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Dive into the research topics where John M. Kurtz is active.

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Featured researches published by John M. Kurtz.


Nature Medicine | 2000

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation with co-stimulatory blockade inducesmacrochimerism and tolerance without cytoreductive host treatment

Thomas Wekerle; John M. Kurtz; Hiroshi Ito; Joseph V. Ronquillo; Victor M. Dong; Guiling Zhao; Juanita Shaffer; Mohamed H. Sayegh; Megan Sykes

Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (in immunocompetent adults) has always required cytoreductive treatment of recipients with irradiation or cytotoxic drugs to achieve lasting engraftment at levels detectable by non-PCR-based techniques (‘macrochimerism’ or ‘mixed chimerism’). Only syngeneic marrow engraftment at such levels has been achieved in unconditioned hosts. This requirement for potentially toxic myelosuppressive host pre-conditioning has precluded the clinical use of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for many indications other than malignancies, including tolerance induction. We demonstrate here that treatment of naive mice with a high dose of fully major histocompatibility complex-mismatched allogeneic bone marrow, followed by one injection each of monoclonal antibody against CD154 and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 immunoglobulin, resulted in multi-lineage hematopoietic macrochimerism (of about 15%) that persisted for up to 34 weeks. Long-term chimeras developed donor-specific tolerance (donor skin graft survival of more than 145 days) and demonstrated ongoing intrathymic deletion of donor-reactive T cells. A protocol of high-dose bone marrow transplantation and co-stimulatory blockade can thus achieve allogeneic bone marrow engraftment without cytoreduction or T-cell depletion of the host, and eliminates a principal barrier to the more widespread use of allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Although efforts have been made to minimize host pre-treatment for allogeneic bone marrow transplantation for tolerance induction, so far none have succeeded in eliminating pre-treatment completely. Our demonstration that this can be achieved provides the rationale for a safe approach for inducing robust transplantation tolerance in large animals and humans.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Undertreatment Strongly Decreases Prognosis of Breast Cancer in Elderly Women

Christine Bouchardy; Elisabetta Rapiti; Gérald Fioretta; Paul Laissue; Isabelle Neyroud-Caspar; Peter Schäfer; John M. Kurtz; André-Pascal Sappino; Georges Vlastos

PURPOSE No consensus exists on therapy of elderly cancer patients. Treatments are influenced by unclear standards and are usually less aggressive. This study aims to evaluate determinants and effect of treatment choice on breast cancer prognosis among elderly patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS We reviewed clinical files of 407 breast cancer patients aged >/= 80 years recorded at the Geneva Cancer Registry between 1989 and 1999. Patient and tumor characteristics, general health status, comorbidity, treatment, and cause of death were considered. We evaluated determinants of treatment by logistic regression and effect of treatment on mortality by Cox model, accounting for prognostic factors. RESULTS Age was independently linked to the type of treatment. Overall, 12% of women (n = 48) had no treatment, 32% (n = 132) received tamoxifen only, 7% (n = 28) had breast-conserving surgery only, 33% (n = 133) had mastectomy, 14% (n = 57) had breast-conserving surgery plus adjuvant therapy, and 2% (n = 9) received miscellaneous treatments. Five-year specific breast cancer survival was 46%, 51%, 82%, and 90% for women with no treatment, tamoxifen alone, mastectomy, and breast-conserving surgery plus adjuvant treatment, respectively. Compared with the nontreated group, the adjusted hazard ratio of breast cancer mortality was 0.4 (95% CI, 0.2 to 0.7) for tamoxifen alone, 0.4 (95% CI, 0.1 to 1.4) for breast-conserving surgery alone, 0.2 (95% CI, 0.1 to 0.7) for mastectomy, and 0.1 (95% CI, 0.03 to 0.4) for breast-conserving surgery plus adjuvant treatment. CONCLUSION Half of elderly patients with breast cancer are undertreated, with strongly decreased specific survival as a consequence. Treatments need to be adapted to the patients health status, but also should offer the best chance of cure.


