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Dive into the research topics where José Javier Sánchez is active.

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Featured researches published by José Javier Sánchez.


Lung Cancer | 1999

Preresectional chemotherapy in stage IIIA non-small-cell lung cancer : a 7-year assessment of a randomized controlled trial

Rafael Rosell; José Gómez-Codina; Carlos Camps; José Javier Sánchez; José Maestre; José Padilla; Antonio Canto; A. Abad; Jordi Roig

In 1989, we began a multicenter study to evaluate the potential benefit of preoperative chemotherapy with cisplatin, ifosfamide and mitomycin over surgery alone in CT-visible N2 non-small-cell lung cancer. We present here a 7-year assessment of this randomized trial. Sixty patients were randomized to receive either surgery alone or three cycles of mitomycin 6 mg/m2, ifosfamide 3 g/m2 and cisplatin 50 mg/m2, given intravenously on day 1 of each cycle at 3-week intervals and followed by surgery. All patients received thoracic irradiation after surgery. The resected tumors were evaluated for the presence of K-ras gene point mutations. Treatment arms were well-balanced in characteristics such as gender, age, histology, and tumor size. Mediastinoscopy and/or mediastinotomy (Chamberlain procedure) with a biopsy was performed in all patients with N2 stage detected by CT scan of the chest (83% of the patients in the preresectional chemotherapy arm and 63% of those in the surgery arm). In eight of the 25 patients (32%) who had mediastinoscopy in the preresectional chemotherapy arm, the initially positive mediastinal lymph nodes were downstaged. For the 30 patients who received preresectional chemotherapy, overall median survival was 22 months (95% CI, 13.4 30.6). Of the 30 patients who received surgery alone, overall median survival was 10 months (95% CI, 7.4-12.6; P = 0.005 by the log rank test). Updated survival data reveals a plateau in the preresectional chemotherapy group, and this still significant long-term survival benefit prompts us to hypothesize that even with short-term preresectional chemotherapy, the natural history of still resectable CT-visible N2 non-small cell lung cancer is favorably altered. The results of our study mirror the long-term survival recently reported in the MD Anderson randomized study.


Cancer Letters | 2003

Methylation patterns and K-ras mutations in tumor and paired serum of resected non-small-cell lung cancer patients

Jose Luis Ramirez; Carme Sarries; Pedro López de Castro; Barbara Roig; Cristina Queralt; Daniel Escuin; Itziar de Aguirre; Jose Miguel Sanchez; Jose Luis Manzano; Mireia Margeli; José Javier Sánchez; Julio Astudillo; Miquel Taron; Rafael Rosell

Gene methylation and K-ras mutations were examined in tumor and paired serum DNA of 50 resected non-small-cell lung cancer patients. RASSF1A, death associated protein kinase and target of methylation-induced silencing were methylated in 17/50 (34%), 23/50 (45%) and 18/50 (35%) tumors, respectively, and in 17/50 (34%), 20/50 (40%) and 17/50 (34%) sera, respectively. Methylation in tumor and serum were closely correlated (P=0.001), but no correlation was found with survival. Twelve K-ras mutations (cysteine) were found in serum and nine mutations were found in tumor (five cysteine, one alanine, one aspartic, one arginine, and one valine). K-ras mutations in serum correlated significantly with survival (P=0.01).


Lung Cancer | 1993

Neuroendocrine differentiation as a prognostic factor in non-small cell lung cancer

J. Carles; Rafael Rosell; Aurelio Ariza; I. Pellicer; José Javier Sánchez; G. Fernandez-Vasalo; A. Abad; Agustí Barnadas

The prognostic value of clinical and pathological factors in 97 patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), were analyzed through immunohistochemical methods. The impact on response rate and survival of age, Karnofsky performance status (PS), sex, NSCLC subtype and grade, extent of disease, objective chemotherapy response, LDH values, metastatic sites involved and immunohistochemical markers of neuroendocrine differentiation (neuron specific enolase (NSE), synaptophysin (Sy 38), chromogranin (Chr A) and Leu-7) were analyzed. Median age was 61 years and seven patients were women. Histologically, 58 had squamous cell carcinoma, 28 adenocarcinoma and 11 large cell undifferentiated carcinoma. One patient had Stage II, 35 Stage IIIa, 19 Stage IIIb and 42 Stage IV. Six patients achieved complete response, 18 partial response, 34 stable disease and 39 progressive disease. NSE was negative in 54.3% of cases as was Sy 38 (77.4%), Chr A (97.8%) and Leu-7 (95.8%). We have found correlation between neuroendocrine differentiation and absence of P-Glycoprotein expression; patients included in this subset had a higher response rate but no evidence of longer survival. The univariate analysis showed that four parameters had significant adverse effect on survival: non-responders, poor PS, abnormal LDH value and absence of NSE expression. Multivariate analysis showed that the best combination of independent prognostic factors in predicting survival was: PS and NSE expression by immunohistochemical methods.


