Olivia Spleiss
Hoffmann-La Roche
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Featured researches published by Olivia Spleiss.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012
Fei Su; Amaya Viros; Carla Milagre; Kerstin Trunzer; Gideon Bollag; Olivia Spleiss; Jorge S. Reis-Filho; Xiangju Kong; Richard C. Koya; Keith T. Flaherty; Paul B. Chapman; Min Jung Kim; Robert Hayward; Matthew Martin; Hong Yang; Qiongqing Wang; Holly Hilton; Julie S. Hang; Johannes Noe; Maryou B. Lambros; Felipe C. Geyer; Nathalie Dhomen; Ion Niculescu-Duvaz; Alfonso Zambon; Dan Niculescu-Duvaz; Natasha Preece; Lidia Robert; Nicholas Otte; Stephen Mok; Damien Kee
BACKGROUND Cutaneous squamous-cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas are common findings in patients treated with BRAF inhibitors. METHODS We performed a molecular analysis to identify oncogenic mutations (HRAS, KRAS, NRAS, CDKN2A, and TP53) in the lesions from patients treated with the BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib. An analysis of an independent validation set and functional studies with BRAF inhibitors in the presence of the prevalent RAS mutation was also performed. RESULTS Among 21 tumor samples, 13 had RAS mutations (12 in HRAS). In a validation set of 14 samples, 8 had RAS mutations (4 in HRAS). Thus, 60% (21 of 35) of the specimens harbored RAS mutations, the most prevalent being HRAS Q61L. Increased proliferation of HRAS Q61L-mutant cell lines exposed to vemurafenib was associated with mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-pathway signaling and activation of ERK-mediated transcription. In a mouse model of HRAS Q61L-mediated skin carcinogenesis, the vemurafenib analogue PLX4720 was not an initiator or a promoter of carcinogenesis but accelerated growth of the lesions harboring HRAS mutations, and this growth was blocked by concomitant treatment with a MEK inhibitor. CONCLUSIONS Mutations in RAS, particularly HRAS, are frequent in cutaneous squamous-cell carcinomas and keratoacanthomas that develop in patients treated with vemurafenib. The molecular mechanism is consistent with the paradoxical activation of MAPK signaling and leads to accelerated growth of these lesions. (Funded by Hoffmann-La Roche and others; ClinicalTrials.gov numbers, NCT00405587, NCT00949702, NCT01001299, and NCT01006980.).
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013
Kerstin Trunzer; Anna C. Pavlick; Lynn M. Schuchter; Rene Gonzalez; Grant A. McArthur; Thomas E. Hutson; Stergios J. Moschos; Keith T. Flaherty; Kevin B. Kim; Jeffrey S. Weber; Peter Hersey; Donald P. Lawrence; Patrick A. Ott; Ravi K. Amaravadi; Karl D. Lewis; Igor Puzanov; Roger S. Lo; Astrid Koehler; Mark M. Kockx; Olivia Spleiss; Annette Schell-Steven; Houston Gilbert; Louise Cockey; Gideon Bollag; Richard J. Lee; Andrew K. Joe; Jeffrey A. Sosman; Antoni Ribas
PURPOSE To assess pharmacodynamic effects and intrinsic and acquired resistance mechanisms of the BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib in BRAF(V600)-mutant melanoma, leading to an understanding of the mechanism of action of vemurafenib and ultimately to optimization of metastatic melanoma therapy. METHODS In the phase II clinical study NP22657 (BRIM-2), patients received oral doses of vemurafenib (960 mg twice per day). Serial biopsies were collected to study changes in mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling, cell-cycle progression, and factors causing intrinsic or acquired resistance by immunohistochemistry, DNA sequencing, or somatic mutation profiling. Results Vemurafenib inhibited MAPK signaling and cell-cycle progression. An association between the decrease in extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) phosphorylation and objective response was observed in paired biopsies (n = 22; P = .013). Low expression of phosphatase and tensin homolog showed a modest association with lower response. Baseline mutations in MEK1(P124) coexisting with BRAF(V600) were noted in seven of 92 samples; their presence did not preclude objective tumor responses. Acquired resistance to vemurafenib associated with reactivation of MAPK signaling as observed by elevated ERK1/2 phosphorylation levels in progressive lesions and the appearance of secondary NRAS(Q61) mutations or MEK1(Q56P) or MEK1(E203K) mutations. These two activating MEK1 mutations had not previously been observed in vivo in biopsies of progressive melanoma tumors. CONCLUSION Vemurafenib inhibits tumor proliferation and oncogenic BRAF signaling through the MAPK pathway. Acquired resistance results primarily from MAPK reactivation driven by the appearance of secondary mutations in NRAS and MEK1 in subsets of patients. The data suggest that inhibition downstream of BRAF should help to overcome acquired resistance.
Transplant International | 2008
Josep M. Grinyó; Yves Vanrenterghem; Bjoern Nashan; Flavio Vincenti; Henrik Ekberg; Klaus Lindpaintner; Michelle Rashford; Clare Nasmyth-Miller; Athina Voulgari; Olivia Spleiss; Matthew Truman; Laurent Essioux
Renal transplant outcomes exhibit large inter‐individual variability, possibly on account of genetic variation in immune‐response mediators and genes influencing the pharmacodynamics/pharmacokinetics of immunosuppressants. We examined 21 polymorphisms from 10 genes in 237 de novo renal transplant recipients participating in an open‐label, multicenter study [Cyclosporine Avoidance Eliminates Serious Adverse Renal‐toxicity (CAESAR)] investigating renal function and biopsy‐proven acute rejection (BPAR) with different cyclosporine A regimens and mycophenolate mofetil. Genes were selected for their immune response and pharmacodynamic/pharmacokinetic relevance and were tested for association with BPAR. Four polymorphisms were significantly associated with BPAR. The ABCB1 2677T allele tripled the odds of developing BPAR (OR: 3.16, 95% CI [1.50–6.67]; P = 0.003), as did the presence of at least one IMPDH2 3757C allele (OR: 3.39, 95% CI [1.42–8.09]; P = 0.006). BPAR was almost fivefold more likely in patients homozygous for IL‐10 ‐592A (OR: 4.71, 95% CI [1.52–14.55]; P = 0.007) and twice as likely in patients with at least one A allele of TNF‐α G‐308A (OR: 2.18, 95% CI [1.08–4.41]; P = 0.029). There were no statistically significant interactions between polymorphisms, or the different treatment regimens. Variation in genes of immune response and pharmacodynamic/pharmacokinetic relevance may be important in understanding acute rejection after renal transplant.
Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2010
Federico Goodsaid; Shashi Amur; Michael E. Burczynski; Kevin Carl; Jennifer Catalano; Rosane Charlab; Sandra L Close; Catherine Cornu-Artis; Laurent Essioux; Albert J. Fornace; Lois Hinman; Huixiao Hong; Ian Hunt; David Jacobson-Kram; Ansar Jawaid; David Laurie; Lawrence J. Lesko; Heng-Hong Li; Klaus Lindpaintner; James T. Mayne; Peter Morrow; Marisa Papaluca-Amati; Timothy W. Robison; John Roth; Leming Shi; Olivia Spleiss; Weida Tong; Sharada Louis Truter; Jacky Vonderscher; Agnes Westelinck
Heterogeneity in the underlying mechanisms of disease processes and inter-patient variability in drug responses are major challenges in drug development. To address these challenges, biomarker strategies based on a range of platforms, such as microarray gene-expression technologies, are increasingly being applied to elucidate these sources of variability and thereby potentially increase drug development success rates. With the aim of enhancing understanding of the regulatory significance of such biomarker data by regulators and sponsors, the US Food and Drug Administration initiated a programme in 2004 to allow sponsors to submit exploratory genomic data voluntarily, without immediate regulatory impact. In this article, a selection of case studies from the first 5 years of this programme — which is now known as the voluntary exploratory data submission programme, and also involves collaboration with the European Medicines Agency — are discussed, and general lessons are highlighted.
International Journal of Cancer | 2015
Jordan Madic; Anna Kiialainen; François-Clément Bidard; Fabian Birzele; Guillemette Ramey; Quentin Leroy; Thomas Rio Frio; Isabelle Vaucher; Virginie Raynal; Virginie Bernard; Alban Lermine; Inga Clausen; Nicolas Giroud; Roland Schmucki; Maud Milder; Carsten Horn; Olivia Spleiss; Olivier Lantz; Marc-Henri Stern; Jean-Yves Pierga; Martin Weisser; Ronald Lebofsky
Circulating tumor DNA (ctDNA) is a new circulating tumor biomarker which might be used as a prognostic biomarker in a way similar to circulating tumor cells (CTCs). Here, we used the high prevalence of TP53 mutations in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) to compare ctDNA and CTC detection rates and prognostic value in metastatic TNBC patients. Forty patients were enrolled before starting a new line of treatment. TP53 mutations were characterized in archived tumor tissues and in plasma DNA using two next generation sequencing (NGS) platforms in parallel. Archived tumor tissue was sequenced successfully for 31/40 patients. TP53 mutations were found in 26/31 (84%) of tumor samples. The same mutation was detected in the matched plasma of 21/26 (81%) patients with an additional mutation found only in the plasma for one patient. Mutated allele fractions ranged from 2 to 70% (median 5%). The observed correlation between the two NGS approaches (R2 = 0.903) suggested that ctDNA levels data were quantitative. Among the 27 patients with TP53 mutations, CTC count was ≥1 in 19 patients (70%) and ≥5 in 14 patients (52%). ctDNA levels had no prognostic impact on time to progression (TTP) or overall survival (OS), whereas CTC numbers were correlated with OS (p = 0.04) and marginally with TTP (p = 0.06). Performance status and elevated LDH also had significant prognostic impact. Here, absence of prognostic impact of baseline ctDNA level suggests that mechanisms of ctDNA release in metastatic TNBC may involve, beyond tumor burden, biological features that do not dramatically affect patient outcome.
Journal of Thoracic Oncology | 2016
Barbara Klughammer; Wolfram Brugger; Federico Cappuzzo; Tudor Ciuleanu; Tony Mok; Martin Reck; Eng Huat Tan; Paul Delmar; Gaelle Klingelschmitt; Anny-Yue Yin; Olivia Spleiss; Lin Wu; David S. Shames
Introduction: Exon 19 deletions and the exon 21 L858R mutation of the epidermal growth factor receptor gene (EGFR) predict activity of EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitors, including erlotinib; however, the ability of less common EGFR mutations to predict efficacy of erlotinib is unclear. Methods: The efficacy of erlotinib in individual patients with rare EGFR mutations from the MERIT, SATURN, TITAN, TRUST, ATLAS, BeTa, and FASTACT‐2 trials was analyzed and compared with data from the literature. Results: In the patients tested for biomarkers, the frequency of rare mutations identified here ranged from 1.7% (eight of 467) in the SATURN study to 7.4% (27 of 364) in ATLAS. Some rare mutations were associated with greater clinical benefit from EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy or improved prognosis independent of treatment, whereas others appeared to have a poorer prognosis. In particular, exon 18 G719 mutations, exon 19 K757R and E746G mutations, the exon 20 S768I mutation, and the exon 21 G836S mutation appeared to confer a good outcome with erlotinib treatment, whereas exon 18 S720I showed a particularly poor outcome. Owing to the small number of patients with each mutation, however, it is difficult to confirm whether these rare mutations do indeed confer sensitivity or resistance to erlotinib. Conclusions: Erlotinib can have different efficacy depending on the specific EGFR mutation. More research is needed to create a central database such as the My Cancer Genome database of rare mutations to definitively confirm whether these mutations are activating, resistant, or neutral.
Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2016
Joaquín Dopazo; Alicia Amadoz; Marta Bleda; Luz Garcia-Alonso; Alejandro Alemán; Francisco García-García; Juan Antonio Rodríguez; Joséphine T. Daub; Gerard Muntane; Antonio Rueda; Alicia Vela-Boza; Francisco J. López-Domingo; J. P. Florido; Pablo Arce; Macarena Ruiz-Ferrer; Cristina Méndez-Vidal; Todd E. Arnold; Olivia Spleiss; Miguel Alvarez-Tejado; Arcadi Navarro; Shomi S. Bhattacharya; Salud Borrego; Javier Santoyo-Lopez; Guillermo Antiñolo
Recent results from large-scale genomic projects suggest that allele frequencies, which are highly relevant for medical purposes, differ considerably across different populations. The need for a detailed catalog of local variability motivated the whole-exome sequencing of 267 unrelated individuals, representative of the healthy Spanish population. Like in other studies, a considerable number of rare variants were found (almost one-third of the described variants). There were also relevant differences in allelic frequencies in polymorphic variants, including ∼10,000 polymorphisms private to the Spanish population. The allelic frequencies of variants conferring susceptibility to complex diseases (including cancer, schizophrenia, Alzheimer disease, type 2 diabetes, and other pathologies) were overall similar to those of other populations. However, the trend is the opposite for variants linked to Mendelian and rare diseases (including several retinal degenerative dystrophies and cardiomyopathies) that show marked frequency differences between populations. Interestingly, a correspondence between differences in allelic frequencies and disease prevalence was found, highlighting the relevance of frequency differences in disease risk. These differences are also observed in variants that disrupt known drug binding sites, suggesting an important role for local variability in population-specific drug resistances or adverse effects. We have made the Spanish population variant server web page that contains population frequency information for the complete list of 170,888 variant positions we found publicly available (http://spv.babelomics.org/), We show that it if fundamental to determine population-specific variant frequencies to distinguish real disease associations from population-specific polymorphisms.
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2015
Stephen Fowler; Heidemarie Kletzl; Moshe Finel; Nenad Manevski; Paul Schmid; Dietrich Tuerck; Roger David Norcross; Marius C. Hoener; Olivia Spleiss; Victor A. Iglesias
RO5263397 [(S)-4-(3-fluoro-2-methyl-phenyl)-4,5-dihydro-oxazol-2-ylamine], a new compound that showed promising results in animal models of schizophrenia, is mainly metabolized in humans by N-glucuronidation. Enzyme studies, using the (then) available commercial uridine 5′-diphosphate-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs), suggested that UGT1A4 is responsible for its conjugation. In the first clinical trial, in which RO5263397 was administered orally to healthy human volunteers, a 136-fold above-average systemic exposure to the parent compound was found in one of the participants. Further administration in this trial identified two more such poor metabolizers, all three of African origin. Additional in vitro studies with recombinant UGTs showed that the contribution of UGT2B10 to RO5263397 glucuronidation is much higher than UGT1A4 at clinically relevant concentrations. DNA sequencing in all of these poor metabolizers identified a previously uncharacterized splice site mutation that prevents assembly of full-length UGT2B10 mRNA and thus functional UGT2B10 protein expression. Further DNA database analyses revealed the UGT2B10 splice site mutation to be highly frequent in individuals of African origin (45%), moderately frequent in Asians (8%) and almost unrepresented in Caucasians (<1%). A prospective study using hepatocytes from 20 individual African donors demonstrated a >100-fold lower intrinsic clearance of RO5263397 in cells homozygous for the splice site variant allele. Our results highlight the need to include UGT2B10 when screening the human UGTs for the enzymes involved in the glucuronidation of a new compound, particularly when there is a possibility of N-glucuronidation. Moreover, this study demonstrates the importance of considering different ethnicities during drug development.
International Journal of Cancer | 2012
Christel Bonnas; Katja Specht; Olivia Spleiss; Stefanie Froehner; Gabriele Dietmann; Juliane M. Krüger; Susanne Arbogast; Friedrich Feuerhake
The accuracy of common markers for PI3K/AKT and MAPK pathway activation in preclinical and clinical cancer biomarker studies depends on phosphoepitope stability and changes of phosphorylation under ischemia. Herein, we define conditions under which phosphoepitope‐specific duplex immunohistochemistry (IHC) on formalin‐fixed, paraffin‐embedded tumor tissues reflects pathway activation in situ as accurately as possible, and identify activation patterns linked to mutational status, pathway dependency and tumor microenvironment in clinical tumor samples, cell culture and xenograft tissues. Systematically assessing robustness of pAKT, pERK1/2, pMEK1/2 and pmTOR detection and related markers in xenograft tissues exposed to ischemia, we show that control of preprocessing and ischemia times allows accurate interpretation of staining results. Phosphorylation patterns were then analyzed in 33 xenograft models and in 58 cases with breast cancer, including 21 paired samples of core‐needle biopsies with corresponding mastectomy specimens, and 37 mastectomy samples obtained under rigorously controlled conditions minimizing ischemia time. Patterns of pAKT and pERK1/2 staining (predominant PI3K/AKT, predominant MAPK and concomitant activation) were associated with sensitivity to pathway inhibition and partially with the mutational status in cell lines and corresponding xenograft tumors. In contrast, no clear correlation between mutational status and staining patterns was observed in clinical breast cancer samples, suggesting that interaction with the human tumor microenvironment may interfere with the use of phosphoepitope‐specific IHC as potential markers for pathway dependency. In contrast to core needle biopsies, surgically resected breast cancer samples showed evidence of severe signal changes comparable to those effects observed in xenograft tumors exposed to controlled ischemia.
Genome Medicine | 2016
Nils Grabole; Jitao David Zhang; Stefan Aigner; Nadine Ruderisch; Veronica Costa; Felix Weber; Michel Theron; Nikolaos Berntenis; Olivia Spleiss; Martin Ebeling; Gene W. Yeo; Ravi Jagasia; Anna Kiialainen
BackgroundTuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is a genetic disease characterized by benign tumor growths in multiple organs and neurological symptoms induced by mTOR hyperfunction. Because the molecular pathology is highly complex and the etiology poorly understood, we employed a defined human neuronal model with a single mTOR activating mutation to dissect the disease-relevant molecular responses driving the neuropathology and suggest new targets for treatment.MethodsWe investigate the disease phenotype of TSC by neural differentiation of a human stem cell model that had been deleted for TSC2 by genome editing. Comprehensive genomic analysis was performed by RNA sequencing and ribosome profiling to obtain a detailed genome-wide description of alterations on both the transcriptional and translational level. The molecular effect of mTOR inhibitors used in the clinic was monitored and comparison to published data from patient biopsies and mouse models highlights key pathogenic processes.ResultsTSC2-deficient neural stem cells showed severely reduced neuronal maturation and characteristics of astrogliosis instead. Transcriptome analysis indicated an active inflammatory response and increased metabolic activity, whereas at the level of translation ribosomal transcripts showed a 5’UTR motif-mediated increase in ribosome occupancy. Further, we observed enhanced protein synthesis rates of angiogenic growth factors. Treatment with mTOR inhibitors corrected translational alterations but transcriptional dysfunction persisted.ConclusionsOur results extend the understanding of the molecular pathophysiology of TSC brain lesions, and suggest phenotype-tailored pharmacological treatment strategies.