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Featured researches published by Karen Seiter.


Cancer | 1992

A randomized trial of intrahepatic infusion of fluorodeoxyuridine with dexamethasone versus fluorodeoxyuridine alone in the treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer

Nancy E. Kemeny; Karen Seiter; Donna Niedzwiecki; Doug Chapman; Elin R. Sigurdson; Alfred M. Cohen; Jose Botet; Paula Oderman; Peggy Murray

To decrease the toxicity of hepatic arterial fluorodeoxyuridine (FUDR) administered through an Infusaid pump (Shiley Infusaid, Inc., Norwood, MA), 50 patients with liver metastases from colorectal cancer were selected randomly to receive FUDR, 0.3 mg/kg/d, for 14 of 28 days, with or without a total dose of 20 mg of hepatic arterial dexamethasone for 14 of 28 days. Patients were stratified according to the percentage of liver involvement by tumor and the perfusion pattern on macroaggrated albumin perfusion scan (MAA) scan. There was a trend toward decreased frequency of bilirubin levels in the group receiving dexamethasone plus FUDR versus the group receiving FUDR alone (9% and 30%, respectively, had a 200% or greater increase from baseline; P = 0.07). Patients in the group treated with dexamethasone and FUDR received higher doses of FUDR in the second, third, fifth, and sixth months than those receiving FUDR alone; however, this was statistically significant only in the fifth month (percentages of planned dose received: 42% and 19%, respectively; P = 0.05), and there was no overall difference for the total 6‐month period. The complete and partial response rates were increased in patients receiving dexamethasone and FUDR versus FUDR alone (8% and 63% versus 4% and 36%, respectively; P = 0.03), and there was a trend toward increased survival with the addition of dexamethasone (median, 23 months and 15 months, respectively; P = 0.06). In conclusion, the use of hepatic arterial dexamethasone is associated with an increased response rate and a trend toward increased survival and decreased bilirubin levels. Therefore, the authors recommend additional investigation of the use of dexamethasone with chemotherapy to treat hepatic metastases.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Clofarabine Plus Cytarabine Compared With Cytarabine Alone in Older Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Acute Myelogenous Leukemia: Results From the CLASSIC I Trial

Stefan Faderl; Meir Wetzler; David A. Rizzieri; Gary J. Schiller; Madan Jagasia; Robert K. Stuart; Siddhartha Ganguly; David Avigan; Michael Craig; Robert H. Collins; Michael B. Maris; Tibor Kovacsovics; Stuart L. Goldberg; Karen Seiter; Parameswaran Hari; Jochen Greiner; Norbert Vey; Christian Recher; Farhad Ravandi; Eunice S. Wang; Michael J. Vasconcelles; Dirk Huebner; Hagop M. Kantarjian

PURPOSE To compare the receipt of clofarabine plus cytarabine (Clo+Ara-C arm) with cytarabine (Ara-C arm) in patients ≥ 55 years old with refractory or relapsed acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients were randomly assigned to receive either clofarabine (Clo) 40 mg/m(2) or a placebo followed by Ara-C 1 g/m(2) for five consecutive days. The primary end point was overall survival (OS). Secondary end points included event-free survival (EFS), 4-month EFS, overall remission rate (ORR; complete remission [CR] plus CR with incomplete peripheral blood count recovery), disease-free survival (DFS), duration of remission (DOR), and safety. RESULTS Among 320 patients with confirmed AML (median age, 67 years), the median OS was 6.6 months in the Clo+Ara-C arm and 6.3 months in the Ara-C arm (hazard ratio [HR], 1.00; 95% CI, 0.78 to 1.28; P = 1.00). The ORR was 46.9% in the Clo+Ara-C arm (35.2% CR) versus 22.9% in the Ara-C arm (17.8% CR; P < .01). EFS (HR: 0.63; 95% CI, 0.49 to 0.80; P < .01) and 4-month EFS (37.7% v 16.6%; P < .01) favored the Clo+Ara-C arm compared with Ara-C arm, respectively. DFS and DOR were similar in both arms. Overall 30-day mortality was 16% and 5% for CLO+Ara-C and Ara-C arms, respectively. In the Clo+Ara-C and Ara-C arms, the most common grade 3 to 4 toxicities were febrile neutropenia (47% v 35%, respectively), hypokalemia (18% v 11%, respectively), thrombocytopenia (16% v 17%, respectively), pneumonia (14% v 10%, respectively), anemia (13% v 0%, respectively), neutropenia (11% v 9%, respectively), increased AST (11% v 2%, respectively), and increased ALT (10% v 3%, respectively). CONCLUSION Although the primary end point of OS did not differ between arms, Clo+Ara-C significantly improved response rates and EFS. Study follow-up continues, and the role of clofarabine in the treatment of adult patients with AML continues to be investigated.