Investigational New Drugs | 2003

Weekly regimen of irinotecan/docetaxel in previously treated non-small cell lung cancer patients and correlation with uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase 1A1 (UGT1A1) polymorphism.

Albert Font; Jose Miguel Sanchez; Miquel Taron; Eva Martinez-Balibrea; José Javier Sánchez; Jose Luis Manzano; Mireia Margeli; Martin Richardet; Agustí Barnadas; Albert Abad; Rafael Rosell

Purpose: Inherited variations in drug metabolizing enzymes may influence drug efficacy. This phase II study assesses the impact of second-line weekly irinotecan (CPT-11)/docetaxel in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients, and gauges the uridine diphosphate glucuronosyl transferase (UGT1A1) polymorphism influence in toxicity and antitumor activity. Experimental Design: Fifty-one patients with NSCLC treated with at least one prior chemotherapy regimen were enrolled. Patients received irinotecan 70u2009mg/m2 followed by docetaxel 25u2009mg/m2. Both drugs were given on days 1, 8, and 15 every 28 days. UGT1A1 polymorphism were analyzed in blood samples of 47 patients. The UGT1A1 polymorphism are classified according to the number of TA repeats in the promoter region of this gene. Results: Three patients (6%) achieved a partial response and nineteen patients (37%) had stable disease. Median survival was 8 months (95% CI: 4.8–11.2) and 1-year survival 30%. Grade 3–4 hematologic toxicity was low (less than 10% of patients); 15% of patients had grade 3 asthenia and 25% of patients had grade 3/4 diarrhea. The frequency of UGT1A1 genotypes was as follows: 6/6 49%, 6/7 36%, and 7/7 15%. No differences in toxicity were observed according to UGT1A1 polymorphism. A nonsignificant improvement in time to progression (4 vs. 3 months) and median survival (11 vs. 8 months) was detected in patients with the variant alleles (6/7 and 7/7). Conclusions: This weekly irinotecan/docetaxel regimen has shown an acceptable toxicity profile while encouraging median and 1-year survival in heavily pretreated NSCLC patients. The tendency to better prognosis in patients carrying the variant genotypes 6/7 and 7/7 of UGT1A1 gene requires further validation.


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2001

Prognostic value of K-ras mutations and allelic imbalance on chromosome 18q in patients with resected colorectal cancer

Albert Font; Albert Abad; M. Monzó; José Javier Sánchez; Mónica Guillot; José Luis Martín Manzano; Marta Piñol; Isabel Ojanguren; Rafael Rosell

PURPOSE: We designed this study to assess the frequency of K-ras mutations in patients with resected colorectal tumors and their association with survival. A second objective was to analyze the prognostic value of different K-ras genotypes. In a subgroup of patients we also investigated the presence of allelic imbalance on chromosome 18q and its relationship to clinical outcome. METHODS: One hundred fourteen colorectal tumors resected between 1983 and 1986 were analyzed to detect K-ras point mutations at codons 12, 13, and 61 by polymerase chain reaction followed by allele specific oligonucleotide hybridization. A subgroup of 77 tumors was further screened to detect loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 18q using three polymorphic microsatellite markers (D18S67, D18S474 andD18S58). RESULTS: K-ras mutations were detected in 29 percent (33/114) of patients. K-ras mutations correlated with age and preoperative carcinoembryonic antigen levels, and there was some indication that they may be linked to poor survival, especially in Stage II tumors, where a subgroup of patients with aspartic and serine mutations showed significantly reduced survival (P=0.03) compared with K-ras-negative patients. 18q loss of heterozygosity was present in 39 percent (25/63) of tumors. A multivariate analysis of Stage II tumors showed that 18q loss of heterozygosity was significantly associated with a worse prognosis (P=0.006). A significant decrease in survival was identified in ten patients harboring both genetic alterations (K-i mutations and 18q loss of heterozygosity;P=0.02). CONCLUSIONS: In colorectal tumors, K-ras mutations and 18q loss of heterozygosity are two genetic markers which may identify patients with more aggressive behavior, mainly in Stage II tumors. These findings warrant further research, because they can be useful in customizing adjuvant chemotherapy.