Cancer | 1989

Local recurrence after breast-conserving surgery and radiotherapy: frequency, time course, and prognosis

John M. Kurtz; Robert Amalric; Henri Brandone; Yves Ayme; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Jean-Claude Pietra; Daniel Hans; Jean-François Pollet; Claude Bressac; Jean-Maurice Spitalier

Mammary recurrences were studied in 1593 patients with Stage I and II breast cancer treated by macroscopically complete tumor excision followed by megavoltage radiotherapy, including a boost to the tumor bed (mean dose, 78 Gy). The actuarial freedom from mammary recurrence was 93% at 5,86% at 10, 82% at 15, and 80% at 20 years. Seventy‐nine percent of the recurrences were in the vicinity of the tumor bed, but with increasing time interval, an increasing percentage of recurrences was located elsewhere in the breast. A majority of recurrences after 10 years could be considered new tumors. Only ten of 181 patients with recurrence had prior or concomitant distant metastases, and 159 of 171 isolated mammary recurrences (93%) were operable. Uncorrected overall survival after operable recurrence was 69% at 5 and 57% at 10 years. Prognosis after late recurrence (after 5 years) was favorable (84% 5‐year survival). Operable early recurrences retained a favorable prognosis if smaller than 2 cm and confined to the breast (74% 5‐year survival). Disease‐free interval and histologic grade also appeared to be important prognostic factors after early recurrence. Survival after recurrence did not depend upon the type of salvage operation. Locoregional control was 88% at 5 years after salvage mastectomy and 64% after breast‐conserving salvage procedures. The role of adjuvant systemic therapy at time of local recurrence requires additional study. This experience illustrates the important differences between mammary failure and chest wall recurrence after mastectomy, in particular the protracted time course and more favorable prognosis associated with the former.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996

Fifteen-year results of breast-conserving surgery and definitive breast irradiation for the treatment of ductal carcinoma in situ of the breast.

Lawrence J. Solin; John M. Kurtz; A. Fourquet; Robert Amalric; Abram Recht; Bruce A. Bornstein; Robert R. Kuske; Marie E. Taylor; W. L. Barrett; Barbara Fowble; Bruce G. Haffty; Delray Schultz; I-Tien Yeh; Beryl McCormick; Marsha D. McNeese

PURPOSE To determine the 15-year outcome for women with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS, intraductal carcinoma) of the breast treated with breast-conserving surgery followed by definitive breast irradiation. PATIENTS AND METHODS An analysis was performed of 270 intraductal breast carcinomas in 268 women from 10 institutions in Europe and the United States. In all patients, breast-conserving surgery included complete gross excision of the primary tumor followed by definitive breast irradiation. When performed, pathologic axillary lymph node staging was node-negative (n=86). The median follow-up time was 10.3 years (range, 0.9 to 26.8). RESULTS The 15-year actuarial overall survival rate was 87%, and the 15-year actuarial cause-specific survival rate was 96%. The 15-year actuarial rate of freedom from distant metastases was 96%. There were 45 local recurrences in the treated breast, and the 15-year actuarial rate of local failure was 19%. The median time to local failure was 5.2 years (range, 1.4 to 16.8). A number of clinical and pathologic parameters were evaluated for correlation with local failure, and none were predictive for local failure (all P > or = .15). CONCLUSION The results from the present study demonstrate high rates of overall survival, cause-specific survival, and freedom from distant metastases following the treatment of DCIS of the breast using breast-conserving surgery and definitive breast irradiation. These results support the use of breast-conserving surgery and definitive breast irradiation for the treatment of DCIS of the breast.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1981

The palliation of brain metastases in a favorable patient population: a randomized clinical trial by the Radiation Therapy Oncology Group.

