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Dive into the research topics where Nathan Petty is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathan Petty.


British Journal of Haematology | 2007

Incorporating bortezomib into upfront treatment for multiple myeloma: early results of total therapy 3.

Bart Barlogie; Elias Anaissie; Frits van Rhee; Jeff Haessler; Klaus Hollmig; Mauricio Pineda-Roman; Michele Cottler-Fox; Abid Mohiuddin; Yazan Alsayed; Guido Tricot; Vanessa Bolejack; Maurizio Zangari; Joshua Epstein; Nathan Petty; Douglas Steward; Bonnie Jenkins; Jennifer Gurley; Ellen Sullivan; John Crowley; John D. Shaughnessy

Total therapy 3 incorporated bortezomib into a melphalan‐based tandem transplant regimen for 303 newly diagnosed patients with myeloma. Induction chemotherapy prior to and consolidation chemotherapy after transplants each consisted of two cycles of VTD‐PACE (bortezomib, thalidomide, dexamethasone and 4‐d continuous infusions of cis‐platin, doxorubicin, cyclophosphamide, etoposide); 3‐year maintenance comprised monthly cycles of VTD in the first and TD in the remaining years. The median age was 59 years (age >64 years, 28%). A minimum of 20 × 106 CD34 cells/kg was collected in 87% of patients; 83% completed both transplants, and only 5% suffered a treatment‐related death. At 24 months, 83% had achieved near‐complete remission, which was sustained in 88% at 2 years from its onset. With a median follow‐up of 20 months, 2‐year estimates of event‐free and overall survival were 84% and 86% respectively. The 44 patients who experienced an event more often had a high‐risk gene array profile, cytogenetic abnormalities and indicators of high lactate dehydrogenase, beta‐2‐microglobulin, creatinine and International Staging System stage. Toxicities of grade > 2 included thrombo‐embolic events in 27% and peripheral neuropathy in 12%. Results of this phase‐2 study demonstrated that bortezomib could be safely combined with multi‐agent chemotherapy, effecting near‐complete remission status and 2‐year survival rates in more than 80% of patients.


Blood | 2008

Thalidomide arm of Total Therapy 2 improves complete remission duration and survival in myeloma patients with metaphase cytogenetic abnormalities.

Bart Barlogie; Mauricio Pineda-Roman; Frits van Rhee; Jeff Haessler; Elias Anaissie; Klaus Hollmig; Yazan Alsayed; Sarah Waheed; Nathan Petty; Joshua Epstein; John D. Shaughnessy; Guido Tricot; Maurizio Zangari; Jerome B. Zeldis; Sol Barer; John Crowley

Total Therapy 2 examined the clinical benefit of adding thalidomide up-front to a tandem transplant regimen for newly diagnosed patients with multiple myeloma. When initially reported with a median follow-up of 42 months, complete response rate and event-free survival were superior among the 323 patients randomized to thalidomide, whereas overall survival was indistinguishable from that of the 345 patients treated on the control arm. With further follow-up currently at a median of 72 months, survival plots segregated 5 years after initiation of therapy in favor of thalidomide (P = .09), reaching statistical significance for the one third of patients exhibiting cytogenetic abnormalities (CAs; P = .02), a well-recognized adverse prognostic feature. The duration of complete remission was also superior in the cohort presenting with CAs such that, at 7 years from onset of complete remission, 45% remained relapse-free as opposed to 20% on the control arm (P = .05). These observations were confirmed when examined by multivariate analysis demonstrating that thalidomide reduced the hazard of death by 41% among patients with CA-positive disease (P = .008). Because two thirds of patients without CAs have remained alive at 7 years, the presently emerging separation in favor of thalidomide may eventually reach statistical significance as well.