Cancer | 1990

Interferon alpha-2a and 5-fluorouracil for advanced colorectal carcinoma assessment of activity and toxicity

Nancy E. Kemeny; Anas Younes; Karen Seiter; David P. Kelsen; Patricia Sammarco; Lynn Adams; Susan Derby; Peggy Murray; Collette Houston

Preclinical data showed that the cytotoxic effects of 5‐fluorouracil (5‐FU) are augmented by interferon (IFN). in a small study, 13 of 17 patients with advanced colorectal cancer responded to a regimen of 5‐FU with IFN. Using the same dose and schedule as in this pilot study, 38 previously untreated patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma were treated with continuous intravenous (IV) infusion of 5‐FU 750 mg/m2 daily for 5 days, followed by weekly bolus 5‐FU at 750 mg/m2 and subcutaneous IFN at 9 million units three times per week. of 35 evaluable patients, nine (26%) had a partial response (95% confidence limit, 11% to 41%), with a median response duration of 7.5 months (range, 4.4 to > 11.7 months). Seven patients (20%) had a minor response, and ten (28%) had stable disease. the most common toxicities observed were stomatitis (52%) and diarrhea (43%). Neurotoxicity was seen in 34% of patients and consisted of gait disturbance, dizziness, confusion, memory loss, and dementia. Because of toxicity, 84% of patients required a reduction of the IFN dose by at least 50%, and 63% required reduction of the 5‐FU dose by at least 25%. Although the combination of 5‐FU and IFN in patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma has some activity, the regimen was toxic, and the observed response rate (26%) was not substantially superior to alternative 5‐FU programs.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

High-Dose Vincristine Sulfate Liposome Injection for Advanced, Relapsed, and Refractory Adult Philadelphia Chromosome–Negative Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Susan O'Brien; Gary J. Schiller; John Lister; Lloyd E. Damon; Stuart L. Goldberg; Walter E. Aulitzky; Dina Ben-Yehuda; Wendy Stock; Steven Coutre; Dan Douer; Leonard T. Heffner; Melissa C. Larson; Karen Seiter; Scott E. Smith; Sarit Assouline; Philip Kuriakose; Lori J. Maness; Arnon Nagler; Jacob M. Rowe; Markus Schaich; Ofer Shpilberg; Karen Yee; Guenter Schmieder; Jeffrey A. Silverman; Deborah A. Thomas; Steven R. Deitcher; Hagop M. Kantarjian

