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Dive into the research topics where Javier Oesterheld is active.

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Featured researches published by Javier Oesterheld.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2016

A Phase I Study of Quizartinib Combined with Chemotherapy in Relapsed Childhood Leukemia: A Therapeutic Advances in Childhood Leukemia & Lymphoma (TACL) Study.

Todd Cooper; Jeannette Cassar; Elena Eckroth; Jemily Malvar; Richard Sposto; Paul S. Gaynon; Bill H. Chang; Lia Gore; Keith J. August; Jessica A. Pollard; Steven G. DuBois; Lewis B. Silverman; Javier Oesterheld; Guy Gammon; Daniel Magoon; Colleen E. Annesley; Patrick Brown

Purpose: To determine a safe and biologically active dose of quizartinib (AC220), a potent and selective class III receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) FLT3 inhibitor, in combination with salvage chemotherapy in children with relapsed acute leukemia. Experimental Design: Quizartinib was administered orally to children with relapsed AML or MLL-rearranged ALL following 5 days of high-dose cytarabine and etoposide (AE). A 3+3 dose escalation design was used to identify a safe and biologically active dose. Plasma inhibitory assay (PIA) testing was performed weekly to determine biologic activity. Results: Toxicities were consistent with intensive relapsed leukemia regimens. One of 6 patients experienced a dose-limiting toxicity (DLT) at 40 mg/m2/day (elevated lipase) and 1 of 9 had a DLT (hyperbilirubinemia) at the highest tested dose of 60 mg/m2/day. Of 17 response evaluable patients, 2 had complete response (CR), 1 complete response without platelet recovery (CRp), 1 complete response with incomplete neutrophil and platelet recovery (CRi), 10 stable disease (SD), and 3 progressive disease (PD). Of 7 FLT3-ITD patients, 1 achieved CR, 1 CRp, 1 Cri, and 4 SD. FLT3-ITD patients, but not FLT3 wild-type (WT) patients, had significantly lower blast counts post-quizartinib. FLT3 phosphorylation was completely inhibited in all patients. Conclusions: Quizartinib plus intensive chemotherapy is well tolerated at 60 mg/m2/day with near complete inhibition of FLT3 phosphorylation in all patients. The favorable toxicity profile, pharmacodynamic activity, and encouraging response rates warrant further testing of quizartinib in children with FLT3-ITD AML. Clin Cancer Res; 22(16); 4014–22. ©2016 AACR.


Anti-Cancer Drugs | 2013

Valproic acid reduces the tolerability of temsirolimus in children and adolescents with solid tumors

Don W. Coulter; Christine M. Walko; Jai N. Patel; Billie M. Moats-Staats; Andrew W. McFadden; Scott V. Smith; Wasiuddin A. Khan; Arlene S. Bridges; Allison M. Deal; Javier Oesterheld; Ian J. Davis; Julie Blatt

A pediatric study has established a maximum tolerated dose (MTD) for temsirolimus (Tem) of more than 150 mg/m2 intravenously/week. A phase I trial was conducted to establish the MTD for Tem in combination with valproic acid (VPA) in children and adolescents with refractory solid tumors. The secondary aims included expression of mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) markers on archival tumor tissue; Tem pharmacokinetics; assessment of histone acetylation (HA); and tumor response. Patients were treated with VPA (5 mg/kg orally three times daily) with a target serum level of 75–100 mcg/ml. Tem was started at an initial dose of 60 mg/m2/week. Pharmacokinetics and HA measurements were performed during weeks 1 and 5. Two of the first three patients experienced dose-limiting toxicity (grade 3 mucositis). Tem at 35 mg/m2/week was found to be tolerable. Peak Tem concentrations were higher in all patients compared with those in previously published reports of single agent Tem. Increases in HA are correlated with VPA levels. All tumor samples expressed mTORC1 and mTORC2. An objective response was observed in one patient (melanoma), whereas transient stable disease was observed in four other patients (spinal cord ependymoma, alveolar soft part sarcoma, medullary thyroid carcinoma, and hepatocellular carcinoma). The MTD of Tem when administered with VPA is considerably lower than when used as a single agent, with mucositis the major dose-limiting toxicity. The combination merits further study and may have activity in melanoma. Attention to drug–drug interactions will be important in future multiagent trials including Tem.