John M. Kurtz; Richard D. Gelber; Luther W. Brady; Richard J. Carella; Jay S. Cooper

Abstract The palliative effectiveness of a short, intensive course of brain irradiation (3000 rad in 2 weeks) was compared to that of a high-dose course (5000 rad in 4 weeks) in a randomized RTOG clinical trial. Eighty percent of the 255 evaluable patients had lung primaries, 7% breast, and 13% other or unknown primaries. Patients with evidence of extra-cranial metastases, uncontrolled primaries, or Class IV Neurologic Function (NFIV) were excluded. Forty-one percent of NFII and 71 % of NFIV patients improved in neurologic function class. For NFII patients, a significantly greater improvement rate was obtained with the short course than with the long course. Otherwise there were no significant differences between the two regimens with respect to palliation of symptoms, improvement rate, median time to progression, cause of death, or median survival. We conclude that 3000 rad in two weeks is at least as effective as 5000 rad in four weeks in the palliation of brain metastases, even in this relatively favorable patient population.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Why are local recurrences after breast-conserving therapy more frequent in younger patients?

John M. Kurtz; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Robert Amalric; H Brandone; Y Ayme; D Hans; C Bressac; Jean-Maurice Spitalier

The influence of patient age on risk of recurrence in the breast was retrospectively studied in 496 stage I-II invasive ductal carcinomas treated by macroscopically complete primary tumor excision followed by radiotherapy. With a median follow-up of 71 months, local recurrence occurred in 13 of 62 (21%) patients younger than 40 years, compared with 48 of 434 (11%) older patients (P less than .025). Cox multivariate analysis of 18 parameters identified four that significantly determined risk: major lymphocytic stromal reaction (MCR), unsatisfactory resection margins, increasing histologic grade, and extensive intraductal cancer (DCIS) within the primary tumor. Compared with older patients, those younger than 40 years had tumors that more often exhibited MCR (36% v 20%, P less than .01), histologic grade 3 (42% v 28%, P less than .025), and very extensive DCIS (21% v 6%, P less than .001). The status of resection margins did not differ significantly between younger and older patients. Restriction of Cox analysis to patients younger than 40 indicated that risk was adequately described by MCR and percentage of DCIS, without consideration of grade or margins. For patients younger than 40, local failure occurred in four of five (80%) tumors with both MCR and more than 50% DCIS, in eight of 25 (32%) with either, and one of 32 (3.1%) with neither of these morphologic features. This study suggests that the higher local failure risk observed in patients younger than 40 years reflects the greater prevalence of certain morphologic characteristics in breast cancers in younger patients. Age itself does not appear to be an independent determinate of risk.


Cancer | 1989

Conservation therapy for breast cancers other than infiltrating ductal carcinoma

John M. Kurtz; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Joachim Torhorst; Jean-Maurice Spitalier; Robert Amalric; Reinhard Hünig; Eike Walther; Felix Harder; Alfonso C. Almendral; Henri Brandone; Yves Ayme; Jakob Roth

Pathologic review of 861 Stage I and II breast cancers yielded 152 patients (18%) with histologic types other than invasive ductal carcinoma. All patients had been treated by breast‐conserving surgery and radiotherapy, including supplemental radiation to the tumor bed. For 67 patients with predominantly lobular carcinomas, the actuarial overall 5‐year survival was 100% and 77% for node‐negative and node‐positive patients, respectively. The actuarial probability of recurrence in the treated breast (13.5% at 5 years) appeared to be somewhat greater than that observed after treatment of invasive ductal cancers (8.8% at 5 years, P = 0.11). Of 12 mammary recurrences in patients with lobular carcinoma, four occurred at a considerable distance from the original primary and seven were multifocal, involving more than one quadrant in five patients. Of 47 patients with strictly in situ carcinomas, one patient whose axillary nodal status had not been determined subsequently developed distant metastases. Three additional patients developed mammary recurrence, two at the primary tumor site and one in another quadrant. The actuarial 5‐year mammary recurrence and overall survival rates were 4% and 98%, respectively. For 27 patients with true medullary cancers, overall survival at 5 years was 90%. One localized mammary recurrence was observed at the site of the original primary. Actuarial mammary recurrence rate was 4% at 5 years. No relapse was observed in ten patients with colloid and one patient with adenoid cystic carcinoma. The authors conclude that, in addition to its well‐established efficacy in the treatment of infiltrating ductal carcinomas, the combination of tumor excision and radiotherapy appears to provide adequate local control for other histologic types as well. However, patients with lobular cancer appear to be at somewhat greater risk of mammary failure, and recurrences in such patients tend to be multifocal and multicentric.


