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Dive into the research topics where Sharmilan Thanendrarajan is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharmilan Thanendrarajan.


Leukemia Research | 2011

Combining cytokine-induced killer cells with vaccination in cancer immunotherapy: more than one plus one?

Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Michael Nowak; Hinrich Abken; Ingo G.H. Schmidt-Wolf

The immune system can be harnessed to fight cancer by active (stimulating the patients intrinsic immune response to cancer) and by passive (transfer of active humoral or cellular immunity) immunotherapy. While for each strategy proof-of-principle was provided, clinical benefit was limited likely due to malfunction of lymphocytes. Increasing knowledge of both the mechanism of vaccination through dendritic cells (DCs) and the potency of a subset of natural killer T lymphocytes termed cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cells led to new strategies through combining adoptive and passive immunotherapy. This review summarizes most recent clinical trials indicating that CIK cells can substantially enhance the effect of tumor vaccines and discusses the potential therapeutic benefit in the long-term control of tumor progression.


Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2012

New adoptive immunotherapy strategies for solid tumours with CIK cells

Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Young Kim; Ingo G.H. Schmidt-Wolf

Introduction : Despite development and introduction of new and innovative drugs, a large number of malignant diseases are associated with unfavourable prognosis. In recent years, considerable progress in cancer treatment has been obtained by the application of cytokine-induced killer (CIK) cells. Areas covered : This review provides an overview and summary of recent advances in adoptive immunotherapy strategies in cancer treatment using CIK cells. A selective literature search has been performed. Expert opinion : The application of CIK cells as adoptive immunotherapy plays an important role in cancer treatment. Combining CIK cells with other conventional and established therapy options represents an innovative approach and will hopefully provide new insight for the future.


Blood | 2016

Clonal selection and double-hit events involving tumor suppressor genes underlie relapse in myeloma.

Niels Weinhold; Cody Ashby; Leo Rasche; Shweta S. Chavan; Caleb K. Stein; Owen Stephens; Ruslana Tytarenko; Michael Bauer; Tobias Meissner; Shayu Deshpande; Purvi Patel; Timea Buzder; Gabor Molnar; Erich Allen Peterson; van Rhee F; Maurizio Zangari; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Carolina Schinke; Erming Tian; Joshua Epstein; Bart Barlogie; Faith E. Davies; Christoph Heuck; Brian A. Walker; Gareth J. Morgan

To elucidate the mechanisms underlying relapse from chemotherapy in multiple myeloma, we performed a longitudinal study of 33 patients entered into Total Therapy protocols investigating them using gene expression profiling, high-resolution copy number arrays, and whole-exome sequencing. The study illustrates the mechanistic importance of acquired mutations in known myeloma driver genes and the critical nature of biallelic inactivation events affecting tumor suppressor genes, especially TP53, the end result being resistance to apoptosis and increased proliferation rates, which drive relapse by Darwinian-type clonal evolution. The number of copy number aberration changes and biallelic inactivation of tumor suppressor genes was increased in GEP70 high risk, consistent with genomic instability being a key feature of high risk. In conclusion, the study highlights the impact of acquired genetic events, which enhance the evolutionary fitness level of myeloma-propagating cells to survive multiagent chemotherapy and to result in relapse.


Nature Communications | 2017

Spatial genomic heterogeneity in multiple myeloma revealed by multi-region sequencing

Leo Rasche; Shweta S. Chavan; Owen Stephens; Purvi Patel; Ruslana Tytarenko; Cody Ashby; Michael Bauer; Caleb K. Stein; Shayu Deshpande; Christopher P. Wardell; Timea Buzder; Gabor Molnar; Maurizio Zangari; Fritz Van Rhee; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Carolina Schinke; Joshua Epstein; Faith E. Davies; Brian A. Walker; Tobias Meissner; Bart Barlogie; Gareth J. Morgan; Niels Weinhold