Leukemia | 2018

Outcome of children with multiply relapsed B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia: a therapeutic advances in childhood leukemia & lymphoma study

Weili Sun; Jemily Malvar; Richard Sposto; Anupam Verma; Jennifer J. Wilkes; Robyn M. Dennis; Kenneth Matthew Heym; Theodore W. Laetsch; Melissa Widener; Susan R. Rheingold; Javier Oesterheld; Nobuko Hijiya; Maria Luisa Sulis; Van Huynh; Andrew E. Place; Henrique Bittencourt; Raymond J. Hutchinson; Yoav Messinger; Bill H. Chang; Yousif Matloub; David S. Ziegler; Rebecca A. Gardner; Todd Cooper; Francesco Ceppi; Michelle L. Hermiston; Luciano Dalla-Pozza; Kirk R. Schultz; Paul S. Gaynon; Alan S. Wayne; James A. Whitlock

The survival of pediatric patients with multiply relapsed and/or refractory (R/R) B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia has historically been very poor; however, data are limited in the current era. We conducted a retrospective study to determine the outcome of multiply R/R childhood B-ALL treated at 24 TACL institutions between 2005 and 2013. Patient information, treatment, and response were collected. Prognostic factors influencing the complete remission (CR) rate and event-free survival (EFS) were analyzed. The analytic set included 578 salvage treatment attempts among 325 patients. CR rates (mean ± SE) were 51 ± 4% for patients with bone marrow R/R B-ALL who underwent a second salvage attempt, 37 ± 6% for a third attempt, and 31 ± 6% for the fourth through eighth attempts combined. For patients achieving a CR after their second, third, and fourth through eighth attempts, the 2 year EFS was 41 ± 6%, 13 ± 7%, and 27 ± 13% respectively. Our results showed slight improvement when compared to previous studies. This is the largest and most recent study to date that evaluates the outcome of this patient population. Our data will provide detailed reference for the evaluation of new agents being developed for childhood B-ALL.


Pediatric Hematology and Oncology | 2017

Combination of clofarabine, cyclophosphamide, and etoposide for relapsed or refractory childhood and adolescent acute myeloid leukemia

Yoav Messinger; John M. Goldberg; Steven G. DuBois; Javier Oesterheld; Oussama Abla; Alissa Martin; Joanna Weinstein; Nobuko Hijiya

ABSTRACT Relapsed/refractory acute myeloid leukemia (AML) has an extremely poor prognosis. We describe 17 children and adolescents with relapsed/refractory AML who received clofarabine, cyclophosphamide, and etoposide. Seven patients (41%) responded: 4 with a complete response (CR); 1 with CR with incomplete platelet recovery; and 2 with a partial response. Additionally, 4 developed hypocellular marrow without evidence of leukemia; 5 patients had resistant disease; and 1 suffered early toxic death. After further therapy including transplantation, 4 patients (24%) are alive without evidence of disease at a median of 60 months. This anthracycline-free regimen may be studied for relapsed or refractory AML, but due to the high risk of marrow aplasia reduced doses of clofarabine and cyclophosphamide should be used.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Maintenance DFMO Increases Survival in High Risk Neuroblastoma

Giselle Saulnier Sholler; William S. Ferguson; Genevieve Bergendahl; Jeffrey P. Bond; Kathleen Neville; Don Eslin; Valerie I. Brown; William Roberts; Randal K. Wada; Javier Oesterheld; Deanna Mitchell; Jessica Foley; Nehal Parikh; Francis Eshun; Peter E. Zage; Jawhar Rawwas; Susan Sencer; Debra Pankiewicz; Monique Quinn; Maria Rich; Joseph Junewick; Jacqueline M. Kraveka