PURPOSE Relapsed adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is associated with high reinduction mortality, chemotherapy resistance, and rapid progression leading to death. Vincristine sulfate liposome injection (VSLI), sphingomyelin and cholesterol nanoparticle vincristine (VCR), facilitates VCR dose-intensification and densification plus enhances target tissue delivery. We evaluated high-dose VSLI monotherapy in adults with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) -negative ALL that was multiply relapsed, relapsed and refractory to reinduction, and/or relapsed after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). PATIENTS AND METHODS Sixty-five adults with Ph-negative ALL in second or greater relapse or whose disease had progressed following two or more leukemia therapies were treated in this pivotal phase II, multinational trial. Intravenous VSLI 2.25 mg/m(2), without dose capping, was administered once per week until response, progression, toxicity, or pursuit of HCT. The primary end point was achievement of complete response (CR) or CR with incomplete hematologic recovery (CRi). RESULTS The CR/CRi rate was 20% and overall response rate was 35%. VSLI monotherapy was effective as third-, fourth-, and fifth-line therapy and in patients refractory to other single- and multiagent reinduction therapies. Median CR/CRi duration was 23 weeks (range, 5 to 66 weeks); 12 patients bridged to a post-VSLI HCT, and five patients were long-term survivors. VSLI was generally well tolerated and associated with a low 30-day mortality rate (12%). CONCLUSION High-dose VSLI monotherapy resulted in meaningful clinical outcomes including durable responses and bridging to HCT in advanced ALL settings. The toxicity profile of VSLI was predictable, manageable, and comparable to standard VCR despite the delivery of large, normally unachievable, individual and cumulative doses of VCR.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 1994

Apoptotic Cell Death During Treatment of Leukemias

Xun Li; Jianping Gong; Eric J. Feldman; Karen Seiter; Frank Traganos; Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz

The apoptosis-associated DNA strand breaks were detected in situ, in individual leukemic cells in peripheral blood and bone marrow of over 110 patients with different types of leukemia (ALL, AML, CML in blastic crisis, APL), prior to and during routine chemotherapy. The DNA strand breaks were labeled with digoxigenin- or biotin-conjugated dUTP in the reaction catalyzed by exogenous terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase, and the cells, counterstained for DNA, were analyzed by bivariate flow cytometry. The proportion of cells with DNA strand breaks prior to therapy, most likely reflecting spontaneous apoptosis, varied from 0.1 to 16%, but in the large majority of cases was below 3%. Administration of drugs of different classes, which included DNA topoisomerase I (Topotecan) and II (mitoxantrone, VP-16) inhibitors, antimetabolite (ara-C) or microtubule poison (Taxol), all triggered the appearance of cells with extensive DNA breakage, typical of apoptosis, to up to 80%. The peak of the response, measured as maximal percent of cells with DNA strand breaks, which varied between individual patients by as much as factor 10, was generally seen between 8 to 24 h after the initial administration of DNA topoisomerase inhibitors, and somewhat later (48-72 h) during the response to Taxol or ara-C. Thus, the data show that the response to treatment with a variety of drugs, in terms of induction of apoptosis, can be conveniently measured by the present method. The prognostic value of the apoptotic index, before, as well as during treatment, is being estimated for each type of leukemia, in the ongoing prospective studies.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Control of Plasma Uric Acid in Adults at Risk for Tumor Lysis Syndrome: Efficacy and Safety of Rasburicase Alone and Rasburicase Followed by Allopurinol Compared With Allopurinol Alone—Results of a Multicenter Phase III Study

Jorge Cortes; Joseph O. Moore; Richard T. Maziarz; Meir Wetzler; Michael Craig; Jeffrey Matous; Selina M. Luger; Bimalangshu R. Dey; Gary J. Schiller; Dat Pham; Camille N. Abboud; Muthuswamy Krishnamurthy; Archie Brown; Abderrahmane Laadem; Karen Seiter

