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Dive into the research topics where Nadine Norton is active.

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Featured researches published by Nadine Norton.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Gene expression, single nucleotide variant and fusion transcript discovery in archival material from breast tumors.

Nadine Norton; Zhifu Sun; Yan W. Asmann; Daniel J. Serie; Brian M. Necela; Aditya Bhagwate; Jin Jen; Bruce W. Eckloff; Krishna R. Kalari; Kevin J. Thompson; Jennifer M. Carr; Jennifer M. Kachergus; Xochiquetzal J. Geiger; Edith A. Perez; E. Aubrey Thompson

Advantages of RNA-Seq over array based platforms are quantitative gene expression and discovery of expressed single nucleotide variants (eSNVs) and fusion transcripts from a single platform, but the sensitivity for each of these characteristics is unknown. We measured gene expression in a set of manually degraded RNAs, nine pairs of matched fresh-frozen, and FFPE RNA isolated from breast tumor with the hybridization based, NanoString nCounter (226 gene panel) and with whole transcriptome RNA-Seq using RiboZeroGold ScriptSeq V2 library preparation kits. We performed correlation analyses of gene expression between samples and across platforms. We then specifically assessed whole transcriptome expression of lincRNA and discovery of eSNVs and fusion transcripts in the FFPE RNA-Seq data. For gene expression in the manually degraded samples, we observed Pearson correlations of >0.94 and >0.80 with NanoString and ScriptSeq protocols, respectively. Gene expression data for matched fresh-frozen and FFPE samples yielded mean Pearson correlations of 0.874 and 0.783 for NanoString (226 genes) and ScriptSeq whole transcriptome protocols respectively, p<2x10-16. Specifically for lincRNAs, we observed superb Pearson correlation (0.988) between matched fresh-frozen and FFPE pairs. FFPE samples across NanoString and RNA-Seq platforms gave a mean Pearson correlation of 0.838. In FFPE libraries, we detected 53.4% of high confidence SNVs and 24% of high confidence fusion transcripts. Sensitivity of fusion transcript detection was not overcome by an increase in depth of sequencing up to 3-fold (increase from ~56 to ~159 million reads). Both NanoString and ScriptSeq RNA-Seq technologies yield reliable gene expression data for degraded and FFPE material. The high degree of correlation between NanoString and RNA-Seq platforms suggests discovery based whole transcriptome studies from FFPE material will produce reliable expression data. The RiboZeroGold ScriptSeq protocol performed particularly well for lincRNA expression from FFPE libraries, but detection of eSNV and fusion transcripts was less sensitive.


Cancer Research | 2016

Improved Survival of HER2+ Breast Cancer Patients Treated with Trastuzumab and Chemotherapy Is Associated with Host Antibody Immunity against the HER2 Intracellular Domain

Keith L. Knutson; Raphael Clynes; Barath Shreeder; Patrick Yeramian; Kathleen P. Kemp; Karla V. Ballman; Kathleen S. Tenner; Courtney L. Erskine; Nadine Norton; Donald W. Northfelt; Winston Tan; Carmen Calfa; Mark D. Pegram; Elizabeth A. Mittendorf; Edith A. Perez

The addition of trastuzumab to chemotherapy extends survival among patients with HER2(+) breast cancer. Prior work showed that trastuzumab and chemotherapy augments HER2 extracellular domain (ECD)-specific antibodies. The current study investigated whether combination therapy induced immune responses beyond HER2-ECD and, importantly, whether those immune responses were associated with survival. Pretreatment and posttreatment sera were obtained from 48 women with metastatic HER2(+) breast cancer on NCCTG (now Alliance for Clinical Trials in Oncology) studies, N0337 and N983252. IgG to HER2 intracellular domain (ICD), HER2-ECD, p53, IGFBP2, CEA, and tetanus toxoid were examined. Sera from 25 age-matched controls and 26 surgically resected HER2(+) patients were also examined. Prior to therapy, some patients with metastatic disease had elevated antibodies to IGFBP2, p53, HER2-ICD, HER2-ECD, and CEA, but not to tetanus toxin, relative to controls and surgically resected patients. Treatment augmented antibody responses to HER2-ICD in 69% of metastatic patients, which was highly associated with improved progression-free survival (PFS; HR = 0.5, P = 0.0042) and overall survival (OS; HR = 0.7, P = 0.038). Augmented antibody responses to HER2-ICD also correlated (P = 0.03) with increased antibody responses to CEA, IGFBP2, and p53, indicating that treatment induces epitope spreading. Paradoxically, patients who already had high preexisting immunity to HER2-ICD did not respond to therapy with increased antibodies to HER2-ICD and demonstrated poorer PFS (HR = 1.6, P < 0.0001) and OS (HR = 1.4, P = 0.0006). Overall, the findings further demonstrate the importance of the adaptive immune system in the efficacy of trastuzumab-containing regimens. Cancer Res; 76(13); 3702-10. ©2016 AACR.