High risk neuroblastoma (HRNB) accounts for 15% of all pediatric cancer deaths. Despite aggressive therapy approximately half of patients will relapse, typically with only transient responses to second-line therapy. This study evaluated the ornithine decarboxylase inhibitor difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) as maintenance therapy to prevent relapse following completion of standard therapy (Stratum 1) or after salvage therapy for relapsed/refractory disease (Stratum 2). This Phase II single agent, single arm multicenter study enrolled from June 2012 to February 2016. Subjects received 2 years of oral DFMO (750 ± 250 mg/m2 twice daily). Event free survival (EFS) and overall survival (OS) were determined on an intention-to-treat (ITT) basis. 101 subjects enrolled on Stratum 1 and 100 were eligible for ITT analysis; two-year EFS was 84% (±4%) and OS 97% (±2%). 39 subjects enrolled on Stratum 2, with a two-year EFS of 54% (±8%) and OS 84% (±6%). DFMO was well tolerated. The median survival time is not yet defined for either stratum. DFMO maintenance therapy for HRNB in remission is safe and associated with high EFS and OS. Targeting ODC represents a novel therapeutic mechanism that may provide a new strategy for preventing relapse in children with HRNB.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2017

A case of advanced infantile myofibromatosis harboring a novel MYH10-RET fusion

Mark Rosenzweig; Siraj M. Ali; Victor W. Wong; Alexa B. Schrock; Theodore W. Laetsch; William Ahrens; Andreas Heilmann; Samantha Morley; Yakov Chudnovsky; Rachel L. Erlich; Kai Wang; Philip J. Stephens; Jeffrey S. Ross; Vincent A. Miller; Javier Oesterheld

To the Editor: Infantile myofibromatosis (IM), predominantly observed in infants andyoung children, features variable prognosis, as evidenced by some tumors spontaneously regressing, others successfully surgically managed, and those multifocal or with visceral involvement requiring systemic therapy.1–3 For patients with unresectable, persistent, and disseminated IM, comprehensive genomic profiling (CGP) may identify targetable genomic alterations. In this case of a child with a single focus unresectable IM, CGP identified a novel MYH10-RET fusion, suggesting possible utility of RET-targeted therapies.


Blood | 2014

A Phase I Dose Finding Study of Panobinostat in Children with Hematologic Malignancies: Initial Report of TACL Study T2009-012 in Children with Acute Leukemia

John M. Goldberg; Julia Glade-Bender; Maria Luisa Sulis; Rebecca A. Gardner; Jessica A. Pollard; Victor M. Aquino; Naomi J. Winick; Bruce Bostrom; Cecilia Fu; Raymond J. Hutchinson; Thomas J. Manley; Rajen Mody; Javier Oesterheld; Blythe Thomson; Julie R Park; Jeannette Cassar; Elena Eckroth; Richard Sposto; Yoav Messinger; Nobuko Hijiya; Paul S. Gaynon; Julio C. Barredo


Biology of Blood and Marrow Transplantation | 2015

Successful Use of Cryopreservation and Shipping of CD34-Selected Mismatched Related Donor Grafts for Treatment of Children

Michael J. Eckrich; Carrie Barnhart; Ching-Ying Oon; Stacy Epstein; Darci L. Grochowski; Javier Oesterheld; Alexis Teplick; Sherman Bakabak; Morton J. Cowan; Andrew L. Gilman


Blood | 2013

CD34-Selected, T Cell-Depleted Alternative Donor Stem Cell Transplantation For Children

Michael J. Eckrich; Stacy Epstein; Carrie Barnhart; Javier Oesterheld; Darci Grochowski; Tracy Fukes; Maria Lacaria; Mark Cannon


Cancer Research | 2018

Abstract CT073: Peds-plan, pediatric precision laboratory advanced neuroblastoma therapy: Molecular guided therapy for high risk neuroblastoma at diagnosis

Jacqeline Kraveka; Valerie I. Brown; William S. Ferguson; Genevieve Bergendahl; William Roberts; Jessica Foley; Deanna Mitchell; Javier Oesterheld; Michael Isakoff; Kathleen Neville; Randal K. Wada; Jawhar Rawwas; Gina Hanna; Abhinav Nagulapally; Jeffrey P. Bond; Jeffrey M. Trent; William Hendricks; Sarah Byron; Giselle L. Saulnier Sholler

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Liana Klejmont

New York Medical College

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Olga Militano

New York Medical College

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Paul S. Gaynon

University of Southern California

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