. Fung; Patrick M. Sluss; Nathalie Scholler; Karen H. Lu; Adele Marrangoni; Christos Patriotis; Sudhir Srivastava; Saundra S. Buys; Christine D. Berg

A panel of biomarkers may improve predictive performance over individual markers. Although many biomarker panels have been described for ovarian cancer, few studies used prediagnostic samples to assess the potential of the panels for early detection. We conducted a multisite systematic evaluation of biomarker panels using prediagnostic serum samples from the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer (PLCO) screening trial. Using a nested case–control design, levels of 28 biomarkers were measured laboratory-blinded in 118 serum samples obtained before cancer diagnosis and 951 serum samples from matched controls. Five predictive models, each containing 6 to 8 biomarkers, were evaluated according to a predetermined analysis plan. Three sequential analyses were conducted: blinded validation of previously established models (step 1); simultaneous split-sample discovery and validation of models (step 2); and exploratory discovery of new models (step 3). Sensitivity, specificity, sensitivity at 98% specificity, and AUC were computed for the models and CA125 alone among 67 cases diagnosed within one year of blood draw and 476 matched controls. In step 1, one model showed comparable performance to CA125, with sensitivity, specificity, and AUC at 69.2%, 96.6%, and 0.892, respectively. Remaining models had poorer performance than CA125 alone. In step 2, we observed a similar pattern. In step 3, a model derived from all 28 markers failed to show improvement over CA125. Thus, biomarker panels discovered in diagnostic samples may not validate in prediagnostic samples; utilizing prediagnostic samples for discovery may be helpful in developing validated early detection panels. Cancer Prev Res; 4(3); 375–83. ©2011 AACR.


Clinical Genitourinary Cancer | 2011

Comparison of Circulating MicroRNA 141 to Circulating Tumor Cells, Lactate Dehydrogenase, and Prostate-Specific Antigen for Determining Treatment Response in Patients With Metastatic Prostate Cancer

Jason Gonzales; Louis M. Fink; Oscar B. Goodman; James Symanowski; Nicholas J. Vogelzang; David C. Ward

Our aim was to determine the utility of circulating micro RNA miR-141 as a potential biomarker of therapeutic response in prostate cancer (CaP) patients. We compared the values of miR-141 in plasma of 21 CaP patients to the levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA), circulating tumor cells (CTC) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH). Data suggest a strong correlation of miR-141 values and clinical course. For prostate cancer (CaP), the measurement of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and radiographic studies do not adequately predict response to therapy and survival, and, therefore, new relevant biomarkers are needed. We and other researchers have shown that longitudinal measurements of PSA, circulating tumor cells (CTC), and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) may aid in predicting response to therapy. Results of recent studies have determined that circulating microRNA (miRNA) miR-141 is detected in plasma of patients with CaP. We, therefore, compared the temporal changes of miR-141 with the levels of CTC, LDH, and PSA in 21 patients with CaP, and longitudinally examined these markers alone or in combinations to determine the utility of miR-141 in the predicting a patients clinical course and response to therapy. Levels of miR-141 in plasma of 21 patients with CaP were measured by using quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. A total of 35 intervals were assessed. Directional changes (increasing or decreasing) in PSA, CTC, and miR-141 had sensitivity in predicting clinical outcome (progression vs. nonprogressing) of 78.9%. Logistic regression modeling of the probability of clinical progression demonstrates that miR-141 levels predicted clinical outcomes with an odds ratio of at least 8.3. miR-141 also had the highest correlation with temporal changes of PSA with a correlation of R = 0.77 (P < .001). In this retrospective study, miR-141 demonstrated a similar ability to predict clinical progression when compared with other clinically validated biomarkers. Furthermore, miR-141 demonstrated high correlation with changes of the other biomarkers.


Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention | 2009

Circulating Tumor Cells in Patients with Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer Baseline Values and Correlation with Prognostic Factors

Oscar B. Goodman; Louis M. Fink; James Symanowski; Bryan Y. Wong; Beth Grobaski; David Pomerantz; Yupo Ma; David C. Ward; Nicholas J. Vogelzang