Cancer immunology research | 2014

Association studies of Fcγ receptor polymorphisms with outcome in HER2+ breast cancer patients treated with trastuzumab in NCCTG (Alliance) Trial N9831.

Nadine Norton; Rebecca M. Olson; Mark D. Pegram; Kathleen S. Tenner; Karla V. Ballman; Raphael Clynes; Keith L. Knutson; Edith A. Perez

Norton, Olson, and colleagues found no differences in disease-free survival in trastuzumab-treated patients regardless of their FCGR2A and FCGR3A genotypes, but a significant difference between patients with FCGR2B variants, suggesting the functionality of FCGR2B may predict benefit to trastuzumab. Patients with HER2+ breast cancer treated with trastuzumab and chemotherapy have superior survival compared with patients treated with chemotherapy alone. Polymorphisms within FCGR2A and FCGR3A are associated with binding affinity of natural killer cells to the IgG1 portion of trastuzumab, and a polymorphism in FCGR2B (I232T) is associated with impaired regulatory activity. The association of these polymorphisms with clinical response among trastuzumab-treated patients is equivocal, with both positive and negative associations. We performed genotyping analysis on the FCGR3A V158F, FCGR2A R131H, and FCGR2B I232T polymorphisms in 1,325 patients from the N9831 clinical trial. Patients in arm A (N = 419) received chemotherapy only. Patients in arms B (N = 469) and C (N = 437) were treated with chemotherapy and trastuzumab (sequentially in arm B and concurrently in arm C). Using log-rank test and Cox proportional hazard models, we compared disease-free survival (DFS) among genotypic groups within pooled arms B/C. We found no differences in DFS between trastuzumab-treated patients who had the FCGR3A 158 V/V and/or FCGR2A 131 H/H high-affinity genotypes and patients without those genotypes. Furthermore, there was no significant interaction between FCGR3A and FCGR2A and treatment. However, there was a difference in DFS for FCGR2B I232T, with I/I patients deriving benefit from trastuzumab (P < 0.001), compared with the T carriers who did not (P = 0.81). The interaction between FCGR2B genotype and treatment was statistically significant (P = 0.03). Our analysis did not reveal an association between FcγR high-affinity genotypes and outcomes. However, it seems that the FCGR2B inhibitory gene may be predictive of adjuvant trastuzumab benefit. Cancer Immunol Res; 2(10); 962–9. ©2014 AACR.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2017

Intrinsic Subtype and Therapeutic Response Among HER2-Positive Breast Tumors from the NCCTG (Alliance) N9831 Trial

Edith A. Perez; Karla V. Ballman; Afshin Mashadi-Hossein; Kathleen S. Tenner; Jennifer M. Kachergus; Nadine Norton; Brian M. Necela; Jennifer M. Carr; Sean Ferree; Charles M. Perou; Frederick L. Baehner; Maggie Cheang; E. Aubrey Thompson