British Journal of Cancer | 1997

Prognostic value of replication errors on chromosomes 2p and 3p in non-small-cell lung cancer

A. Pifarré; Rafael Rosell; M. Monzó; J. M. De Anta; Isabel Moreno; José Javier Sánchez; Aurelio Ariza; José L. Mate; Eva Martínez; M. Sánchez

As chromosomes 2p and 3p are frequent targets for genomic instability in lung cancer, we have addressed whether alterations of simple (CA)n DNA repeats occur in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) at early stages. We have analysed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay replication errors (RER) and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at microsatellites mapped on chromosomes 2p and 3p in 64 paired tumour-normal DNA samples from consecutively resected stage I, II or IIIA NSCLC. DNA samples were also examined for K-ras and p53 gene mutations by PCR-single-stranded conformational polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) analysis and cyclic sequencing, as well as their relationship with clinical outcome. Forty-two of the 64 (66%) NSCLC patients showed RER at single or multiple loci. LOH was detected in 23 tumours (36%). Among patients with stage I disease, the 5-year survival rate was 80% in those whose tumours had no evidence of RER and 26% in those with RER (P = 0.005). No correlation was established between RER phenotype and LOH, K-ras or p53 mutations. RER remained a strong predictive factor (hazard ratio for death, 2.89; 95% confidence interval, 2.23-3.79; P = 0.002) after adjustment for all other evaluated factors, including p53, K-ras, LOH, histological type, tumour differentiation and TNM stage, suggesting that microsatellite instability on chromosomes 2p and 3p may play a role in NSCLC progression through a different pathway from the traditional tumour mechanisms of oncogene activation and/or tumour-suppressor gene inactivation.


Lung Cancer | 2001

The role of chemotherapy in early non-small-cell lung cancer management

Rafael Rosell; Enriqueta Felip; José Maestre; Jose Miguel Sanchez; José Javier Sánchez; Jose Luis Manzano; Julio Astudillo; Miquel Taron; Mariano Monzo

Great advances have been made in chemotherapy in advanced and metastatic non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and a major milestone was reached with the administration of neoadjuvant chemotherapy in stage IIIA N2 disease. The systemic nature of lung cancer has been confirmed by many genetic analyses documenting micrometastases in negative lymph nodes and bone marrow, and mRNA gene overexpression as a surrogate of cancer cells has been identified in peripheral blood. Furthermore, serum or plasma cell-free tumor DNA has been observed even in tumors with a diameter of less than 2 cm. Pharmacogenetic screening can lead to tailored chemotherapy even in patients with early disease through the use of a genetic tool kit that will allow us to optimize the use of chemotherapy by using serial measurements of serum DNA that can help to detect residual disease and re-assess the chemosensitivity of sub-clinical micrometastatic disease. The ongoing (neo)adjuvant taxol/carboplatin hope (NATCH) trial is testing the value of three cycles of chemotherapy given pre- or post-operatively compared with surgery alone and will analyze genetic abnormalities in serum DNA at three different points during patient follow-up. Our major concern in this review is to analyze the pros and cons of chemotherapy in NSCLC. Although this review is not a formal meta-analysis, we have discussed the most relevant published studies in this field. We conclude that not only is there no evidence of detrimental effects of chemotherapy, in fact, there are many indications that chemotherapy induces response in up to 80% of patients and downgrades N2 disease in up to 50% of patients. This translates into significantly better survival when accompanied by complete resection. Since at least 50% of patients with stage IB disease develop distant metastases, it seems logical to explore the role of chemotherapy in early disease.


