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Featured researches published by Martin G. Sanda.


Nature | 2002

The polycomb group protein EZH2 is involved in progression of prostate cancer

Sooryanarayana Varambally; Saravana M. Dhanasekaran; Ming Zhou; Terrence R. Barrette; Chandan Kumar-Sinha; Martin G. Sanda; Debashis Ghosh; Kenneth J. Pienta; Richard George Antonius Bernardus Sewalt; Arie P. Otte; Mark A. Rubin; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Prostate cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related death in males and is second only to lung cancer. Although effective surgical and radiation treatments exist for clinically localized prostate cancer, metastatic prostate cancer remains essentially incurable. Here we show, through gene expression profiling, that the polycomb group protein enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) is overexpressed in hormone-refractory, metastatic prostate cancer. Small interfering RNA (siRNA) duplexes targeted against EZH2 reduce the amounts of EZH2 protein present in prostate cells and also inhibit cell proliferation in vitro. Ectopic expression of EZH2 in prostate cells induces transcriptional repression of a specific cohort of genes. Gene silencing mediated by EZH2 requires the SET domain and is attenuated by inhibiting histone deacetylase activity. Amounts of both EZH2 messenger RNA and EZH2 protein are increased in metastatic prostate cancer; in addition, clinically localized prostate cancers that express higher concentrations of EZH2 show a poorer prognosis. Thus, dysregulated expression of EZH2 may be involved in the progression of prostate cancer, as well as being a marker that distinguishes indolent prostate cancer from those at risk of lethal progression.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Quality of Life and Satisfaction with Outcome among Prostate-Cancer Survivors

Martin G. Sanda; Rodney L. Dunn; Jeff M. Michalski; Howard M. Sandler; Laurel Northouse; Larry Hembroff; Xihong Lin; Thomas K. Greenfield; Mark S. Litwin; Christopher S. Saigal; A. Mahadevan; Eric A. Klein; Adam S. Kibel; Louis L. Pisters; Deborah A. Kuban; Irving D. Kaplan; David P. Wood; Jay P. Ciezki; Nikhil Shah; John T. Wei

BACKGROUND We sought to identify determinants of health-related quality of life after primary treatment of prostate cancer and to measure the effects of such determinants on satisfaction with the outcome of treatment in patients and their spouses or partners. METHODS We prospectively measured outcomes reported by 1201 patients and 625 spouses or partners at multiple centers before and after radical prostatectomy, brachytherapy, or external-beam radiotherapy. We evaluated factors that were associated with changes in quality of life within study groups and determined the effects on satisfaction with the treatment outcome. RESULTS Adjuvant hormone therapy was associated with worse outcomes across multiple quality-of-life domains among patients receiving brachytherapy or radiotherapy. Patients in the brachytherapy group reported having long-lasting urinary irritation, bowel and sexual symptoms, and transient problems with vitality or hormonal function. Adverse effects of prostatectomy on sexual function were mitigated by nerve-sparing procedures. After prostatectomy, urinary incontinence was observed, but urinary irritation and obstruction improved, particularly in patients with large prostates. No treatment-related deaths occurred; serious adverse events were rare. Treatment-related symptoms were exacerbated by obesity, a large prostate size, a high prostate-specific antigen score, and older age. Black patients reported lower satisfaction with the degree of overall treatment outcomes. Changes in quality of life were significantly associated with the degree of outcome satisfaction among patients and their spouses or partners. CONCLUSIONS Each prostate-cancer treatment was associated with a distinct pattern of change in quality-of-life domains related to urinary, sexual, bowel, and hormonal function. These changes influenced satisfaction with treatment outcomes among patients and their spouses or partners.


Urology | 2000

Development and validation of the expanded prostate cancer index composite (EPIC) for comprehensive assessment of health-related quality of life in men with prostate cancer