Cancer | 1990

Risk factors for breast recurrence in premenopausal and postmenopausal patients with ductal cancers treated by conservation therapy

John M. Kurtz; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Robert Amalric; Henri Brandone; Yves Ayme; Daniel Hans; Claude Bressac; Jakob Roth; Jean-Maurice Spitalier

Risk factors for local failure were evaluated for 496 clinical Stage I‐II patients with infiltrating ductal carcinomas (median follow‐up, 71 months) treated by conservative surgery and radiotherapy. Monofactorial analysis identified the following factors to be correlated with increased risk: moderate/marked mononuclear cell reaction (MCR), high histologic grade (G), extensive intraductal component (EIC), tumor necrosis, macroscopic multiplicity, estrogen receptor negativity, anatomic tumor size, age younger than 40 years, and vascular invasion. Only MCR, G, and EIC proved significant in Cox multivariate analysis. These risk factors were highly age dependent, with EIC markedly more prevalent in women younger than 50, MCR and G in women younger than 40. Separate Cox analysis for premenopausal patients showed that MCR/EIC determined risk independent of resection margins: tumors with MCR had a 28%, and with EIC a 22% probability of recurring locally by 5 years. Premenopausal patients with neither risk factor had a very low failure rate (2.6% at 5 years), regardless of age. For postmenopausal patients risk of breast recurrence was determined both by adequacy of resection margins and grade, with a high local failure rate for patients having G3 tumors with positive or indeterminate margins (31% at 5 years). The authors conclude that the microscopic examination is the only useful tool for assessing the risk of local failure, which is quite low for the majority of patients treated with breast conservation. High‐risk patients can be recognized morphologically. The age dependence of morphologic risk factors appears to explain the high local failure rate seen in patients younger than 40.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2002

Mechanisms of transplant tolerance induction using costimulatory blockade

Thomas Wekerle; John M. Kurtz; Sinda Bigenzahn; Yasuo Takeuchi; Megan Sykes

The potential use of costimulation-blocking reagents to induce transplantation tolerance has recently created considerable excitement. Recent evidence has begun to delineate the mechanisms by which these powerful effects occur. It has become increasingly clear, firstly, that T cell costimulation is mediated by a delicate network of signaling pathways and, secondly, that interference with these systems can lead to numerous different tolerance mechanisms, including immune regulation, anergy and deletion.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1989

The prognostic significance of late local recurrence after breast-conserving therapy

John M. Kurtz; Jean-Maurice Spitalier; Robert Amalric; Henri Brandone; Yves Ayme; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Daniel Hans; Claude Bressac

Of 178 local recurrences occurring in 1593 patients with clinical Stages I-II breast cancer treated by conservative surgery and megavoltage radiotherapy, 71 were diagnosed after the 5th year. Compared with recurrences occurring prior to 60 months, late recurrences were less frequently inoperable (1/71, 1.4%, versus 18/107, 17%, p less than 0.001), were more often located at a distance from the initial primary tumor (23/71, 32%, versus 15/106, 14%, p less than 0.005), and had a more favorable prognosis (5-year survival 84% versus 61% for late and early operable recurrences, respectively, p = 0.05). Five-year metastasis-free survival after late failure depended mainly on the anatomic extent of the recurrence (87% for recurrences apparently confined to the breast versus 34% for relapses involving the axilla, p less than 0.002). Prognosis of late recurrence appeared to be unaffected both by location of the recurrence within the breast and by the type of salvage operation used (mastectomy versus wide excision). Local-regional control after salvage surgery was satisfactory (89% at 5 years). Whereas recurrence in the breast prior to 5 years profoundly affected survival after initial diagnosis, patients with late failure had identical 15-year survival as other 5-year survivors who never failed locally. Late recurrences were more frequent in patients younger than 40 at initial treatment, and in patients who had inadequate radiotherapy. We conclude that late local recurrences after breast conservation do not represent a serious management problem.

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Thomas Wekerle

Medical University of Vienna

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