PURPOSE Rasburicase is effective in controlling plasma uric acid in pediatric patients with hematologic malignancies. This study in adults evaluated safety of and compared efficacy of rasburicase alone with rasburicase followed by oral allopurinol and with allopurinol alone in controlling plasma uric acid. PATIENTS AND METHODS Adults with hematologic malignancies at risk for hyperuricemia and tumor lysis syndrome (TLS) were randomly assigned to rasburicase (0.20 mg/kg/d intravenously days 1-5), rasburicase plus allopurinol (rasburicase 0.20 mg/kg/d days 1 to 3 followed by oral allopurinol 300 mg/d days 3 to 5), or allopurinol (300 mg/d orally days 1 to 5). Primary efficacy variable was plasma uric acid response rate defined as percentage of patients achieving or maintaining plasma uric acid ≤ 7.5 mg/dL during days 3 to 7. RESULTS Ninety-two patients received rasburicase, 92 rasburicase plus allopurinol, and 91 allopurinol. Plasma uric acid response rate was 87% with rasburicase, 78% with rasburicase plus allopurinol, and 66% with allopurinol. It was significantly greater for rasburicase than for allopurinol (P = .001) in the overall study population, in patients at high risk for TLS (89% v 68%; P = .012), and in those with baseline hyperuricemia (90% v 53%; P = .015). Time to plasma uric acid control in hyperuricemic patients was 4 hours for rasburicase, 4 hours for rasburicase plus allopurinol, and 27 hours for allopurinol. CONCLUSION In adults with hyperuricemia or at high risk for TLS, rasburicase provided control of plasma uric acid more rapidly than allopurinol. Rasburicase was well tolerated as a single agent and in sequential combination with allopurinol.


Expert Opinion on Drug Safety | 2005

Toxicity of the topoisomerase II inhibitors

Karen Seiter

Topoisomerase II inhibitors represent a broad class of antineoplastic agents with a wide spectrum of activity against malignancies. Topoi-somerase II inhibitors include the anthracyclines, mitoxantrone and epipodophyllotoxins. Short-term toxicity includes myelosuppression and gastrointestinal toxicity. Long-term survivors are at risk of cardiac toxicity and secondary leukaemia. This article discusses these toxicities in detail, including administration of these agents to patients with hepatic and/or renal insuffi-ciency, and the need for dose adjustments in selected patient populations.


Cell Cycle | 2007

Induction of ATM Activation, Histone H2AX Phosphorylation and Apoptosis by Etoposide: Relation to Cell Cycle Phase

Toshiki Tanaka; H. Dorota Halicka; Frank Traganos; Karen Seiter; Zbigniew Darzynkiewicz

Etoposide (VP-16) belongs to the family of DNA topoisomerase II (topo2) inhibitors, drugs widely used in cancer chemotherapy. Their presumed mode of action is stabilization of “cleavable complexes” between topo2 and DNA; collisions of DNA replication forks with these complexes convert them into DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), potentially lethal lesions that may trigger apoptosis. Immunocytochemical detection of activation of ATM (ATM-S1981P) and histone H2AX phosphorylation (γH2AX) provides a sensitive probe of the induction of DSBs in individual cells. Using multiparameter cytometry we measured the expression of ATM-S1981P and γH2AX as well as initiation of apoptosis (caspase-3 activation) in relation to the cell cycle phase in etoposide-treated human lymphoblastoid TK6 cells. The induction of ATM-S1981P and γH2AX was seen in all phases of the cell cycle. The G1-phase cells, however, preferentially underwent apoptosis. The extent of etoposide-induced H2AX phosphorylation was partially reduced by N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC), a scavenger of reactive oxygen species (ROS).The maximal reduction of H2AX phosphorylation by NAC, seen in G1-phase cells, was nearly 50%. NAC also protected a fraction of G1 cells from etoposide-induced apoptosis, but had no such effect on S or G2M cells. However, no significant rise in the intracellular level of ROS upon treatment with etoposide was detected. The effects of etoposide were compared with the previously investigated effects of another topo2 inhibitor, mitoxantrone. The latter was seen to induce a maximal level of ATM-S1981P and γH2AX (partially abrogated by NAC) in G1-phase cells, but unlike etoposide, triggered apoptosis exclusively of S-phase cells. The data suggest that in addition to the generally accepted mechanism involving collisions of replication forks with the “cleavable complexes”, other mechanisms which appear to be different for etoposide vs. mitoxantrone, may contribute to formation of DSBs and to triggering of apoptosis.


Leukemia | 2003

Treatment of relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia with humanized anti-CD33 monoclonal antibody HuM195.