Leukemia | 2008

VTD combination therapy with bortezomib–thalidomide–dexamethasone is highly effective in advanced and refractory multiple myeloma

Mauricio Pineda-Roman; Maurizio Zangari; F van Rhee; Elias Anaissie; Jackie Szymonifka; Antje Hoering; Nathan Petty; John Crowley; John Shaughnessy; Joshua Epstein; B Barlogie

Bortezomib (V) was combined with thalidomide (T) and dexamethasone (D) in a phase I/II trial to determine dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs) and clinical activity of the VTD regimen in 85 patients with advanced and refractory myeloma. The starting dose of V was 1.0 mg/m2 (days 1, 4, 8, 11, every 21 day) with T added from cycle 2 at 50 mg/day, with 50 mg increments per 10 patient cohorts, to a maximum dose of 200 mg. In the absence of DLTs, the same reiteration of T dose increases was applied with a higher dose of V=1.3 mg/m2. D was added with cycle 4 in the absence of partial response (PR). Ninety-two percent had prior autotransplants, 74% had prior T and 76% abnormal cytogenetics. MTD was reached at V=1.3 mg/m2 and T=150 mg. Minor response (MR) was recorded in 79%, and 63% achieved PR including 22% who qualified for near-complete remission. At 4 years, 6% remain event-free and 23% alive. Both OS and EFS were significantly longer in the absence of prior T exposure and when at least MR status was attained. The MMSET/FGFR3 molecular subtype was prognostically favorable, a finding since reported for a VTD-incorporating tandem transplant trial (Total Therapy 3) for untreated patients with myeloma (BJH 2008).


Blood | 2014

Clinical, genomic and imaging predictors of myeloma progression from asymptomatic monoclonal gammopathies (SWOG S0120)

Madhav V. Dhodapkar; Rachael Sexton; Sarah Waheed; Saad Z Usmani; Xenofon Papanikolaou; Bijay Nair; Nathan Petty; John D. Shaughnessy; Antje Hoering; John Crowley; Robert Z. Orlowski; Bart Barlogie

All cases of clinical myeloma (CMM) are preceded by an asymptomatic monoclonal gammopathy (AMG), classified as either monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) or asymptomatic multiple myeloma (AMM). We analyzed data from AMG patients (n = 331) enrolled in a prospective, observational clinical trial (S0120). Baseline data from clinical variables, gene expression profiles (GEP) of purified tumor cells, and findings of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were correlated with the risk of progression to CMM requiring therapy. GEP of purified tumor cells revealed that all molecular subtypes of CMM are also represented in the AMG phase. An increased risk score (>-0.26) (based on a 70-gene signature, GEP70) was an independent predictor of the risk of progression to CMM. Combination of elevated serum free light chain, M-spike, and GEP70 risk score identified a subset with high risk (67% at 2 years) of progression to CMM requiring therapy. Importantly, absence of these factors in AMM patients predicted low risk similar to MGUS. Detection of multiple (>1) focal lesions by MRI also conferred an increased risk of progression. These data demonstrate that signatures associated with high-risk CMM impact disease risk and support inclusion of genomic analysis in the clinical management of AMGs.


Blood | 2010

Total Therapy 3 for multiple myeloma: prognostic implications of cumulative dosing and premature discontinuation of VTD maintenance components, bortezomib, thalidomide, and dexamethasone, relevant to all phases of therapy

Frits van Rhee; Jackie Szymonifka; Elias Anaissie; Bijay Nair; Sarah Waheed; Yazan Alsayed; Nathan Petty; John D. Shaughnessy; Antje Hoering; John Crowley; Bart Barlogie

The impact of cumulative dosing and premature drug discontinuation (PMDD) of bortezomib (V), thalidomide (T), and dexamethasone (D) on overall survival (OS), event-free survival (EFS), time to next therapy, and post-relapse survival in Total Therapy 3 were examined, using time-dependent methodology, relevant to induction, peritransplantation, consolidation, and maintenance phases. Univariately, OS and EFS were longer in case higher doses were used of all agents during induction, consolidation (except T), and maintenance (except V and T). The favorable OS and EFS impact of D induction dosing provided the rationale for examining the expression of glucocorticoid receptor NR3C1, top-tertile levels of which significantly prolonged OS and EFS and rendered outcomes independent of D and T dosing, whereas T and D, but not V, dosing was critical to outcome improvement in the bottom-tertile NR3C1 setting. PMDD of V was an independent highly adverse feature for OS (hazard ratio = 6.44; P < .001), whereas PMDD of both T and D independently imparted shorter time to next therapy. The absence of adverse effects on postrelapse survival of dosing of any VTD components and indeed a benefit from V supports the use up-front of all active agents in a dose-dense and dose-intense fashion, as practiced in Total Therapy 3, toward maximizing myeloma survival.