John T. Wei; Rodney L. Dunn; Mark S. Litwin; Howard M. Sandler; Martin G. Sanda

OBJECTIVES Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is an increasingly important endpoint in prostate cancer care. However, pivotal issues that are not fully assessed in existing HRQOL instruments include irritative urinary symptoms, hormonal symptoms, and multi-item scores quantifying bother between urinary, sexual, bowel, and hormonal domains. We sought to develop a novel instrument to facilitate more comprehensive assessment of prostate cancer-related HRQOL. METHODS Instrument development was based on advice from an expert panel and prostate cancer patients, which led to expanding the 20-item University of California-Los Angeles Prostate Cancer Index (UCLA-PCI) to the 50-item Expanded Prostate Index Composite (EPIC). Summary and subscale scores were derived by content and factor analyses. Reliability and validity were assessed by test-retest correlation, Cronbachs alpha coefficient, interscale correlation, and EPIC correlation with other validated instruments. RESULTS Test-retest reliability and internal consistency were high for EPIC urinary, bowel, sexual, and hormonal domain summary scores (each r >/=0.80 and Cronbachs alpha >/=0.82) and for most domain-specific subscales. Correlations between function and bother subscales within domains were high (r >0.60). Correlations between different primary domains were consistently lower, indicating that these domains assess distinct HRQOL components. EPIC domains had weak to modest correlations with the Medical Outcomes Study 12-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-12), indicating rationale for their concurrent use. Moderate agreement was observed between EPIC domains relevant to the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy Prostate module (FACT-P) and the American Urological Association Symptom Index (AUA-SI), providing criterion validity without excessive overlap. CONCLUSIONS EPIC is a robust prostate cancer HRQOL instrument that complements prior instruments by measuring a broad spectrum of urinary, bowel, sexual, and hormonal symptoms, thereby providing a unique tool for comprehensive assessment of HRQOL issues important in contemporary prostate cancer management.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Comprehensive Comparison of Health-Related Quality of Life After Contemporary Therapies for Localized Prostate Cancer

John T. Wei; Rodney L. Dunn; Howard M. Sandler; P. William McLaughlin; James E. Montie; Mark S. Litwin; Linda V. Nyquist; Martin G. Sanda

PURPOSE Health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL) concerns are pivotal in choosing prostate cancer therapy. However, concurrent HRQOL comparison between brachytherapy, external radiation, radical prostatectomy, and controls is hitherto lacking. HRQOL effects of hormonal adjuvants and of cancer control after therapy also lack prior characterization. PATIENTS AND METHODS A cross-sectional survey was administered to patients who underwent brachytherapy, external-beam radiation, or radical prostatectomy during 4 years at an academic medical center and to age-matched controls. HRQOL among controls was compared with therapy groups. Comparison between therapy groups was performed using regression models to control covariates. HRQOL effects of cancer progression were evaluated. RESULTS One thousand fourteen subjects participated. Compared with controls, each therapy group reported bothersome sexual dysfunction; radical prostatectomy was associated with adverse urinary HRQOL; external-beam radiation was associated with adverse bowel HRQOL; and brachytherapy was associated with adverse urinary, bowel, and sexual HRQOL (P < or =.0002 for each). Hormonal adjuvant symptoms were associated with significant impairment (P <.002). More than 1 year after therapy, several HRQOL outcomes were less favorable among subjects after brachytherapy than after external radiation or radical prostatectomy. Progression-free subjects reported better sexual and hormonal HRQOL than subjects with increasing prostate-specific antigen (P <.0001). CONCLUSION Long-term HRQOL after prostate brachytherapy showed no benefit relative to radical prostatectomy or external-beam radiation and may be less favorable in some domains. Hormonal adjuvants can be associated with significant impairment. Progression-free survival is associated with HRQOL benefits. These findings facilitate patient counseling regarding HRQOL expectations and highlight the need for prospective studies sensitive to urinary irritative and hormonal concerns in addition to incontinence, sexual, and bowel HRQOL domains.


The Journal of Urology | 2002

Contemporary Diagnosis and Management of Renal Angiomyolipoma

Caleb P. Nelson; Martin G. Sanda

PURPOSE We present a comprehensive resource that summarizes contemporary advances relevant to the clinical management of renal angiomyolipoma. MATERIALS AND METHODS A MEDLINE search was done using the key words angiomyolipoma, hemangioma or lipoma and kidney neoplasm, and therapeutic embolization. References from these articles were reviewed to identify additional relevant source material. We identified 13 series published since 1986 comprising 336 patients as well as 24 reports of therapeutic embolization for angiomyolipoma, comprising 76 patients. To our knowledge we report the largest compilation series to date. RESULTS Angiomyolipoma is generally benign, although an uncommon subtype (epithelioid angiomyolipoma) may behave more aggressively. Tuberous sclerosis associated angiomyolipoma tends to be larger, multiple and more likely to cause spontaneous hemorrhage than the sporadic entity. Tumors that hemorrhage tend to be larger. Computerized tomography or magnetic resonance is usually sufficient for diagnosis. Biopsy is rarely useful. Primary indications for intervention include symptoms such as pain or bleeding or suspicion of malignancy. Prophylactic intervention is justifiable for large tumors, in females of childbearing age or in patients in whom followup or access to emergency care may be inadequate. Recent advances that have affected management include improved understanding of tuberous sclerosis complex and angiomyolipoma genetics, the identification of molecular markers that facilitate histopathological diagnosis, and the refinement of embolization and partial nephrectomy techniques. CONCLUSIONS Although some cases of angiomyolipoma may require complete nephrectomy, most can be managed by conservative nephron sparing approaches. Ongoing research into the molecular biology and clinical behavior of angiomyolipoma may improve our ability to manage these lesions.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Long-term outcomes among localized prostate cancer survivors: health-related quality-of-life changes after radical prostatectomy, external radiation, and brachytherapy.

