Scott M. Lindhorst
Medical University of South Carolina
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Publication
Featured researches published by Scott M. Lindhorst.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2016
Eric Bouffet; Valerie Larouche; Brittany Campbell; Daniele Merico; Richard de Borja; Melyssa Aronson; Carol Durno; Joerg Krueger; Vanja Cabric; Vijay Ramaswamy; Nataliya Zhukova; Gary Mason; Roula Farah; Samina Afzal; Michal Yalon; Gideon Rechavi; Vanan Magimairajan; Michael F. Walsh; Shlomi Constantini; Rina Dvir; Ronit Elhasid; Alyssa T. Reddy; Michael Osborn; Michael Sullivan; Jordan R. Hansford; Andrew J. Dodgshun; Nancy Klauber-Demore; Lindsay L. Peterson; Sunil J. Patel; Scott M. Lindhorst
PURPOSE Recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is incurable with current therapies. Biallelic mismatch repair deficiency (bMMRD) is a highly penetrant childhood cancer syndrome often resulting in GBM characterized by a high mutational burden. Evidence suggests that high mutation and neoantigen loads are associated with response to immune checkpoint inhibition. PATIENTS AND METHODS We performed exome sequencing and neoantigen prediction on 37 bMMRD cancers and compared them with childhood and adult brain neoplasms. Neoantigen prediction bMMRD GBM was compared with responsive adult cancers from multiple tissues. Two siblings with recurrent multifocal bMMRD GBM were treated with the immune checkpoint inhibitor nivolumab. RESULTS All malignant tumors (n = 32) were hypermutant. Although bMMRD brain tumors had the highest mutational load because of secondary polymerase mutations (mean, 17,740 ± standard deviation, 7,703), all other high-grade tumors were hypermutant (mean, 1,589 ± standard deviation, 1,043), similar to other cancers that responded favorably to immune checkpoint inhibitors. bMMRD GBM had a significantly higher mutational load than sporadic pediatric and adult gliomas and all other brain tumors (P < .001). bMMRD GBM harbored mean neoantigen loads seven to 16 times higher than those in immunoresponsive melanomas, lung cancers, or microsatellite-unstable GI cancers (P < .001). On the basis of these preclinical data, we treated two bMMRD siblings with recurrent multifocal GBM with the anti-programmed death-1 inhibitor nivolumab, which resulted in clinically significant responses and a profound radiologic response. CONCLUSION This report of initial and durable responses of recurrent GBM to immune checkpoint inhibition may have implications for GBM in general and other hypermutant cancers arising from primary (genetic predisposition) or secondary MMRD.
Tumor Biology | 2015
Arabinda Das; Rickey Miller; Philip Lee; Chrysanthe Alyssa Holden; Scott M. Lindhorst; Jerry J. Jaboin; William A. Vandergrift; Naren L. Banik; Pierre Giglio; Abhay K. Varma; Jeffery J. Raizer; Sunil J. Patel
Recurrent meningiomas constitute an uncommon but significant problem after standard (surgery and radiation) therapy failure. Current chemotherapies (hydroxyurea, RU-486, and interferon-α) are only of marginal benefit. There is an urgent need for more effective treatments for meningioma patients who have failed surgery and radiation therapy. Limonin, Tangeritin, Zerumbone, 6-Gingerol, Ganoderic Acid A, and Ganoderic Acid DM are some of the plant derivatives that have anti-tumorgenic properties and cause cell death in meningioma cells in vitro. Due to its ease of administration, long-term tolerability, and low incidence of long-term side effects, we explored its potential as a therapeutic agent against meningiomas by examining their efficacy in vitro against meningioma cells. Treatment effects were assessed using MTT assay, Western blot analysis, caspases assay, and DNA fragmentation assay. Results indicated that treatments of IOMM-Lee and CH157MN meningioma cells with Limonin, Tangeritin, Zerumbone, 6-Gingerol, Ganoderic Acid A, and Ganoderic Acid DM induced apoptosis with enhanced phosphorylation of glycogen synthase kinase 3 β (GSK3β) via inhibition of the Wnt5/β-catenin pathway. These drugs did not induce apoptosis in normal human neurons. Other events in apoptosis included downregulation of tetraspanin protein (TSPAN12), survival proteins (Bcl-XL and Mcl-1), and overexpression apoptotic factors (Bax and caspase-3). These results provide preliminary strong evidence that medicinal plants containing Limonin, Tangeritin, 6-Gingerol, Zerumbone, Ganoderic Acid A, and Ganoderic Acid DM can be applied to high-grade meningiomas as a therapeutic agent, and suggests that further in vivo studies are necessary to explore its potential as a therapeutic agent against malignant meningiomas.
Tumor Biology | 2016
Arabinda Das; Daniel G. McDonald; Yaenette N. Dixon-Mah; D Jacqmin; Vikram Samant; William A. Vandergrift; Scott M. Lindhorst; David Cachia; Abhay K. Varma; K Vanek; Naren L. Banik; Joseph M. Jenrette; Jeffery J. Raizer; Pierre Giglio; Sunil J. Patel
Radiation-induced necrosis (RN) is a relatively common side effect of radiation therapy for glioblastoma. However, the molecular mechanisms involved and the ways RN mechanisms differ from regulated cell death (apoptosis) are not well understood. Here, we compare the molecular mechanism of cell death (apoptosis or necrosis) of C6 glioma cells in both in vitro and in vivo (C6 othotopically allograft) models in response to low and high doses of X-ray radiation. Lower radiation doses were used to induce apoptosis, while high-dose levels were chosen to induce radiation necrosis. Our results demonstrate that active caspase-8 in this complex I induces apoptosis in response to low-dose radiation and inhibits necrosis by cleaving RIP1 and RI. When activation of caspase-8 was reduced at high doses of X-ray radiation, the RIP1/RIP3 necrosome complex II is formed. These complexes induce necrosis through the caspase-3-independent pathway mediated by calpain, cathepsin B/D, and apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF). AIF has a dual role in apoptosis and necrosis. At high doses, AIF promotes chromatinolysis and necrosis by interacting with histone H2AX. In addition, NF-κB, STAT-3, and HIF-1 play a crucial role in radiation-induced inflammatory responses embedded in a complex inflammatory network. Analysis of inflammatory markers in matched plasma and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) isolated from in vivo specimens demonstrated the upregulation of chemokines and cytokines during the necrosis phase. Using RIP1/RIP3 kinase specific inhibitors (Nec-1, GSK′872), we also establish that the RIP1-RIP3 complex regulates programmed necrosis after either high-dose radiation or TNF-α-induced necrosis requires RIP1 and RIP3 kinases. Overall, our data shed new light on the relationship between RIP1/RIP3-mediated programmed necrosis and AIF-mediated caspase-independent programmed necrosis in glioblastoma
Cancer Growth and Metastasis | 2015
Arabinda Das; Ron Ron Cheng; Megan L.T. Hilbert; Yaenette N. Dixon-Moh; Michele L Decandio; William A. Vandergrift; Naren L. Banik; Scott M. Lindhorst; David Cachia; Abhay K. Varma; Sunil J. Patel; Pierre Giglio
Glioblastoma (GB) is the most common malignant brain tumor. Drug resistance frequently develops in these tumors during chemotherapy. Therefore, predicting drug response in these patients remains a major challenge in the clinic. Thus, to improve the clinical outcome, more effective and tolerable combination treatment strategies are needed. Robust experimental evidence has shown that the main reason for failure of treatments is signal redundancy due to coactivation of several functionally linked receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), including anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), c-Met (hepatocyte growth factor receptor), and oncogenic c-ros oncogene1 (ROS1: RTK class orphan) fusion kinase FIG (fused in GB)-ROS1. As such, these could be attractive targets for GB therapy. The study subjects consisted of 19 patients who underwent neurosurgical resection of GB tissues. Our in vitro and ex vivo models promisingly demonstrated that treatments with crizotinib (PF-02341066: dual ALK/c-Met inhibitor) and temozolomide in combination induced synergistic antitumor activity on FIG-ROS1-positive GB cells. Our results also showed that ex vivo FIG-ROS1+ slices (obtained from GB patients) when cultured were able to preserve tissue architecture, cell viability, and global gene-expression profiles for up to 14 days. Both in vitro and ex vivo studies indicated that combination blockade of FIG, p-ROS1, p-ALK, and p-Met augmented apoptosis, which mechanistically involves activation of Bim and inhibition of survivin, p-Akt, and Mcl-1 expression. However, it is important to note that we did not see any significant synergistic effect of crizotinib and temozolomide on FIG-ROS1-negative GB cells. Thus, these ex vivo culture results will have a significant impact on patient selection for clinical trials and in predicting response to crizotinib and temozolomide therapy. Further studies in different animal models of FIG-ROS1-positive GB cells are warranted to determine useful therapies for the management of human GBs.
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2018
Linda M. Liau; Keyoumars Ashkan; David D. Tran; Jian Campian; John E. Trusheim; Charles S. Cobbs; Jason A. Heth; Michael Salacz; Sarah A. Taylor; Stacy D. D'Andre; Fabio M. Iwamoto; Edward J. Dropcho; Yaron A. Moshel; Kevin A. Walter; Clement P. Pillainayagam; Robert Aiken; Rekha Chaudhary; Samuel A. Goldlust; Daniela A. Bota; Paul Duic; Jai Grewal; Heinrich Elinzano; Steven A. Toms; Kevin O. Lillehei; Tom Mikkelsen; Tobias Walbert; Steven R. Abram; Andrew Brenner; Steven Brem; Matthew G. Ewend
Following publication of the original article [1], the authors reported an error in the spelling of one of the author names. In this Correction the incorrect and correct author names are indicated and the author name has been updated in the original publication. The authors also reported an error in the Methods section of the original article. In this Correction the incorrect and correct versions of the affected sentence are indicated. The original article has not been updated with regards to the error in the Methods section.
Expert Review of Quality of Life in Cancer Care | 2016
Rosa M. Michel Ortega; Scott M. Lindhorst
ABSTRACT Even though chemotherapy has improved survival in patients with different malignancies, it has short-term side effects as well as toxicity in survivors. Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is encountered with neurotoxic chemotherapy agents. It has proven difficult to prevent and, once it is already established, management becomes more challenging. Rationale for medications used to treat CIPN are based on extrapolation of their efficacy in other types of neuropathic pain, whereas duloxetine is the only medication that has a moderate strength of recommendation after a phase III double-blind, randomized controlled trial was published on treatment of CIPN.
Cell | 2017
Brittany Campbell; Nicholas Light; David Fabrizio; Matthew Zatzman; Fabio Fuligni; Richard de Borja; Scott Davidson; M. J. Edwards; Julia A. Elvin; Karl P Hodel; Walter J. Zahurancik; Zucai Suo; Tatiana Lipman; Katharina Wimmer; Christian P. Kratz; Daniel C. Bowers; Theodore W. Laetsch; Gavin P. Dunn; Tanner M. Johanns; Matthew R. Grimmer; Ivan Smirnov; Valerie Larouche; David Samuel; Annika Bronsema; Michael Osborn; Duncan Stearns; Pichai Raman; Kristina A. Cole; Phillip B. Storm; Michal Yalon
Anticancer Research | 2015
Philip Lee; Ben Murphy; Rickey Miller; Vivek Menon; Naren L. Banik; Pierre Giglio; Scott M. Lindhorst; Abhay K. Varma; William A. Vandergrift; Sunil J. Patel; Arabinda Das
Journal of Translational Medicine | 2018
Linda M. Liau; Keyoumars Ashkan; David D. Tran; Jian Campian; John E. Trusheim; Charles S. Cobbs; Jason A. Heth; Michael Salacz; Sarah A. Taylor; Stacy D. D’Andre; Fabio M. Iwamoto; Edward J. Dropcho; Yaron A. Moshel; Kevin A. Walter; Clement P. Pillainayagam; Robert Aiken; Rekha Chaudhary; Samuel Goldlust; Daniela A. Bota; Paul Duic; Jai Grewal; Heinrich Elinzano; Steven A. Toms; Kevin O. Lillehei; Tom Mikkelsen; Tobias Walbert; Steven R. Abram; Andrew Brenner; Steven Brem; Matthew G. Ewend
Neuro-oncology | 2018
Andrew J. Dodgshun; Kohei Fukuoka; Brittany Campbell; M. J. Edwards; Alexandra Sexton-Oates; Valerie Larouche; Vanan Magimairajan; Scott M. Lindhorst; Michal Oren; Gary Mason; Bruce Crooks; Shlomi Constantini; Maura Massimino; Stefano Chiaravalli; Jagadeesh Ramdas; Warren P. Mason; Ashraf Shamvil; Roula Farah; An Van Damme; Enrico Opocher; Syed Ahmer Hamid; David S. Ziegler; David Samuel; Kristina A. Cole; Patrick Tomboc; Duncan Stearns; Gregory Thomas; Richard Saffery; Michael Sullivan; Jordan R. Hansford