Blood | 2013

Prognostic implications of serial 18-fluoro-deoxyglucose emission tomography in multiple myeloma treated with total therapy 3

Saad Z Usmani; Alan Mitchell; Sarah Waheed; John Crowley; Antje Hoering; Nathan Petty; Tracy Brown; Twyla Bartel; Elias Anaissie; Frits van Rhee; Bart Barlogie

Prognostic implications of 3 imaging tools, metastatic bone survey, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography (PET), were evaluated in 2 consecutive Total Therapy 3 trials for newly diagnosed myeloma. Data including PET at baseline and on day 7 of induction as well as standard prognostic factors were available in 302 patients of whom 277 also had gene expression profiling (GEP)-derived risk information. According to multivariate analysis, more than 3 focal lesions on day 7 imparted inferior overall survival and progression-free survival, overall and in the subset with GEP-risk data. GEP high-risk designation retained independent significance for all 3 end points examined. Thus, the presence of > 3 focal lesions on day 7 PET follow-up may be exploited toward early therapy change, especially for the 15% of patients with GEP-defined high-risk disease with a median overall survival expectation of 2 years. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00081939 and # NCT00572169.


Blood | 2008

Seven-year median time to progression with thalidomide for smoldering myeloma: partial response identifies subset requiring earlier salvage therapy for symptomatic disease

Bart Barlogie; Frits van Rhee; John Shaughnessy; Joshua Epstein; Shmuel Yaccoby; Mauricio Pineda-Roman; Klaus Hollmig; Yazan Alsayed; Antje Hoering; Jackie Szymonifka; Elias Anaissie; Nathan Petty; Naveen Sanath Kumar; Geetika Srivastava; Bonnie Jenkins; John Crowley; Jerome B. Zeldis

Smoldering multiple myeloma (SMM) is usually followed expectantly without therapy. We conducted a phase 2 trial in 76 eligible patients with SMM, combining thalidomide (THAL, 200 mg/d) with monthly pamidronate. In the first 2 years, THAL dose reduction was required in 86% and drug was discontinued in 50%. Within 4 years, 63% improved, including 25% qualifying for partial response (PR); by then, 34 patients had progressed and 17 required salvage therapy. Unexpectedly, attaining PR status was associated with a shorter time to salvage therapy for disease progression (P < .001), perhaps reflecting greater drug sensitivity of more aggressive disease. Low beta-2-microglobulin levels less than 2 mg/L were independently associated with superior overall and event-free survival. Four-year survival and event-free survival estimates of 91% and 60%, respectively, together with a median postsalvage therapy survival of more than 5 years justify the conduct of a prospective randomized clinical trial to determine the clinical value of preemptive therapy in SMM. Trial registered at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov under identifier NCT00083382.


Blood | 2012

Second malignancies in total therapy 2 and 3 for newly diagnosed multiple myeloma: influence of thalidomide and lenalidomide during maintenance

Saad Z Usmani; Rachel Sexton; Antje Hoering; Christoph Heuck; Bijay Nair; Sarah Waheed; Yazan Al Sayed; Nabeel Chauhan; Nisar Ahmad; Shebli Atrash; Nathan Petty; Frits van Rhee; John Crowley; Bart Barlogie

Thalidomide and lenalidomide constitute an important part of effective myeloma therapy. Recent data from the Intergroup Francophone du Myélome, Cancer and Leukemia Group B, and Gruppo Italiano Malattie Ematologiche dell Adulto MM-015 trials suggest that lenalidomide maintenance therapy is associated with a higher incidence of second primary malignancies (SPMs), including both hematologic and solid malignancies. In the present study, we analyzed data from the Total Therapy 2 (TT2) trial, along with the 2 Total Therapy 3 (TT3) trials. TT2 patients were assigned randomly to either a control group (no thalidomide) or to the experimental group (thalidomide during induction, between transplantations, and during consolidation and maintenance). The 2 TT3 trials used thalidomide and bortezomib during induction, before and in consolidation after tandem melphalan-based transplantation; TT3A applied VTD (bortezomib, thalidomide, dexamethasone) in the first year of maintenance and TD for 2 more years, whereas TT3B used VRD (bortezomib, lenalidomide, dexamethasone) maintenance for 3 years. The cumulative incidence of SPMs did not differ significantly among the TT trial components when measured from enrollment (P = .78) or from initiation of maintenance (P = .82). However, a pairwise comparison of the TT2 arms suggested a lower incidence of hematologic SPMs in the thalidomide maintenance arm (hazard ratio = 0.38; P = .09). These trials are registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00573391 (TT2), NCT00081939 (TT3A), and NCT00572169 (TT3B).