David C. Miller; Martin G. Sanda; Rodney L. Dunn; James E. Montie; Hector Pimentel; Howard M. Sandler; William P. McLaughlin; John T. Wei

PURPOSE We sought to elucidate long-term changes in health-related quality-of-life (HRQOL) outcomes by prospectively re-evaluating a well-characterized cohort of prostate cancer (PC) survivors 4 to 8 years after primary treatment. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients who had been evaluated previously at a median of 2.6 years after radical prostatectomy (RP), external radiation (three-dimensional conformal radiation therapy [3-D CRT]), or brachytherapy (BT) were recontacted at a median of 6.2 years after treatment. The clinical relevance of long-term HRQOL impairment among survivors was established by comparison with controls of similar age. Factors associated with HRQOL changes during this interval were evaluated. RESULTS Of the 964 eligible men, 709 (73.5%) completed measurable questionnaires. In four domains (urinary irritative-obstructive, urinary incontinence, bowel, and sexual), significant HRQOL differences were detected for at least one of the therapy groups, compared with controls (all P < .05). During the 4-year interval, significant improvement was observed for the urinary irritative-obstructive (P < .0001) and bowel (P < .0001) domains among BT patients, whereas urinary incontinence HRQOL worsened for both the BT (P = .0017) and 3-D CRT (P = .0008) treatment groups. Overall sexual HRQOL deteriorated for the 3-D CRT cohort (P = .0017), as well as for controls (P = .0136). Among RP patients, significant HRQOL changes were not observed. CONCLUSION During a 4-year interval from earlier to longer-term phases of PC treatment survivorship, sexual, urinary, and bowel dysfunction remain significant concerns among early-stage PC treatment survivors, compared with control men. Although postprostatectomy HRQOL remains relatively stable during this interval, disease-specific HRQOL continues to evolve among men treated with BT and 3-D CRT.


Science Translational Medicine | 2011

Urine TMPRSS2:ERG Fusion Transcript Stratifies Prostate Cancer Risk in Men with Elevated Serum PSA

Scott A. Tomlins; Sheila M.J. Aubin; Javed Siddiqui; Robert J. Lonigro; Laurie Sefton-Miller; Siobhan Miick; Sarah Williamsen; Petrea Hodge; Jessica Meinke; Amy Blase; Yvonne Penabella; John R. Day; Radhika Varambally; Bo Han; David P. Wood; Lei Wang; Martin G. Sanda; Mark A. Rubin; Daniel R. Rhodes; Brent K. Hollenbeck; Kyoko Sakamoto; Jonathan L. Silberstein; Yves Fradet; James B. Amberson; Stephanie Meyers; Nallasivam Palanisamy; Harry G. Rittenhouse; John T. Wei; Jack Groskopf; Arul M. Chinnaiyan