Background: Genomic data from human epidermal growth factor receptor 2‐positive (HER2+) tumors were analyzed to assess the association between intrinsic subtype and clinical outcome in a large, well‐annotated patient cohort. Methods: Samples from the NCCTG (Alliance) N9831 trial were analyzed using the Prosigna algorithm on the NanoString platform to define intrinsic subtype, risk of recurrence scores, and risk categories for 1392 HER2+ tumors. Subtypes were evaluated for recurrence‐free survival (RFS) using Kaplan‐Meier and Cox model analysis following adjuvant chemotherapy (n = 484) or chemotherapy plus trastuzumab (n = 908). All statistical tests were two‐sided. Results: Patients with HER2+ tumors from N9831 were primarily scored as HER2‐enriched (72.1%). These individuals received statistically significant benefit from trastuzumab (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.68, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.52 to 0.89, P = .005), as did the patients (291 of 1392) with luminal‐type tumors (HR = 0.52, 95% CI = 0.32 to 0.85, P = .01). Patients with basal‐like tumors (97 of 1392) did not have statistically significantly better RFS when treated with trastuzumab and chemotherapy compared with chemotherapy alone (HR = 1.06, 95% CI = 0.53 to 2.13, P = .87). Conclusions: The majority of clinically defined HER2‐positive tumors were classified as HER2‐enriched or luminal using the Prosigna algorithm. Intrinsic subtype alone cannot replace conventional histopathological evaluation of HER2 status because many tumors that are classified as luminal A or luminal B will benefit from adjuvant trastuzumab if that subtype is accompanied by HER2 overexpression. However, among tumors that overexpress HER2, we speculate that assessment of intrinsic subtype may influence treatment, particularly with respect to evaluating alternative therapeutic approaches for that subset of HER2‐positive tumors of the basal‐like subtype.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Assessment of Tumor Heterogeneity, as Evidenced by Gene Expression Profiles, Pathway Activation, and Gene Copy Number, in Patients with Multifocal Invasive Lobular Breast Tumors

Nadine Norton; Pooja Advani; Daniel J. Serie; Xochiquetzal J. Geiger; Brian M. Necela; Bianca C. Axenfeld; Jennifer M. Kachergus; Ryan Feathers; Jennifer M. Carr; Julia E. Crook; Alvaro Moreno-Aspitia; Panos Z. Anastasiadis; Edith A. Perez; E. Aubrey Thompson

Background Invasive lobular carcinoma (ILC) comprises approximately ~10–20% of breast cancers. In general, multifocal/multicentric (MF/MC) breast cancer has been associated with an increased rate of regional lymph node metastases. Tumor heterogeneity between foci represents a largely unstudied source of genomic variation in those rare patients with MF/MC ILC. Methods We characterized gene expression and copy number in 2 or more foci from 11 patients with MF/MC ILC (all ER+, HER2-) and adjacent normal tissue. RNA and DNA were extracted from 3x1.5mm cores from all foci. Gene expression (730 genes) and copy number (80 genes) were measured using Nanostring PanCancer and Cancer CNV panels. Linear mixed models were employed to compare expression in tumor versus normal samples from the same patient, and to assess heterogeneity (variability) in expression among multiple ILC within an individual. Results 35 and 34 genes were upregulated (FC>2) and down-regulated (FC<0.5) respectively in ILC tumor relative to adjacent normal tissue, q<0.05. 9/34 down-regulated genes (FIGF, RELN, PROM1, SFRP1, MMP7, NTRK2, LAMB3, SPRY2, KIT) had changes larger than CDH1, a hallmark of ILC. Copy number changes in these patients were relatively few but consistent across foci within each patient. Amplification of three genes (CCND1, FADD, ORAOV1) at 11q13.3 was present in 2/11 patients in both foci. We observed significant evidence of within-patient between-foci variability (heterogeneity) in gene expression for 466 genes (p<0.05 with FDR 8%), including CDH1, FIGF, RELN, SFRP1, MMP7, NTRK2, LAMB3, SPRY2 and KIT. Conclusions There was substantial variation in gene expression between ILC foci within patients, including known markers of ILC, suggesting an additional level of complexity that should be addressed.


Pharmacogenetics and Genomics | 2017

Genome-wide association study of cardiotoxicity in the NCCTG N9831 (Alliance) adjuvant trastuzumab trial

Daniel J. Serie; Julia E. Crook; Brian M. Necela; Travis J. Dockter; Xue Wang; Yan W. Asmann; DeLisa Fairweather; Katelyn A. Bruno; Gerardo Colon-Otero; Edith A. Perez; E. Aubrey Thompson; Nadine Norton

