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Dive into the research topics where Katrin Rhodes is active.

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Featured researches published by Katrin Rhodes.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Molecular Determinants of Cetuximab Efficacy

Daniel Vallböhmer; Wu Zhang; Michael S. Gordon; Dong Yun Yang; J. Yun; Oliver A. Press; Katrin Rhodes; Andy Sherrod; Syma Iqbal; Kathleen D. Danenberg; Susan Groshen; Heinz-Josef Lenz

PURPOSE To investigate whether mRNA expression levels of cyclin D1 (CCND1), cyclooxygenase 2 (Cox-2), epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), interleukin 8 (IL-8), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), all members of the EGFR signaling pathway, are associated with clinical outcome in patients with EGFR-expressing metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) treated with cetuximab. PATIENTS AND METHODS Thirty-nine patients with metastatic CRC, refractory to both irinotecan and oxaliplatin, were enrolled on IMCL-0144 and treated with single-agent cetuximab. The intratumoral mRNA levels of CCND1, Cox-2, EGFR, IL-8, and VEGF were assessed from paraffin-embedded tissue samples using laser-capture microdissection and quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS There were 21 women and 18 men with a median age of 64 years (range, 35 to 83 years). Higher gene expression levels of VEGF were associated with resistance to cetuximab (P = .038; Kruskal-Wallis test). The combination of low gene expression levels of Cox-2, EGFR, and IL-8 was significantly associated with overall survival (13.5 v 2.3 months; P = .028; log-rank test). Both findings were independent of skin toxicity that was itself significantly correlated to survival. Patients with a lower mRNA amount of EGFR had a longer overall survival compared with patients that had a higher mRNA amount (7.3 v 2.2 months; P = .09; log-rank test). Patients with lower expression of Cox-2 had a significantly higher rate of grade 2 to 3 skin reactions under cetuximab treatment. CONCLUSION This pilot study suggests that gene expression levels of Cox-2, EGFR, IL-8, and VEGF in patients with metastatic CRC may be useful markers of clinical outcome in single-agent cetuximab treatment.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Polymorphisms and Clinical Outcome in Recurrent Ovarian Cancer Treated with Cyclophosphamide and Bevacizumab

Anne M. Schultheis; Georg Lurje; Katrin Rhodes; Wu Zhang; Dongyun Yang; Agustin A. Garcia; Robert J. Morgan; David R. Gandara; Sidney A. Scudder; Amit M. Oza; Hal Hirte; Gini F. Fleming; Lynda D. Roman; Heinz-Josef Lenz

Purpose: This study was designed to evaluate the associations between angiogenesis gene polymorphisms and clinical outcome in ovarian cancer patients treated with low-dose cyclophosphamide and bevacizumab. Experimental Design: Seventy recurrent/metastatic epithelial ovarian cancer patients were enrolled in a phase II clinical trial. Genomic DNA was available from 53 blood samples. Polymorphisms were analyzed using the PCR-RFLP protocol. A 5′ end 33P γATP-labeled PCR protocol was used to analyze dinucleotide repeats. Results: Patients genotyped A/A or A/T for the IL-8 T-251A gene polymorphism had a statistically significant lower response rate (19%; 0%) than those homozygous T/T (50%; P = 0.006, Fishers exact test). Patients carrying a minimum one C allele (C/C; C/T) of the CXCR2 C+785T polymorphism showed a median progression-free survival (PFS) of 7.4 months compared with the PFS of 3.7 months for those homozygous T/T (P = 0.026, log-rank test). Patients with the VEGF C+936T polymorphism C/T genotype had a longer median PFS of 11.8 months, compared with those with the C/C and T/T genotype, which had median PFS of 5.5 months and 3.2 months, respectively (P = 0.061, log-rank test). Patients carrying both AM 3′end alleles <14 CA repeats had the shortest median PFS of 3.4 months; patients with at least one allele >14 repeats or both alleles >14 repeats showed a median PFS of 6.4 months and 7.2 months, respectively (P = 0.008, log-rank test). Conclusion: Our data suggest that the IL-8 A-251T polymorphism may be a molecular predictor of response to bevacizumab-based chemotherapy. The CXCR2 C+785T, VEGF C+936T single nucleotide polymorphisms and the AM 3′ dinucleotide repeat polymorphisms may be molecular markers for PFS in ovarian cancer patients.


International Journal of Cancer | 2006

Molecular determinants of irinotecan efficacy

Daniel Vallböhmer; Syma Iqbal; Dong Yun Yang; Katrin Rhodes; Wu Zhang; Michael S. Gordon; William Fazzone; Anne M. Schultheis; Andy Sherrod; Kathleen D. Danenberg; Heinz-Josef Lenz

Molecular markers predicting the efficacy of CPT‐11 based chemotherapies in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) are unknown. Therefore, we investigated whether mRNA levels of drug targets (Topoisomerase I, TS), enzymes involved in 5‐FU metabolism (DPD), in angiogenesis (EGFR, IL‐8, VEGF) and in DNA‐repair/drug detoxification (ERCC1, GST‐P1) are associated with the clinical outcome of patients with CRC treated with first‐line CPT‐11 based chemotherapy. Thirty three patients with metastatic CRC were included in the study. Intratumoral gene expression levels were assessed from paraffin‐embedded tissue samples, using laser capture microdissection and quantitative Real‐Time PCR. Complete response was observed in 1 patient, partial response in 12 patients, stable disease in 13 patients and progressive disease in 6 patients. Response was inevaluable for 1 patient. Patients with complete response or partial response were classified as responders, while patients with stable disease or progressive disease were classified as nonresponders. High intratumoral mRNA levels of EGFR, ERCC1 and GSPT‐P1 were each significantly associated with response to CPT‐11 based chemotherapy. Recursive partitioning analysis showed that mRNA levels of EGFR and ERCC1 are primarily responsible for delineating responders from nonresponders. Also, the combination of high intratumoral gene expression levels of both EGFR and ERCC1 was significantly associated with progression‐free survival. The mRNA levels of EGFR had a significant correlation with expression levels of ERCC1, GST‐P1 and VEGF. This small retrospective study suggests that gene expression levels of EGFR, ERCC1 and GST‐P1 may be useful in predicting the clinical outcome of patients with metastatic CRC treated with first‐line CPT‐11 based chemotherapy.