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Reiterative Survival Analyses of Total Therapy 2 for Multiple Myeloma Elucidate Follow-Up Time Dependency of Prognostic Variables and Treatment Arms

Bart Barlogie; Elias Anaissie; Frits van Rhee; John D. Shaughnessy; Jackie Szymonifka; Antje Hoering; Nathan Petty; John Crowley

PURPOSE In Total Therapy 2, after randomly assigning 323 patients with myeloma to thalidomide and 345 to a control arm, no difference was observed in overall survival, with a median follow-up of 42 months, although at 72 months, survival was superior on the thalidomide arm in the one third exhibiting cytogenetic abnormalities (CA). After further follow-up of 87 months, we examined, in reiterative analyses, the effect of increasing time intervals on clinical outcomes relevant to baseline prognostic variables and treatment randomization. PATIENTS AND METHODS We investigated clinical trial end points as a function of increasing time intervals from protocol enrollment to determine consistencies of results by treatment and prognostic variables. RESULTS The complete congruence of serial survival plots for both study arms combined attested to stable patient characteristics over the time of accrual and the quality of follow-up management. Presence of CA was associated with consistently inferior survival curves from year 3 onward. Although 80% of patients randomly assigned to thalidomide discontinued study drug after 2 years because of toxicity, its clinical benefit did not reach statistical significance until year 10. The relative ranking order in multivariate models of prognostic factors remained stable over time. Decline in initially high hazard ratio values of gene array-defined high risk is consistent with an initial crisis phase that is time limited. CONCLUSION Reporting potentially time-sensitive features as a part of clinical trial results will enable the critical reader to judge the robustness of prognostic factors and the time sensitivity of outcome predictors, with important implications for future trial designs.


Leukemia | 2012

Primary plasma cell leukemia: clinical and laboratory presentation, gene-expression profiling, and clinical outcome with Total Therapy protocols

Saad Z Usmani; Bijay Nair; Pingping Qu; Emily Hansen; Qing Zhang; Nathan Petty; Sarah Waheed; John D. Shaughnessy; Yazan Alsayed; Christoph Heuck; Frits van Rhee; Teresa Milner; Antje Hoering; Jackie Szymonifka; Rachael Sexton; Jeffrey R. Sawyer; Zeba N. Singh; John Crowley; Bart Barlogie

To determine whether primary plasma cell leukemia (PPCL) remains a high-risk multiple myeloma feature in the context of contemporary therapy and gene-expression profiling (GEP), we reviewed records of 1474 patients with myeloma, who were enrolled in Total Therapy protocols or treated identically off protocol. A total of 27 patients (1.8%) were classified as having PPCL. As a group, these patients more often had low hemoglobin, high beta-2-microglobulin, high lactate dehydrogenase, low albumin and cytogenetic abnormalities. Among 866 patients with GEP results, the PPCL group more often had disease that was classified as high risk, and in CD-1 and MF molecular subgroups. Regardless of the therapeutic protocol, patients with PPCL had shorter median overall survival (OS; 1.8 years), progression-free survival (PFS; 0.8 years) and complete response duration (CRD; 1.3 years) than the remainder, whose clinical outcomes had improved markedly with successive protocols. Multivariate analyses of pretreatment parameters showed that PPCL was a highly significant independent adverse feature linked to OS, PFS and CRD. In GEP analyses, 203 gene probes distinguished PPCL from non-PPCL; the identified genes were involved in the LXR/RXR activation, inositol metabolism, hepatic fibrosis/hepatic stellate-cell activation and lipopolysaccharide/interleukin-1-mediated inhibition of RXR function pathways. Different treatment approaches building on these genomic differences may improve the grave outcome of patients with PPCL.

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Bart Barlogie

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Frits van Rhee

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Antje Hoering

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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John Crowley

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Sarah Waheed

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Christoph Heuck

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Saad Z Usmani

Carolinas Healthcare System

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Joshua Epstein

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Maurizio Zangari

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Gareth J. Morgan

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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