Objectives The major clinical side effect of the ERBB2-targeted breast cancer therapy, trastuzumab, is a decline in the left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF). Improved markers are needed to better identify patients susceptible to cardiotoxicity. Methods The NCCTG N9831 trial compared adjuvant doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide followed by either weekly paclitaxel (arm A); paclitaxel then trastuzumab (arm B); or concurrent paclitaxel and trastuzumab (arm C) in patients with HER2-positive breast cancer. A genome-wide association study was performed on all patients with available DNA (N=1446). We used linear regression to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with decline in LVEF, adjusting for age, baseline LVEF, antihypertensive medications, and the first two principle components. Results In total, 618 863 SNPs passed quality control and DNA from 1191 patients passed genotyping quality control and were identified as Whites of non-Hispanic origin. SNPs at six loci were associated with a decline in LVEF (P=7.73×10−6 to 8.93×10−8), LDB2, BRINP1, chr6 intergenic, RAB22A, TRPC6, and LINC01060, in patients who received chemotherapy plus trastuzumab (arms BC, N=800). None of these loci were significant in patients who received chemotherapy only (arm A, N=391) and did not increase in significance in the combined analysis of all patients. We did not observe association, P<0.05, with SNPs previously associated with trastuzumab-induced cardiotoxicity at ERBB2, I655V, and P1170A. We replicated association, P<0.05, with SNPs previously associated with anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity at CBR3 and ABCB1. Conclusion Our study identified six putative novel cardiotoxicity loci in patients treated with combination chemotherapy and trastuzumab that require further investigation and confirmed known associations of anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity.


Breast Cancer Research | 2013

How relevant is hormone receptor status in the context of outcome to HER2-positive breast cancer?

Nadine Norton; Edith A. Perez

Clinical outcome of patients with breast cancer is based on patient and tumor-related factors. The relevant tumor-related factors include anatomical extent and biology. Of the prognostic and predictive biological markers available, hormone receptors (defined as estrogen and progesterone receptors) and HER2 receptors, have been independently validated. Pertinent questions to be addressed include their combined impact on prognosis, their relevance in terms of sites of metastases, and whether they change in primary versus recurrent tumors. Although these questions are being addressed in clinical trials, epidemiological results, such as those derived from the National Comprehensive Cancer Network dataset, add perspective to our understanding of these two most relevant biological prognostic/predictive markers.


eLife | 2018

Determining the genetic basis of anthracycline-cardiotoxicity by molecular response QTL mapping in induced cardiomyocytes.

David Knowles; Courtney K. Burrows; John Blischak; Kristen Patterson; Daniel J. Serie; Nadine Norton; Carole Ober; Jonathan K Pritchard; Yoav Gilad

Anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity (ACT) is a key limiting factor in setting optimal chemotherapy regimes, with almost half of patients expected to develop congestive heart failure given high doses. However, the genetic basis of sensitivity to anthracyclines remains unclear. We created a panel of iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes from 45 individuals and performed RNA-seq after 24 hr exposure to varying doxorubicin dosages. The transcriptomic response is substantial: the majority of genes are differentially expressed and over 6000 genes show evidence of differential splicing, the later driven by reduced splicing fidelity in the presence of doxorubicin. We show that inter-individual variation in transcriptional response is predictive of in vitro cell damage, which in turn is associated with in vivo ACT risk. We detect 447 response-expression quantitative trait loci (QTLs) and 42 response-splicing QTLs, which are enriched in lower ACT GWAS p-values, supporting the in vivo relevance of our map of genetic regulation of cellular response to anthracyclines.


Cancer Research | 2013

Abstract 2005: Analysis of gene expression and copy number variation in breast tumors using both sequencing and hybridization-based platforms.

Nadine Norton; Edith A. Perez; Yan W. Asmann; Jennifer M. Carr; Brian M. Necela; Jennifer M. Kachergus; Jin Jen; Bruce W. Eckloff; E. Aubrey Thompson