Pharmacogenomics | 2006

Genomic profiling associated with recurrence in patients with rectal cancer treated with chemoradiation

Michael A. Gordon; Ji Gil; Bo Lu; Wu Zhang; Dongyun Yang; J. Yun; Sylke Schneider; Susan Groshen; Syma Iqbal; Oliver A. Press; Katrin Rhodes; Heinz-Josef Lenz

PURPOSE Stage II and III adenocarcinoma of the rectum has an overall 5-year survival rate of approximately 50%, and tumor recurrence remains a major problem despite an improvement in local control through chemotherapy and radiation. The efficacy of chemoradiation therapy may be significantly compromised as a result of interindividual variations in clinical response and host toxicity. Therefore, it is imperative to identify those patients who will benefit from chemoradiation therapy and those who will develop recurrent disease. In this study, we tested whether a specific pattern of 21 polymorphisms in 18 genes involved in the critical pathways of cancer progression (i.e., drug metabolism, tumor microenvironment, cell cycle regulation, and DNA repair) will predict the risk of tumor recurrence in rectal cancer patients treated with chemoradiation. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 90 patients with Stage II or III rectal cancer treated with chemoradiation were genotyped using polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based techniques for 21 polymorphisms. RESULTS A polymorphism in interleukin (IL)-8 was individually associated with risk of recurrence. Classification and regression tree analysis of all polymorphisms and clinical variables developed a risk tree including the following variables: node status, IL-8, intracellular adhesion molecule-1, transforming growth factor-beta, and fibroblast growth factor receptor 4. CONCLUSION Genomic profiling may help to identify patients who are at high risk for developing tumor recurrence, and those who are more likely to benefit from chemoradiation therapy. A larger prospective study is needed to validate these preliminary data using germline polymorphisms on tumor recurrences in rectal cancer patients treated with chemoradiation.


Drug Metabolism Letters | 2007

ABCB1, SLCO1B1 and UGT1A1 Gene Polymorphisms Are Associated with Toxicity Line Irinotecan

Katrin Rhodes; Wu Zhang; Dongyun Yang; Oliver A. Press; Michael S. Gordon; Daniel Vallböhmer; Anne M. Schultheis; Georg Lurje; Robert D. Ladner; William Fazzone; Heinz-Josef Lenz; Syma Iqbal

We tested specific gene polymorphisms known to be involved in the irinotecan (CPT-11) metabolic pathway. The combination of at least one SLCO1B1 521 T allele, one ABCB1 1236 C allele and one UGT1A1*28 variant 7 repeat demonstrated a statistically significant association with Grade 3/4 toxicities in metastatic colorectal cancer patients.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Gene expression profiling associated with risk of recurrence in patients with colorectal cancer

Michael A. Gordon; Wu Zhang; M. Karaman; J. Yun; Oliver A. Press; Katrin Rhodes; Daniel Vallböhmer; Syma Iqbal; J. Hacia; H. Lenz

3602 Background: Early identification of patients at increased risk for recurrence remains a central issue in the treatment of colorectal cancer. Altered expression levels in cancer-related genes h...


Pharmacogenetics and Genomics | 2006

Cyclin D1 and epidermal growth factor polymorphisms associated with survival in patients with advanced colorectal cancer treated with Cetuximab.

Wu Zhang; Michael S. Gordon; Oliver A. Press; Katrin Rhodes; Daniel Vallböhmer; Dong Yun Yang; David J. Park; William Fazzone; Anne M. Schultheis; Andy Sherrod; Syma Iqbal; Susan Groshen; Heinz-Josef Lenz


Clinical Cancer Research | 2005

Epidermal growth factor receptor gene polymorphisms predict pelvic recurrence in patients with rectal cancer treated with chemoradiation.

Wu Zhang; David J. Park; Bo Lu; Dong Yun Yang; Michael S. Gordon; Susan Groshen; J. Yun; Oliver A. Press; Daniel Vallböhmer; Katrin Rhodes; Heinz-Josef Lenz


Clinical Colorectal Cancer | 2005

Gene polymorphisms of epidermal growth factor receptor and its downstream effector, interleukin-8, predict oxaliplatin efficacy in patients with advanced colorectal cancer.

Wu Zhang; Jan Stoehlmacher; David J. Park; Dongyun Yang; Erin Borchard; Ji Gil; Denice D. Tsao-Wei; J. Yun; Michael S. Gordon; Oliver A. Press; Katrin Rhodes; Susan Groshen; Heinz-Josef Lenz


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Genomic profile associated with clinical outcome of EGFR-expressing metastatic colorectal cancer patients treated with epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitor cetuximab

Wu Zhang; Daniel Vallböhmer; Dongyun Yang; J. Yun; Oliver A. Press; Michael S. Gordon; Katrin Rhodes; Andy Sherrod; Syma Iqbal; H. Lenz

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Wu Zhang

University of Southern California

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Oliver A. Press

University of Southern California

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J. Yun

University of Southern California

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Syma Iqbal

University of Southern California

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Dongyun Yang

University of Southern California

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Heinz-Josef Lenz

University of Southern California

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H. Lenz

University of Southern California

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Susan Groshen

University of Southern California

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Andy Sherrod

University of Southern California

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