Urine TMPRSS2:ERG gene fusion could be used for stratification of patients at higher risk for prostate cancer. Old Gene Fusion, New Diagnostic Tricks The “PSA test” is a routine test for men over the age of 50 or for those at risk for prostate cancer. It measures the level of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in the blood, and if that level is above a predefined cutoff, a biopsy is recommended for definitive diagnosis. This test is not perfect; benign conditions, such as an enlarged prostate, can contribute to high levels of PSA, resulting in a “false-positive” and subsequent overdiagnosis and overtreatment. Because of the high prevalence of prostate cancer (it is estimated that nearly 250,000 men will be diagnosed with the disease in 2011), it is clear that a more accurate test for prostate cancer is needed. Here, Tomlins et al. improve on the PSA test by taking a new twist on a known gene fusion, using it to stratify more than 1000 men in two multicenter cohorts based on risk for developing the disease. Recently, it was discovered that the fusion of two genes, the transmembrane protease, serine 2 (TMPRSS2) gene and the v-ets erythroblastosis virus E26 oncogene homolog (avian) (ERG) gene, known as TMPRSS2:ERG, is overexpressed in more than 50% of PSA-screened prostate cancers. The protein product of this fusion cannot be detected in serum, so the authors decided to test for the presence of TMPRSS2:ERG mRNA in urine. First, they developed a clinical-grade, transcription-mediated amplification assay for quantifying fusion mRNA—this generated a TMPRSS2:ERG “score.” Urine TMPRSS2:ERG score was linked to the presence of cancer, tumor volume, and clinically significant cancer in patients. Then, the authors combined the TMPRSS2:ERG score with the level of prostate cancer antigen 3 (PCA3) in urine. TMPRSS2:ERG+PCA3 improved the performance of the multivariate Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial risk calculator, thus demonstrating clinical utility. Who said you can’t teach an old gene fusion new tricks? By combining the cancer-specific fusion TMPRSS2:ERG score with levels of PSA (in serum) and PCA3 (in urine), Tomlins and colleagues demonstrated more accurate, individualized stratification of men at high risk for developing clinically significant prostate cancer—an important step in streamlining diagnosis and treatment. Moreover, men with extremes of TMPRSS2:ERG+PCA3 had different risks of cancer on biopsy; in combination with other clinicopathological features, urine TMPRSS2:ERG+PCA3 might also inform the urgency of biopsy after PSA screening. More than 1,000,000 men undergo prostate biopsy each year in the United States, most for “elevated” serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA). Given the lack of specificity and unclear mortality benefit of PSA testing, methods to individualize management of elevated PSA are needed. Greater than 50% of PSA-screened prostate cancers harbor fusions between the transmembrane protease, serine 2 (TMPRSS2) and v-ets erythroblastosis virus E26 oncogene homolog (avian) (ERG) genes. Here, we report a clinical-grade, transcription-mediated amplification assay to risk stratify and detect prostate cancer noninvasively in urine. The TMPRSS2:ERG fusion transcript was quantitatively measured in prospectively collected whole urine from 1312 men at multiple centers. Urine TMPRSS2:ERG was associated with indicators of clinically significant cancer at biopsy and prostatectomy, including tumor size, high Gleason score at prostatectomy, and upgrading of Gleason grade at prostatectomy. TMPRSS2:ERG, in combination with urine prostate cancer antigen 3 (PCA3), improved the performance of the multivariate Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial risk calculator in predicting cancer on biopsy. In the biopsy cohorts, men in the highest and lowest of three TMPRSS2:ERG+PCA3 score groups had markedly different rates of cancer, clinically significant cancer by Epstein criteria, and high-grade cancer on biopsy. Our results demonstrate that urine TMPRSS2:ERG, in combination with urine PCA3, enhances the utility of serum PSA for predicting prostate cancer risk and clinically relevant cancer on biopsy.


The Journal of Urology | 2000

PROSPECTIVE ASSESSMENT OF PATIENT REPORTED URINARY CONTINENCE AFTER RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY

John T. Wei; Rodney L. Dunn; Robert Marcovich; James E. Montie; Martin G. Sanda

PURPOSE Reported urinary continence rates after radical prostatectomy vary. Although modifications of radical prostatectomy meant to improve outcome, such as nerve sparing or bladder neck preservation, are in widespread use, to our knowledge evidence to support these practices based on patient report is scant. We evaluated the potential effects of nerve sparing and bladder neck preservation on urinary continence after radical prostatectomy, and assessed the impact of various urinary continence definitions on the observed outcome. MATERIALS AND METHODS We prospectively evaluated a cohort of men with prostate cancer who elected surgery with and without nerve sparing, and bladder neck preservation as primary therapy. A total of 482 men completed a brief urinary continence questionnaire preoperatively and postoperatively at a median followup of 18 months. Urinary continence was followed prospectively using the questionnaire and patient reported urinary continence recovery was based on 3 definitions of continence. RESULTS Median time to continence recovery based on patient reporting was significantly shorter in the nerve sparing than in the nonnerve sparing group when continence was defined as no urinary leakage (5.3 versus 10.9 months, p <0.01). A multivariate model controlling for baseline factors revealed that significant predictors of continence outcome were preoperative continence, patient age, nerve sparing and the interaction of nerve sparing with age (p <0.05). The definition of urinary continence also affected outcome. CONCLUSIONS The nerve sparing technique of radical prostatectomy was associated with improved recovery of urinary continence in an age dependent manner, whereas bladder neck preservation was not beneficial. Patient age and the sensitivity of the incontinence definitions, as reflected by the associated variable rates of preoperative baseline incontinence, are significant contexts for interpreting urinary function data after radical prostatectomy. These factors may partially explain the variation in continence rates in the literature.


