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Featured researches published by John J. Orloff.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Immunochemical Characterization of Circulating Parathyroid Hormone–Related Protein in Patients with Humoral Hypercalcemia of Cancer

William J. Burtis; Thomas G. Brady; John J. Orloff; Julie B. Ersbak; Raymond P. Warrell; Beatriz R. Olson; Terence L. Wu; Maryann Mitnick; Arthur E. Broadus; Andrew F. Stewart

Tumors from patients with humoral hypercalcemia of cancer produce a parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHRP). We have developed two region-specific immunoassays capable of measuring PTHRP in plasma: an immunoradiometric assay directed toward PTHRP amino acid sequence 1 to 74 and a radioimmunoassay directed toward PTHRP amino acid sequence 109 to 138. Sixty normal subjects had low or undetectable plasma PTHRP (1 to 74) concentrations (mean, 1.9 pmol per liter) and undetectable PTHRP (109 to 138) concentrations (less than 2.0 pmol per liter). Patients with humoral hypercalcemia of cancer (n = 30) had elevated levels of both PTHRP (1 to 74) (mean, 20.9 pmol per liter) and PTHRP (109 to 138) (mean, 23.9 pmol per liter). The plasma concentrations of immunoreactive PTHRP correlated with the levels of urinary cyclic AMP excreted; in some patients, the concentrations decreased after the tumors were resected. Patients with chronic renal failure (n = 15) had plasma PTHRP (1 to 74) concentrations similar to those in the normal subjects, but their plasma PTHRP (109 to 138) concentrations were elevated (mean, 29.6 pmol per liter). The levels of both peptides were normal in patients with hyperparathyroidism and those with hypercalcemia due to various other causes. Breast milk contained high concentrations of PTHRP. An anti-PTHRP (1 to 36) immunoaffinity column failed to extract PTHRP (109 to 138) immunoactivity from plasma, suggesting that the C-terminal region circulates as a separate peptide. We conclude that plasma PTHRP concentrations are high in the majority of patients with cancer-associated hypercalcemia and that the circulating forms of PTHRP in such patients include both a large N-terminal (1 to 74) peptide and a C-terminal (109 to 138) peptide. Measuring the concentrations of PTHRPs may be useful in the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2004

Change in bone turnover and hip, non-spine, and vertebral fracture in alendronate-treated women: the fracture intervention trial.

Douglas C. Bauer; Dennis M. Black; Patrick Garnero; Marc C. Hochberg; Susan M. Ott; John J. Orloff; Desmond E. Thompson; Susan K. Ewing; Pierre D. Delmas

We used data from the Fracture Intervention Trial to assess the relationship change in bone turnover after 1 year of alendronate or placebo treatment and subsequent hip, non‐spine, and spine fracture risk among 6186 postmenopausal women. In the alendronate group (n = 3105), greater reductions in one or more biochemical marker were associated with a lower risk of fracture.


Clinical Therapeutics | 2000

Weekly administration of alendronate: Rationale and plan for clinical assessment

Henry G. Bone; Silvano Adami; René Rizzoli; Murray J. Favus; Philip D. Ross; Arthur C. Santora; Srinivasa Prahalada; Anastasia G. Daifotis; John J. Orloff; John Yates

OBJECTIVE This paper describes the rationale and supporting data for once-weekly dosing of alendronate. BACKGROUND Alendronate sodium, a bisphosphonate that potently inhibits bone resorption, has been shown to increase bone mass and substantially reduce the incidence of osteoporotic fractures, including fractures of the hip. The standard regimen of daily administration has generally been well tolerated. However, weekly administration may provide greater convenience to patients without compromising efficacy or tolerability. The pharmacokinetics of alendronate and bone remodeling theory predict similar efficacy for weekly and daily administration if the cumulative dose is the same. Bone resorption in individual remodeling units normally proceeds for approximately 2 weeks; alendronate inhibits the rate and extent of resorption. Because the half-life of residence on bone surfaces is several weeks, weekly administration of alendronate should inhibit bone resorption to an overall extent similar to that of daily dosing, thereby producing similar effects on bone mass and strength. Animal studies demonstrate that both weekly and daily parenteral administration of alendronate effectively increase bone mass and strength, but confirmation of efficacy is needed for weekly oral dosing in humans. Although daily bisphosphonates (alendronate and risedronate) elicited esophageal irritation in a canine model of gastroesophageal reflux, weekly dosing with alendronate at a higher unit dose did not. Thus, the lower frequency of weekly dosing with a higher unit dose may actually reduce the risk of upper gastrointestinal irritation compared with daily administration of a lower dose. CONCLUSIONS Current safety and efficacy data justify further investigation of once-weekly dosing of alendronate. Two positive-control, double-blind, randomized trials of osteoporosis treatment and prevention are currently being performed to assess the comparability of weekly, biweekly, and daily dosing of alendronate with regard to effects on bone density, safety, and tolerability.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2004

Prevention of Acute Ischemic Renal Failure by Targeted Delivery of Growth Factors to the Proximal Tubule in Transgenic Mice: The Efficacy of Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein and Hepatocyte Growth Factor

Nathalie Fiaschi-Taesch; Soledad Santos; Vasumathi Reddy; Scott K. Van Why; William F. Philbrick; Arantxa Ortega; Pedro Esbrit; John J. Orloff; Adolfo Garcia-Ocaña