Purpose: Circulating tumor cells (CTC) have been recently accepted by the Food and Drug Administration of the United States as a prognostic tool in advanced prostate cancer. However, a number of questions remain about the use of the test. The optimal clinical cut-off has never been determined. Also, the predictive value of CTCs in the setting of low-burden advanced prostate cancer has not been evaluated. Herein we describe our experience with the CellSearch method of CTC enumeration. Experimental Design: CTCs enumerated from 100 patients with castration-resistant prostate cancer were correlated with clinicopathologic characteristics and conventional biomarkers, such as prostate-specific antigen and lactate dehydrogenase. Patients received ongoing medical oncologic follow-up for up to 26 months, and overall survival status was documented. Results: Forty-nine of the patients (49%) were alive at the end of the study. CTC counts correlate well with overall survival (P < 0.001) but are also tightly interrelated to other biomarkers. Threshold analysis identified 4 CTC/7.5 cc (compared with the approved value of 5) as an optimal cut-off value with respect to correlation with survival outcomes as well as predictive of metastatic disease. Univariate analysis confirmed a tight interrelationship between cut-off CTC values and biomarkers. Multivariate analysis with bootstrap sampling validation identified lactate dehydrogenase (P = 0.002) and CTCs (P = 0.001) as independently prognostically significant. Conclusions: Baseline CTC values provide important prognostic information and specific prediction of metastatic disease. Their presence correlates with classic biomarkers. (Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2009;18(6):1904–13)


Clinical Genitourinary Cancer | 2011

Circulating Tumor Cells as a Predictive Biomarker in Patients With Hormone-sensitive Prostate Cancer

Oscar B. Goodman; James Symanowski; Aida Loudyi; Louis M. Fink; David C. Ward; Nicholas J. Vogelzang

UNLABELLED Little information exists regarding the utility circulating tumor cell (CTC) enumeration in hormone sensitive prostate cancer. We enumerated CTC in 33 consecutive patients undergoing androgren deprivation therapy (ADT) at our institution. Multivariate analysis revealed baseline CTC as the only independent predictor of progression to CRPC. These data suggest that baseline CTC may identify those unlikely to benefit from ADT. INTRODUCTION Circulating tumor cell (CTC) enumeration by using the Cellsearch platform has established prognostic and predictive value in patients with metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Limited information exists regarding the clinical utility of CTC enumeration in metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC). The goal of this study was to prospectively determine the relative clinical utility of CTCs in mHSPC. PATIENTS AND METHODS We analyzed serial CTC in conjunction with other classic biomarkers in 33 consecutive patients treated at the Nevada Cancer Institute with HSPC initiating androgen deprivation therapy and correlated these patients with prognostic prostate-specific antigen (PSA) endpoints and onset of CRPC. RESULTS Initial CTC correlated positively with lactate dehydrogenase and alkaline phosphatase, and were unrelated to PSA and testosterone. In univariate analysis, baseline CTC, alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase, testosterone, and follow-up CTC were individual predictors of progression to CRPC. In a multivariate Cox regression, only baseline CTC retained independent predictive value. Threshold analysis revealed the cutpoint that optimized specificity and sensitivity of the test to be 3 cells per 7.5 mL whole blood. Baseline CTC also correlated well with PSA nadir benchmarks. CONCLUSIONS Initial CTC values predict the duration and magnitude of response to hormonal therapy. CTC enumeration may identify patients at risk of progression to CRPC before initiation of androgen deprivation therapy.


BJUI | 2009

Testosterone replacement in prostate cancer survivors with hypogonadal symptoms

Robert L. Leibowitz; Tanya B. Dorff; Steven Tucker; James Symanowski; Nicholas J. Vogelzang

Study Type – Therapy (case series)
Level of Evidence 4


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2010

Increases in Quantitative D-Dimer Levels Correlate With Progressive Disease Better Than Circulating Tumor Cell Counts in Patients With Refractory Prostate Cancer

Joseph D. Khoury; Dorothy M. Adcock; Fanny Chan; James Symanowski; Stefan Tiefenbacher; Oscar B. Goodman; Lazara Paz; Yupo Ma; David C. Ward; Nicholas J. Vogelzang; Louis M. Fink

Changes in quantitative D-dimer levels, circulating tumor cell (CTC) counts, and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels were measured in 28 patients with refractory castration-resistant prostate cancer to assess their concordance during the course of therapy and their relationship with risk of progressive disease. A significant correlation was identified between changes in PSA and both CTC counts and D-dimer levels (r = 0.67 and 0.58, respectively; P < .001). In addition, there was a significant correlation between changes in CTC count and D-dimer level (r = 0.62; P < .001). A significantly stronger concordance between these biomarkers was noted for increasing values (sensitivity, 72%-77.8%) compared with decreasing values (specificity, 43.8%-71.4%). Notably, increases in PSA and D-dimer levels, not CTC counts, were associated with increased risks for progressive disease (P < .024). Increases in quantitative D-dimer levels correlate with progressive disease better than CTC counts in patients with refractory prostate cancer.


Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2009

A Histone Deacetylase Inhibitor LBH589 Downregulates XIAP in Mesothelioma Cell Lines Which is Likely Responsible for Increased Apoptosis With TRAIL

James Symanowski; Nicholas J. Vogelzang; Leigh Zawel; Peter Atadja; Harvey I. Pass; Sunil Sharma

Purpose: Tumor necrosis factor-alpha-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) is a member of tumor necrosis factor family and it is important for ligand induced apoptosis in tumor cells. TRAIL has been shown to be synergistic with a variety of chemotherapies and targeted agents. In the study, a combination of TRAIL and a histone deacetylase inhibitor LBH589 was studied in mesothelioma cell lines. Experimental Design: Five mesothelioma cell lines and two normal cell lines were tested for cell growth inhibition and apoptosis using high-throughput assays in the presence of LBH589, TRAIL and a combination of the two. Caspase induction was studied and levels of X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (XIAP) were tested using Western blotting. A combination of a direct inhibitor of XIAP was also tested in combination with TRAIL. Results: In mesothelioma cell lines, a combination of LBH589 and TRAIL markedly increased cell growth inhibition and apoptosis when compared with the effect on normal cell lines. LBH589 and TRAIL appeared to induce higher levels of caspase 3 and 7 and this appeared to be closely related to ability of LBH589 to degrade XIAP. In addition, a direct inhibitor of XIAP was also sensitized cells to TRAIL apoptosis, providing an indirect confirmation for XIAP degradation as a possible mechanism of synergy. Conclusions: In mesothelioma cell lines, LBH589 increases the sensitivity to TRAIL. In addition, at least partly, the mechanism of this induction of TRAIL sensitivity is due to LBH589 related degradation of XIAP. These results provide initial evidence for testing this combination in clinical trials.


Annals of Oncology | 2016

Primary analysis of a prospective, randomized, single-blinded phase II trial evaluating the HER2 peptide AE37 vaccine in breast cancer patients to prevent recurrence

Elizabeth A. Mittendorf; Alexandros Ardavanis; James Symanowski; James L. Murray; N. M. Shumway; Jennifer K. Litton; Diane F. Hale; Sonia A. Perez; Eleftheria A. Anastasopoulou; Pistamaltzian N; Sathibalan Ponniah; Constantin N. Baxevanis; E. von Hofe; Michael Papamichail; George E. Peoples

BACKGROUND AE37 is the Ii-Key hybrid of the MHC class II peptide, AE36 (HER2 aa:776-790). Phase I studies showed AE37 administered with granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) to be safe and highly immunogenic. A prospective, randomized, multicenter phase II adjuvant trial was conducted to evaluate the vaccines efficacy. METHODS Clinically disease-free node-positive and high-risk node-negative breast cancer patients with tumors expressing any degree of HER2 [immunohistochemistry (IHC) 1-3+] were enrolled. Patients were randomized to AE37 + GM-CSF versus GM-CSF alone. Toxicity was monitored. Clinical recurrences were documented and disease-free survival (DFS) analyzed. RESULTS The trial enrolled 298 patients; 153 received AE37 + GM-CSF and 145 received GM-CSF alone. The groups were well matched for clinicopathologic characteristics. Toxicities have been minimal. At the time of the primary analysis, the recurrence rate in the vaccinated group was 12.4% versus 13.8% in the control group [relative risk reduction 12%, HR 0.885, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.472-1.659, P = 0.70]. The Kaplan-Meier estimated 5-year DFS rate was 80.8% in vaccinated versus 79.5% in control patients. In planned subset analyses of patients with IHC 1+/2+ HER2-expressing tumors, 5-year DFS was 77.2% in vaccinated patients (n = 76) versus 65.7% in control patients (n = 78) (P = 0.21). In patients with triple-negative breast cancer (HER2 IHC 1+/2+ and hormone receptor negative) DFS was 77.7% in vaccinated patients (n = 25) versus 49.0% in control patients (n = 25) (P = 0.12). CONCLUSION The overall intention-to-treat analysis demonstrates no benefit to vaccination. However, the results confirm that the vaccine is safe and suggest that vaccination may have clinical benefit in patients with low HER2-expressing tumors, specifically TNBC. Further evaluation in a randomized trial enrolling TNBC patients is warranted.

Collaboration


Dive into the James Symanowski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oscar B. Goodman

Thomas Jefferson University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jai N. Patel

Carolinas Healthcare System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ashley Sumrall

University of Mississippi Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniel Haggstrom

Carolinas Healthcare System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katherine Miller

Carolinas Healthcare System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kris E. Gaston

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge