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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas E. Papadopoulos is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicholas E. Papadopoulos.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Sequential Biochemotherapy Versus Chemotherapy for Metastatic Melanoma: Results From a Phase III Randomized Trial

Omar Eton; Sewa S. Legha; Agop Y. Bedikian; J. Jack Lee; Antonio C. Buzaid; Cynthia Hodges; Sigrid Ring; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Carl Plager; Mary Jo East; Feng Zhan; Robert S. Benjamin

PURPOSE The addition of cytokines to chemotherapy has produced encouraging results in advanced melanoma. In this phase III trial, we compared the effects of chemotherapy (cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine [CVD]) with those of sequential biochemotherapy consisting of CVD plus interleukin-2 and interferon alfa-2b. PATIENTS AND METHODS Metastatic melanoma patients who had not previously received chemotherapy were stratified by prognostic factors and given chemotherapy or biochemotherapy. CVD consisted of dacarbazine (days 1 and 22) and cisplatin and vinblastine (days 1 to 4 and 22 to 25). Biochemotherapy involved CVD with vinblastine reduced 25% plus interleukin-2 by 24-hour continuous infusion (on days 5 to 8, 17 to 20, and 26 to 29) and interferon alfa-2b by subcutaneous injection (on days 5 to 9, 17 to 21, and 26 to 30). Response was assessed every 6 weeks. RESULTS Among 190 patients enrolled, 91 were assessable for biochemotherapy and 92 for chemotherapy. Ten percent of the patients were alive a median of 52 months from start of therapy. Response rates were 48% for biochemotherapy and 25% for chemotherapy (P =.001); six patients given biochemotherapy and two given chemotherapy had complete responses. Median time to progression (TTP) was 4.9 months for biochemotherapy and 2.4 months for chemotherapy (P =.008); median survival was 11.9 and 9.2 months, respectively (P =.06). The influence of treatment on TTP and survival was confirmed in multivariate analyses with other prognostic factors not included in the original stratification. Biochemotherapy produced substantially more constitutional, hemodynamic, and myelosuppressive toxic effects. CONCLUSION Cytokines substantially augment the antitumor activity of chemotherapy at the expense of considerable toxicity in patients with metastatic melanoma.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Development of a biochemotherapy regimen with concurrent administration of cisplatin, vinblastine, dacarbazine, interferon alfa, and interleukin-2 for patients with metastatic melanoma.

Sewa S. Legha; Sigrid Ring; Omar Eton; Agop Y. Bedikian; Antonio C. Buzaid; Carl Plager; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos

PURPOSE To evaluate the antitumor activity and toxicity of concurrent biochemotherapy that uses cisplatin, vinblastine, and docarbazine (DTIC) (CVD) in combination with interferon alfa-2a (IFN-alpha) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) in patients with metastatic melanoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between October 1992 and October 1993, 53 patients with a documented diagnosis of metastatic melanoma with measurable lesions and an Eastern Oncology Cooperative Group (ECOG) performance status of 2 or less were enrolled onto this study. Patients were required to have no clinically significant cardiac dysfunction and to be free from symptomatic brain metastases. The treatment consisted of cisplatin 20 mg/m2 daily for 4 days; vinblastine 1.6 mg/m2 daily for 4 days; and DTIC 800 mg/m2 intravenously (i.v.) day 1 with IL-2 9 x 10(6) IU/m2 i.v. by continuous infusion daily for 4 days and IFN-alpha 5 x 10(6) U/m2 subcutaneously daily for 5 days, repeated at 21-day intervals. Response was assessed after two cycles and patients who responded were continued on treatment for a total of six cycles. RESULTS Among 53 assessable patients, 11 patients (21%) achieved a complete response (CR) and 23 patients (43%) achieved a partial response (PR), for an overall objective response rate of 64%. The median time to disease progression for all patients was 5 months. The median survival of all patients entered onto the trial was 11.8 months. Among the 11 patients who achieved a CR, five patients (9%) have remained in continuous CR for 50+ to 61+ months. The toxicity of biochemotherapy consisted of severe myelosuppression, significant nausea and vomiting, and moderately severe hypotension that required inpatient hospital care for each 5-day cycle of treatment. There were no treatment-related deaths. CONCLUSION Concurrent biochemotherapy for patients with advanced melanoma is capable of producing high CR and overall response rates and resulted in durable complete remissions in a small fraction of patients. Toxicity, although severe, was manageable in a routine inpatient hospital environment.


Cancer | 1995

Treatment of uveal melanoma metastatic to the liver. A review of the M. D. Anderson cancer center experience and prognostic factors

Agop Y. Bedikian; Sewa S. Legha; Giora M. Mavligit; C. H. Carrasco; Sunil M. Khorana; Carl Plager; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Robert S. Benjamin

Background. Liver metastasis develops in approximately two‐thirds of patients with recurrent uveal melanoma. Despite therapy, the median survival of those with liver metastasis is 5 to 7 months. The recognition of a grave prognosis associated with liver metastasis has led to evaluation of new modalities of therapy, including the use of regional therapies such as intrahepatic arterial chemotherapy and either embolization or chemoembolization of hepatic metastases. In this study, the results of an institutional experience over the past 2 decades are reviewed and prognostic factors that affect survival from the time the liver metastasis is diagnosed are assessed.


Cancer | 2011

Prognostic Factors for Survival in Melanoma Patients with Brain Metastases

Michael A. Davies; Ping Liu; Susan McIntyre; Kevin B. Kim; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Wen-Jen Hwu; Patrick Hwu; Agop Y. Bedikian

One of the most common and deadly complications of melanoma is brain metastases. The outcomes of advanced melanoma patients who developed brain metastases were reviewed to identify significant prognostic factors for overall survival (OS).


Clinical Cancer Research | 2012

Specific lymphocyte subsets predict response to adoptive cell therapy using expanded autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in metastatic melanoma patients.

Laszlo Radvanyi; Chantale Bernatchez; Minying Zhang; Patricia S. Fox; Priscilla Miller; Jessica Chacon; R Wu; Gregory Lizée; Sandy Mahoney; Gladys Alvarado; Michelle R. Glass; Valen E. Johnson; John McMannis; Elizabeth J. Shpall; Victor G. Prieto; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Kevin B. Kim; Jade Homsi; Agop Y. Bedikian; Wen-Jen Hwu; Sapna Pradyuman Patel; Merrick I. Ross; Jeffrey E. Lee; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Anthony Lucci; Richard E. Royal; Janice N. Cormier; Michael A. Davies; Rahmatu Mansaray; Orenthial J. Fulbright

Purpose: Adoptive cell therapy (ACT) using autologous tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) is a promising treatment for metastatic melanoma unresponsive to conventional therapies. We report here on the results of an ongoing phase II clinical trial testing the efficacy of ACT using TIL in patients with metastatic melanoma and the association of specific patient clinical characteristics and the phenotypic attributes of the infused TIL with clinical response. Experimental Design: Altogether, 31 transiently lymphodepleted patients were treated with their expanded TIL, followed by two cycles of high-dose interleukin (IL)-2 therapy. The effects of patient clinical features and the phenotypes of the T cells infused on the clinical response were determined. Results: Overall, 15 of 31 (48.4%) patients had an objective clinical response using immune-related response criteria (irRC) with 2 patients (6.5%) having a complete response. Progression-free survival of more than 12 months was observed for 9 of 15 (60%) of the responding patients. Factors significantly associated with the objective tumor regression included a higher number of TIL infused, a higher proportion of CD8+ T cells in the infusion product, a more differentiated effector phenotype of the CD8+ population, and a higher frequency of CD8+ T cells coexpressing the negative costimulation molecule “B- and T-lymphocyte attenuator” (BTLA). No significant difference in the telomere lengths of TIL between responders and nonresponders was identified. Conclusion: These results indicate that the immunotherapy with expanded autologous TIL is capable of achieving durable clinical responses in patients with metastatic melanoma and that CD8+ T cells in the infused TIL, particularly differentiated effectors cells and cells expressing BTLA, are associated with tumor regression. Clin Cancer Res; 18(24); 6758–70. ©2012 AACR.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Prognostic factors for survival of patients treated systemically for disseminated melanoma

Omar Eton; Sewa S. Legha; Thomas E. Moon; Antonio C. Buzaid; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Carl Plager; Andrew M. Burgess; Agop Y. Bedikian; Sigrid Ring; Qiong Dong; Armand Glassman; Charles M. Balch; Robert S. Benjamin

PURPOSE The current American Joint Commission on Cancer (AJCC) staging system distinguishes between soft tissue and visceral metastases in advanced (stage IV) melanoma. We sought to verify these staging criteria and to identify prognostic variables that could be used to evaluate the impact of systemic therapy on long-term survival during the prior decade. PATIENTS AND METHODS We conducted a retrospective study of patients with advanced cutaneous melanoma enrolled in clinical trials between 1979 and 1989 at The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. Pretreatment age, sex, number of organs with metastases, serum levels of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and albumin, and period of enrollment were analyzed using a Cox proportional hazards model of survival. RESULTS In univariate and multivariate analyses that involved 318 stage IV patients, normal serum levels of LDH and albumin, soft tissue and/or single visceral organ metastases (especially lung), female sex, and enrollment late in the decade were independent positive predictors for survival. In multivariate analyses, the current AJCC criteria did not significantly predict outcome. Systemic treatment response did not bias these results, and only 4% of patients had a complete response. Patients who lived more than 2 years (11%) had a mix of favorable prognostic characteristics and a high frequency of systemic or surgically induced complete response. CONCLUSION This study supports the use of stratification parameters that reflect the favorable prognostic impact of soft tissue or single visceral organ metastases and normal serum levels of LDH and albumin at time of enrollment in advanced melanoma trials. Improved survival over the prior decade probably reflects advances in diagnostic and palliative interventions.


British Journal of Cancer | 2008

Phase II trial of imatinib mesylate in patients with metastatic melanoma

Kevin B. Kim; Omar Eton; Darren W. Davis; M L Frazier; David J. McConkey; Abdul H. Diwan; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Agop Y. Bedikian; Luis H. Camacho; Merrick I. Ross; Janice N. Cormier; Jeffrey E. Gershenwald; Jeffrey E. Lee; Paul F. Mansfield; L A Billings; Chaan S. Ng; Chusilp Charnsangavej; Menashe Bar-Eli; Marcella M. Johnson; A J Murgo; Victor G. Prieto

Metastatic melanoma cells express a number of protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs) that are considered to be targets for imatinib. We conducted a phase II trial of imatinib in patients with metastatic melanoma expressing at least one of these PTKs. Twenty-one patients whose tumours expressed at least one PTK (c-kit, platelet-derived growth factor receptors, c-abl, or abl-related gene) were treated with 400 mg of imatinib twice daily. One patient with metastatic acral lentiginous melanoma, containing the highest c-kit expression among all patients, had dramatic improvement on positron emission tomographic scan at 6 weeks and had a partial response lasting 12.8 months. The responder had a substantial increase in tumour and endothelial cell apoptosis at 2 weeks of treatment. Imatinib was fairly well tolerated: no patient required treatment discontinuation because of toxicity. Fatigue and oedema were the only grade 3 or 4 toxicities that occurred in more than 10% of the patients. Imatinib at the studied dose had minimal clinical efficacy as a single-agent therapy for metastatic melanoma. However, based on the characteristics of the responding tumour in our study, clinical activity of imatinib, specifically in patients with melanoma with certain c-kit aberrations, should be examined.


Cancer | 1990

A phase II trial of taxol in metastatic melanoma

Sewa S. Legha; Sigrid Ring; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Martin N. Raber; Robert S. Benjamin

Taxol is an investigational new drug which is currently undergoing Phase II evaluation in various tumors. It is a plant alkaloid extracted from the western Yew, Taxus brevifolia. In this study, patients with metastatic melanoma who were previously untreated, received Taxol at a starting dose of 250 mg/m2 delivered as a continuous intravenous (IV) infusion over 24 hours, at 3‐week intervals. All patients were premedicated with oral dexamethasone and IV diphenhydramine hydrochloride as prophylaxis against allergic reactions. Three of 25 patients had a partial response (PR) for a response rate of 12% (CI, 3%‐31%). In addition four patients had objective regression of tumor that failed to qualify for a PR but these responses were as durable, lasting 6 to 17 months. No patient experienced acute allergic reactions. The major toxicity of Taxol was neutropenia requiring dose reduction to 200 mg/m2 in a majority of the patients. Our data confirm that Taxol has definite although limited activity against metastatic melanoma.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2009