Lung Cancer | 2002

Phase II non-randomized study of three different sequences of docetaxel and vinorelbine in patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer

José Miguel Perea Sánchez; Carme Balañá; Albert Font; José Javier Sánchez; José Luis Manzano; Mónica Guillot; Mireia Margeli; Martin Richardet; Rafael Rosell

Docetaxel and vinorelbine as single agents and in combination with cisplatin have shown significant activity in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Significant neutropenia has been observed with the combination of docetaxel/vinorelbine. To gain insight into the potential synergism of this combination, we examined three different sequences of docetaxel 75 and vinorelbine 20 mg/m(2), every 3 weeks, in locally advanced and metastatic NSCLC patients. About 14 patients were evaluable in each schedule: schedule A, docetaxel day 1, vinorelbine days 1 and 6; schedule B, docetaxel day 6, vinorelbine days 1 and 6; schedule C, docetaxel day 1, vinorelbine days 6 and 15. Response rates were: 42.8, 7.1 and 21.4% for schedules A, B and C, respectively (P=0.01, schedule A vs. B). Median survival time was 16, 6.5 and 10.6 months for schedules A, B and C, respectively (P=0.04, schedule A vs. B). Neutropenia was the commonest toxicity; 43% of patients in schedule A and 57% of patients in schedule B had a febrile neutropenia episode. Prophylactic granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) was prescribed in schedule C after the first episode of febrile neutropenia. Non-hematologic toxicities were mild in all three schedules. For future studies, schedule A with lower doses is recommended.


Clinical & Translational Oncology | 2001

Pharmacogenomic research and serum DNA analysis in the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer

Rafael Rosell; Aurora O'Brate; Mariano Monzo; Jose Miguel Sanchez; Mónica Guillot; Jacek Jassem; José Javier Sánchez; Albert Abad; Daniel Escuin; Miquel Taron; Ewa Jassem

Various genetic alterations have been identified as crucial to both carcinogenesis and prognosis, including several mutational patterns, loss of heterozygosity, and gene overexpression. These alterations have been shown to correlate with mechanisms of resistance to certain cytotoxic agents used in the treatment of non-small-cell lung cancer. This article reviews various aspects of taxane resistance and the relative importance of p53 and ras mutations. Paclitaxel resistance is related to β-tubulin mutations. Genetic alterations can be detected in plasma or serum DNA of patients. Finally, the article discusses the genetic objectives of a european protocol for neoadjuvant and adjuvant chemotherapy in lung cancer.ResumenNumerosas alteraciones genéticas se han identificado como importantes no sólo en la carcinogénesis, sino en la configuración de diversos perfiles de mutaciones, pérdidas de heterocigosidad y sobreexpresión de genes que se correlacionan con mecanismos de resistencia a determinados citotóxicos comúnmente utilizados en cáncer de pulmón de célula no pequeña. Se revisan los diversos aspectos actuales de resistencia a los taxanos y la importancia relativa de las mutaciones del ras y de p53. Se describen los resultados de resistencia al placitaxel en relación con las mutaciones de la β-tubulina y se efectúa una revisión de las alteraciones genéticas detectadas en el ADN en plasma o suero de los pacientes. Finalmente se resumen los objetivos genéticos en un protocolo europeo de quimioterapia neoadyuvante y adyuvante en cáncer de pulmón.


Chemotherapy | 2005

Influence of the cyto-protective agent amifostine on the pharmacokinetics of low-dose paclitaxel

Oscar Juan; Amparo Rocher; Agustín Sánchez; José Javier Sánchez; Vicente Alberola

Background: Pharmacokinetic parameters (PHK) of low-dose weekly paclitaxel (PAC) are not well known, particularly when administered with the cytoprotective agent amifostine (AMI). Methods: Patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) received PAC alone or PAC + AMI. Blood samples were drawn at the end of the infusion at 0, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2 and 4 h for the measurement of plasma PAC using HPLC. Area under the concentration-time curve (AUC), the peak plasma concentrations (Cmax) and the residence time of paclitaxel in plasma at concentrations >0.1 µM (TPP ≧0.1) and >0.05 µM (TPP ≧0.05) were calculated using a two-compartmental model. ANOVA was used for statistical analysis. Results: Pharmacokinetic studies were completed for 43 doses among 11 patients receiving PAC alone and for 26 doses among 8 patients receiving the combination AMI + PAC (from the first to the fifth week). Statistically significant differences in all parameters except AUC were observed between the 2 treatment groups. A significantly higher Cmax was observed for patients receiving PAC + AMI versus PAC alone. Both TPP ≧0.1 and TPP ≧0.05 were also more prolonged in AMI + PAC cycles. Conclusion: AMI produces a prolongation in PAC plasma circulation time. Further specifically designed studies are needed to quantify the resultant effects on PAC’s efficacy and toxicity.

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Rafael Rosell

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Miquel Taron

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Teresa Moran

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Jose Miguel Sanchez

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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M. Monzó

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Mónica Guillot

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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A. Abad

University of Barcelona

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Cristina Queralt

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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