Treatment of acute renal failure (ARF) would be enhanced by identification of factors that accelerate renal recovery from injury. Parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP) and hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) have been shown to stimulate proliferation in proximal nephron-derived cells. For studying the pathophysiologic roles and therapeutic potential of these two factors in ARF, transgenic mice overexpressing PTHrP or HGF in the proximal tubule under the direction of the gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase-I promoter were developed. These mice display (1) abundant expression of the respective transgenes in the kidney; (2) similar PTH type I receptor and HGF receptor (c-met) expression levels in the proximal tubule compared with control littermates; and (3) normal renal morphology, function, and tubule cell proliferation under basal conditions. However, in contrast to control mice, when acute ischemic renal injury was induced, renal function rapidly and dramatically recovered in HGF-overexpressing mice. In addition, 48 h after ischemia, HGF-overexpressing transgenic mice displayed a fourfold increase in tubule cell proliferation and a threefold decrease in apoptotic tubule cell death compared with control mice. In contrast, PTHrP-overexpressing mice responded to either ischemic or folic acid-induced renal damage similarly to control mice. These studies demonstrate that overexpression of PTHrP in the proximal nephron of mice does not seem to provide protection against acute renal injury. In marked contrast, HGF overexpression results in dramatic protection from ischemia-induced ARF, without inducing any apparent alteration in the physiology of the kidney under normal conditions. These studies suggest that HGF, when targeted specifically to the proximal tubule, may have therapeutic potential in providing protection against ischemia-induced renal failure.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2003

Therapeutic equivalence of alendronate 35 milligrams once weekly and 5 milligrams daily in the prevention of postmenopausal osteoporosis

Marjorie M Luckey; Nigel L. Gilchrist; Henry G. Bone; Michael W Davie; Tobias J de Villiers; Mei X. Wu; Anastasia G. Daifotis; Arthur C. Santora; John J. Orloff

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy and safety of alendronate 35 mg once weekly compared with alendronate 5 mg daily in the prevention of osteoporosis. METHODS We compared the efficacy and safety of treatment with alendronate 35 mg once weekly (n = 362) and alendronate 5 mg daily (n = 361) in a 1-year, double-blind, multicenter study of postmenopausal women (6 months or greater), aged 40–70 years, with lumbar spine and femoral neck bone mineral density T-scores between −2.5 and 1. The primary efficacy end point was the comparability of lumbar spine bone mineral density increases, defined by strict prespecified criteria. RESULTS Mean increases in lumbar spine bone mineral density at 12 months were equivalent (difference between the alendronate 35-mg once-weekly group and the alendronate 5-mg daily group [90% confidence interval] at month 12 was −0.3% [−0.6, 0.1], well within the prespecified bounds of ±1.0%). Bone mineral density increases at other skeletal sites and effects on bone turnover were also virtually identical for the two dosing regimens. Both treatment regimens were well tolerated, and the larger weekly unit dose was not associated with an increased frequency of upper gastrointestinal events. CONCLUSION Alendronate 35 mg once weekly is therapeutically equivalent to alendronate 5 mg daily and provides patients with greater dosing convenience, in addition to the proven efficacy of alendronate and good tolerability.


Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine | 1999

Immunohistochemical Detection of Parathyroid Hormone–Related Protein in a Cutaneous Squamous Cell Carcinoma Causing Humoral Hypercalcemia of Malignancy

Manuel Crespo; B. Sopeña; John J. Orloff; Jorge F. Cameselle Teijeiro; Pamela Dann; María A. Andrade; Mayca Freire; Javier de la Fuente; C. Martínez-Vázquez

Humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy is a cancer-related hypercalcemia caused by production of humoral factors by malignant cells in patients without bone metastases. Squamous cell carcinomas are the tumors most frequently associated with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy, and parathyroid hormone-related protein is the main humoral factor implicated. In spite of the fact that normal keratinocytes produce parathyroid hormone-related protein, it is highly unusual for patients with squamous cell carcinomas of the skin to present with humoral hypercalcemia of malignancy. We present a well-documented case of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma complicated by hypercalcemia in a patient with high levels of plasma parathyroid hormone-related protein and immunohistochemical evidence of high parathyroid hormone-related protein production by the tumoral cells.


Endocrine Reviews | 1989

Parathyroid hormone-like proteins: biochemical responses and receptor interactions

John J. Orloff; Terence L. Wu; Andrew F. Stewart


Endocrinology | 1989

Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein Modulates the Effect of Transforming Growth Factor-β on Deoxyribonucleic Acid and Collagen Synthesis in Fetal Rat Bone Cells*

Michael Centrella; Ernesto Canalis; Thomas L. McCarthy; Andrew F. Stewart; John J. Orloff; Karl L. Insogna


Kidney International | 1993

Accumulation of carboxy-terminal fragments of parathyroid hormone-related protein in renal failure

John J. Orloff; Neil E. Soifer; Joseph P. Fodero; Pamela Dann; William J. Burtis


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 1999

Expression and Role of Parathyroid Hormone-Related Protein in Human Renal Proximal Tubule Cells during Recovery from ATP Depletion

Adolfo García-Ocaña; Susan C. Galbraith; Scott K. Van Why; Kai Yang; Lina Golovyan; Pamela Dann; Richard A. Zager; Andrew F. Stewart; Norman J. Siegel; John J. Orloff

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Scott K. Van Why

Medical College of Wisconsin

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