Activity of dasatinib against L576P KIT mutant melanoma: Molecular, cellular, and clinical correlates

Scott E. Woodman; Jonathan C. Trent; Katherine Stemke-Hale; Alexander J. Lazar; Sabrina Pricl; Giovanni Maria Pavan; Maurizio Fermeglia; Y.N. Vashisht Gopal; Dan Yang; Donald A. Podoloff; Doina Ivan; Kevin B. Kim; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Patrick Hwu; Gordon B. Mills; Michael A. Davies

Point mutations in the KIT receptor tyrosine kinase gene have recently been identified in mucosal, acral lentiginous, and chronically sun-damaged melanomas. We have identified the first human melanoma cell line with an endogenous L576P mutation, the most common KIT mutation in melanoma (∼30-40%). In vitro testing showed that the cell viability of the L576P mutant cell line was not reduced by imatinib, nilotinib, or sorafenib small molecule KIT inhibitors effective in nonmelanoma cells with other KIT mutations. However, the viability of the mutant cells was reduced by dasatinib at concentrations as low as 10 nM (P = 0.004). Molecular modeling studies found that the L576P mutation induces structural changes in KIT that reduce the affinity for imatinib (ΔΔGbind = −2.52 kcal/mol) but not for dasatinib (ΔΔGbind = +0.32 kcal/mol). Two metastatic melanoma patients with the L576P KIT mutation were treated with dasatinib, including one patient previously treated with imatinib. Both patients had marked reduction (>50%) and elimination of tumor F18-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-avidity by positron emission tomography (PET) imaging after dasatinib treatment. These data support the selective inhibitory effect of dasatinib against cells harboring the most common KIT mutation in melanoma, and thus has therapeutic implications for acrallentiginous, chronic sun-damaged, and mucosal melanomas. [Mol Cancer Ther 2009;8(8):2079–85]


Cancer | 1989

A prospective evaluation of a triple-drug regimen containing cisplatin, vinblastine, and dacarbazine (CVD) for metastatic melanoma

Sewa S. Legha; Sigrid Ring; Nicholas E. Papadopoulos; Carl Plager; Sant P. Chawla; Robert S. Benjamin

Based on the independent activity of cisplatin, vinblastine, and dimethyl‐triazeno‐imidazole‐carboxamide (DTIC) (CVD), a combination of these agents was used in the treatment of patients with advanced melanoma. Vinblastine was used in a dose of 1.6 mg/m2/d for 5 days, DTIC was used in a dose of 800 mg/m2 intravenously (IV) on day 1, and cisplatin was used in a dose of 20 mg/m2/d for 4 days starting on day 2 of chemotherapy. The courses of chemotherapy were repeated at 3‐week intervals. All patients were premedicated with antiemetics, and IV hydration was used before cisplatin. Fifty‐two consecutive patients were registered and 50 were evaluable for response. Two patients achieved a complete response (CR) and 18 patients had a partial response (PR) for an overall response rate of 40% (95% confidence interval, 27% to 55%). The median duration of response was 9 months and the median survival time of the responders was 12 months. The overall median survival time of patients treated on this protocol was 9 months. The treatment was associated with significant toxicity consisting of nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and partial hair loss. Additionally, neutropenia with a median nadir granulocyte count of 500/μl was observed, and significant anemia required blood transfusions in a majority of the patients after three to four courses of chemotherapy. The dose‐limiting toxicity was peripheral neuropathy which required discontinuation of cisplatin after six to eight courses of chemotherapy. We believe that this triple‐drug regimen has significant activity that appears to be superior to the single‐agent activity of these drugs, both in terms of increased response rate and duration of response.

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Agop Y. Bedikian

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Patrick Hwu

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Wen-Jen Hwu

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Kevin B. Kim

California Pacific Medical Center

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Carl Plager

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Robert S. Benjamin

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Sapna Pradyuman Patel

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Michael A. Davies

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Omar Eton

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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K. B. Kim

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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