Feldman Ej; M Kalaycio; G. Weiner; S. Frankel; Philip Schulman; L. Schwartzberg; J. Jurcic; E. Velez-Garcia; Karen Seiter; David A. Scheinberg; D. Levitt; N. Wedel

HuM195 is a humanized, unconjugated, anti-CD33 monoclonal antibody. Fifty adult patients with relapsed or refractory AML were randomized to receive HuM195 at a dose of 12 or 36 mg/m2 by intravenous infusion over 4 h on days 1–4 and 15–18. Patients with stable or responding disease received two additional cycles on days 29–32 and 43–46. HuM195 was given as first salvage therapy in 24 patients and as second or subsequent salvage therapy in 26 patients. Pretreatment blast percentage in the marrow was between 5 and 30% in 20 patients with the others having blast counts greater than 30%. The median age of patients was 62 years (range 26–86) and CD33 was detected in 95% of patients for whom immunophenotyping was available. Of 49 evaluable patients, two complete and one partial remission were observed. All three responses were in patients treated at the 12 mg/m2 dose level and all had baseline blast percentages less than 30%. Decreases in blast counts ranging from 30 to 74% were seen in nine additional patients. Infusion-related events of fever and chills occurred in the majority of patients and were generally mild and primarily related to the first dose of antibody. No hepatic, renal or cardiac toxicities were observed and other adverse events such as nausea, vomiting, mucositis and diarrhea were uncommon or felt to be unrelated to HuM195. In addition, anti-HuM195 responses were not detected. HuM195 as a single agent has minimal, but observable, anti-leukemic activity in patients with relapsed or refractory AML and activity is confined to patients with low burden disease. No significant differences in clinical efficacy or toxicity were seen between the two dose levels of antibody. HuM195 was well tolerated with infusion-related fevers and chills the predominant toxicities seen. Meaningful clinical efficacy of this unconjugated monoclonal antibody may be realized only in patients with minimal residual disease, or in combination with chemotherapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1997

Phase I clinical and laboratory evaluation of topotecan and cytarabine in patients with acute leukemia.

Karen Seiter; Eric J. Feldman; H D Halicka; F Traganos; Z Darzynkiewicz; D Lake; T. Ahmed

PURPOSE To determine the maximal-tolerated dose (MTD) of topotecan with cytarabine in acute leukemia patients, and to evaluate leukemia cell apoptosis in these patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS Fifty-three patients with acute leukemia not responsive to standard therapy were treated at eight dose levels of topotecan (2.5 mg/m2/d to 7.75 mg/m2/d). Topotecan was given as a 30-minute infusion daily with cytarabine 1 g/m2/d, both for 5 days. Using a flow-cytometric technique, the percent apoptotic cells in blood and bone marrow samples was determined, and the cell cycle distribution of the leukemic cells studied. RESULTS Oropharyngeal mucositis was dose-limiting. The MTD of topotecan was 4.75 mg/m2/d for 5 days in high-risk patients and 7.0 mg/m2/d for 5 days in low-risk patients. The mean percent apoptotic cells in the peripheral blood reached a peak of 18.8%, a median of 48 hours following the first dose of topotecan. Patients with higher S-phase fractions, either before treatment or following cytarabine, were more likely to achieve bone marrow aplasia than those with lower S-phase fractions (P = .01 and P < .05, respectively). Clinical responses were seen in four of 39 patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML; of whom 32 had received prior high-dose cytarabine), three of six with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL), and one of eight with chronic myelogenous leukemia in blast phase (CML-BP). CONCLUSION The recommended phase II dose of topotecan with intermediate-dose cytarabine is 4.75 mg/m2/d for high-risk patients and 7.0 mg/m2/d for low-risk patients. The percentage of cells in S phase was important in determining response to treatment.

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Delong Liu

New York Medical College

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Tauseef Ahmed

New York Medical College

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Anila Qureshi

New York Medical College

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Frank Traganos

New York Medical College

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Nasir Ahmed

New York Medical College

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Paul Baskind

New York Medical College

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Norbert Vey

Aix-Marseille University

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