The Journal of Urology | 2011

A multicenter study of [-2]pro-prostate specific antigen combined with prostate specific antigen and free prostate specific antigen for prostate cancer detection in the 2.0 to 10.0 ng/ml prostate specific antigen range

William J. Catalona; Alan W. Partin; Martin G. Sanda; John T. Wei; George G. Klee; Chris H. Bangma; Kevin M. Slawin; Leonard S. Marks; Stacy Loeb; Dennis L. Broyles; Sanghyuk S. Shin; Amabelle B. Cruz; Daniel W. Chan; Lori J. Sokoll; William L. Roberts; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Isaac A. Mizrahi

PURPOSE Prostate specific antigen and free prostate specific antigen have limited specificity to detect clinically significant, curable prostate cancer, leading to unnecessary biopsy, and detection and treatment of some indolent tumors. Specificity to detect clinically significant prostate cancer may be improved by [-2]pro-prostate specific antigen. We evaluated [-2]pro-prostate specific antigen, free prostate specific antigen and prostate specific antigen using the formula, ([-2]pro-prostate specific antigen/free prostate specific antigen × prostate specific antigen(1/2)) to enhance specificity to detect overall and high grade prostate cancer. MATERIALS AND METHODS We enrolled 892 men with no history of prostate cancer, normal rectal examination, prostate specific antigen 2 to 10 ng/ml and 6-core or greater prostate biopsy in a prospective multi-institutional trial. We examined the relationship of serum prostate specific antigen, free-to-total prostate specific antigen and the prostate health index with biopsy results. Primary end points were specificity and AUC using the prostate health index to detect overall and Gleason 7 or greater prostate cancer on biopsy compared with those of free-to-total prostate specific antigen. RESULTS In the 2 to 10 ng/ml prostate specific antigen range at 80% to 95% sensitivity the specificity and AUC (0.703) of the prostate health index exceeded those of prostate specific antigen and free-to-total prostate specific antigen. An increasing prostate health index was associated with a 4.7-fold increased risk of prostate cancer and a 1.61-fold increased risk of Gleason score greater than or equal to 4 + 3 = 7 disease on biopsy. The AUC of the index exceeded that of free-to-total prostate specific antigen (0.724 vs 0.670) to discriminate prostate cancer with Gleason 4 or greater + 3 from lower grade disease or negative biopsy. Prostate health index results were not associated with age and prostate volume. CONCLUSIONS The prostate health index may be useful in prostate cancer screening to decrease unnecessary biopsy in men 50 years old or older with prostate specific antigen 2 to 10 ng/ml and negative digital rectal examination with minimal loss in sensitivity.


The Journal of Urology | 1994

Demonstration of a Rational Strategy for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy

Martin G. Sanda; Sujatha R. Ayyagari; Elizabeth Jaffee; Jonathan I. Epstein; Shirley Clift; Lawrence K. Cohen; Glenn Dranoff; Drew M. Pardoll; Richard C. Mulligan; Jonathan W. Simons

The potential efficacy and clinical feasibility of gene therapy for prostate cancer were tested. Efficacy was tested using the Dunning rat prostate carcinoma model. Rats with anaplastic, hormone refractory prostate cancer treated with irradiated prostate cancer cells genetically engineered to secrete human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) showed longer disease-free survival compared to either untreated control rats or rats receiving prostate cancer cell vaccine mixed with soluble human GM-CSF. A gene modified prostate cancer cell vaccine thus provided effective therapy for anaplastic, hormone refractory prostate cancer in this animal model. An evaluation of the clinical feasibility of gene therapy for human prostate cancer based on these findings was then undertaken. Prostate cancer cells from patients with stage T2 prostate cancer undergoing radical prostatectomy were first transduced with MFG-lacZ, a retroviral vector carrying the beta-galactosidase reporter gene. Efficient gene transfer was achieved in each of 16 consecutive cases (median transduction efficiency 35%, range 12 to 65%). Cotransduction with a drug-selectable gene was not required to achieve high yield of genetically modified cells. Histopathology confirmed malignant origin of these cells and immunofluorescence analysis of cytokeratin 18 expression confirmed prostatic luminal-epithelial phenotype in each case tested. Cell yields (2.5 x 10(8) cells per gram of prostate cancer) were sufficient for potential entry into clinical trials. Autologous human prostate cancer vaccine cells were then transduced with MFG-GM-CSF, and significant human GM-CSF secretion was achieved in each of 10 consecutive cases. Sequential transductions increased GM-CSF secretion in each of 3 cases tested, demonstrating that increased gene dose can be used to escalate desired gene expression in individual patients. These studies show a preclinical basis for proceeding with clinical trials of gene therapy for human prostate cancer.

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John T. Wei

University of Michigan

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Howard M. Sandler

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Alan W. Partin

Johns Hopkins University

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Irving D. Kaplan

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Ian M. Thompson

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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