Proceedings: AACR 104th Annual Meeting 2013; Apr 6-10, 2013; Washington, DC Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technologies provide rapid genomic analyses of single nucleotide variants, RNA expression and DNA copy number. Application of these technologies to material isolated from formalin fixed paraffin embedded (FFPE) tissue and even degraded frozen material could provide powerful replication samples but remains challenging. We tested the nanoString platform to validate deep sequence analysis of gene expression and DNA copy number in degraded and FFPE material. Firstly, RNA from the Universal Human Reference RNA and a breast cancer cell line (MDA-MB-436) was artificially degraded to different degrees (RIN 1.2-6.8). We used the nanoString platform to simultaneously measure RNA expression across 226 genes in each degraded sample and the corresponding undegraded RNA. Secondly we isolated RNA and DNA from matched fresh frozen and FFPE tissues from nine breast cancer patients (3 HER2+/ER+/PR+, 2 HER2+/ER-/PR-, 2 HER2+/ER+/PR-, 2 HER2-/ER+/PR+) using the nanoString platform to compare expression and copy number across 226 and 86 genes respectively. Finally, we correlated expression and copy number data generated by nanoString with Illumina transcriptome and whole genome sequencing (WGS). NanoString log2 expression fold-change between all artificially degraded samples and their undegraded counterpart showed extremely high correlation (r2>0.91). NanoString DNA copy number between matched fresh-frozen and FFPE showed a high degree of correlation (r2=0.71). All gene amplifications with copy number ≥ 5 in DNA from fresh-frozen material (N=9) were successfully identified in DNA from FFPE material. We also observed good correlation of gene expression between whole transcriptome sequencing and the nanoString platform (r2 0.59 - 0.72) in FFPE and artificially degraded material and for DNA copy number between WGS and nanoString in DNA isolated from cancer cell lines (r2=0.96). The nanoString platform provides reliable data from highly degraded and FFPE material and correlates with sequence analysis of both expression and copy number from NGS platforms demonstrating potential for large-scale replication studies in FFPE material. Citation Format: Nadine Norton, Edith A. Perez, Yan W. Asmann, Jennifer M. Carr, Brian M. Necela, Jennifer M. Kachergus, Jin Jen, Bruce W. Eckloff, E Aubrey Thompson. Analysis of gene expression and copy number variation in breast tumors using both sequencing and hybridization-based platforms. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2013 Apr 6-10; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2013;73(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 2005. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2013-2005


Breast Cancer Research | 2018

Generation of HER2-specific antibody immunity during trastuzumab adjuvant therapy associates with reduced relapse in resected HER2 breast cancer

Nadine Norton; Nicholas Fox; Christie Ann McCarl; Kathleen S. Tenner; Karla V. Ballman; Courtney L. Erskine; Brian M. Necela; Donald W. Northfelt; Winston Tan; Carmen Calfa; Mark D. Pegram; Gerardo Colon-Otero; Edith A. Perez; Raphael Clynes; Keith L. Knutson

BackgroundResected HER2 breast cancer patients treated with adjuvant trastuzumab and chemotherapy have superior survival compared to patients treated with chemotherapy alone. We previously showed that trastuzumab and chemotherapy induce HER2-specific antibodies which correlate with improved survival in HER2 metastatic breast cancer patients. It remains unclear whether the generation of immunity required trastuzumab and whether endogenous antibody immunity is associated with improved disease-free survival in the adjuvant setting. In this study, we addressed this question by analyzing serum anti-HER2 antibodies from a subset of patients enrolled in the NCCTG trial N9831, which includes an arm (Arm A) in which trastuzumab was not used. Arms B and C received trastuzumab sequentially or concurrently to chemotherapy, respectively.MethodsPre-and post-treatment initiation sera were obtained from 50 women enrolled in N9831. Lambda IgG antibodies (to avoid detection of trastuzumab) to HER2 were measured and compared between arms and with disease-free survival.ResultsPrior to therapy, across all three arms, N9831 patients had similar mean anti-HER2 IgG levels. Following treatment, the mean levels of antibodies increased in the trastuzumab arms but not the chemotherapy-only arm. The proportion of patients who demonstrated antibodies increased by 4% in Arm A and by 43% in the Arms B and C combined (p = 0.003). Cox modeling demonstrated that larger increases in antibodies were associated with improved disease-free survival in all patients (HR = 0.23; p = 0.04).ConclusionsThese results show that the increased endogenous antibody immunity observed in adjuvant patients treated with combination trastuzumab and chemotherapy is clinically significant, in view of its correlation with improved disease-free survival. The findings may have important implications for predicting treatment outcomes in patients treated with trastuzumab in the adjuvant setting.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00005970. Registered on July 5, 2000.

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