In multiple myeloma malignant plasma cells expand within the bone marrow. Since this site is well-perfused, a rapid dissemination of “fitter” clones may be anticipated. However, an imbalanced distribution of multiple myeloma is frequently observed in medical imaging. Here, we perform multi-region sequencing, including iliac crest and radiology-guided focal lesion specimens from 51 patients to gain insight into the spatial clonal architecture. We demonstrate spatial genomic heterogeneity in more than 75% of patients, including inactivation of CDKN2C and TP53, and mutations affecting mitogen-activated protein kinase genes. We show that the extent of spatial heterogeneity is positively associated with the size of biopsied focal lesions consistent with regional outgrowth of advanced clones. The results support a model for multiple myeloma progression with clonal sweeps in the early phase and regional evolution in advanced disease. We suggest that multi-region investigations are critical to understanding intra-patient heterogeneity and the evolutionary processes in multiple myeloma.In multiple myeloma, malignant cells expand within bone marrow. Here, the authors use multi-region sequencing in patient samples to analyse spatial clonal architecture and heterogeneity, providing novel insight into multiple myeloma progression and evolution.


Leukemia | 2016

Clinical value of molecular subtyping multiple myeloma using gene expression profiling

Niels Weinhold; Christoph Heuck; Adam Rosenthal; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Caleb K. Stein; F van Rhee; Maurizio Zangari; Antje Hoering; Erming Tian; Faith E. Davies; B Barlogie; Gareth J. Morgan

Using a data set of 1217 patients with multiple myeloma enrolled in Total Therapies, we have examined the impact of novel therapies on molecular and risk subgroups and the clinical value of molecular classification. Bortezomib significantly improved the progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) of the MMSET (MS) subgroup. Thalidomide and bortezomib positively impacted the PFS of low-risk (LoR) cases defined by the GEP70 signature, whereas high-risk (HiR) cases showed no significant changes in outcome. We show that molecular classification is important if response rates are to be used to predict outcomes. The t(11;14)-containing CD-1 and CD-2 subgroups showed clear differences in time to response and cumulative response rates but similar PFS and OS. Furthermore, complete remission was not significantly associated with the outcome of the MAF/MAFB (MF) subgroup or HiR cases. HiR cases were enriched in the MF, MS and proliferation subgroups, but the poor outcome of these groups was not linked to subgroup-specific characteristics such as MAF overexpression per se. It is especially important to define risk status if HiR cases are to be managed appropriately because of their aggressive clinical course, high rates of early relapse and the need to maintain therapeutic pressure on the clone.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2017

Assessment of Total Lesion Glycolysis by 18F FDG PET/CT Significantly Improves Prognostic Value of GEP and ISS in Myeloma

James E. McDonald; Marcus M. Kessler; Michael W. Gardner; Amy Buros; James A. Ntambi; Sarah Waheed; Frits van Rhee; Maurizio Zangari; Christoph Heuck; Nathan Petty; Carolina Schinke; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Alan Mitchell; Antje Hoering; Bart Barlogie; Gareth J. Morgan; Faith E. Davies

Purpose: Fluorine-18 fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography with CT attenuation correction (18F-FDG PET/CT) is useful in the detection and enumeration of focal lesions and in semiquantitative characterization of metabolic activity (glycolytic phenotype) by calculation of glucose uptake. Total lesion glycolysis (TLG) and metabolic tumor volume (MTV) have the potential to improve the value of this approach and enhance the prognostic value of disease burden measures. This study aims to determine whether TLG and MTV are associated with progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS), and whether they improve risk assessments such as International Staging System (ISS) stage and GEP70 risk. Experimental Design: 192 patients underwent whole body PET/CT in the Total Therapy 3A (TT3A) trial and were evaluated using three-dimensional region-of-interest analysis with TLG, MTV, and standard measurement parameters derived for all focal lesions with peak SUV above the background red marrow signal. Results: In multivariate analysis, baseline TLG > 620 g and MTV > 210 cm3 remained a significant factor of poor PFS and OS after adjusting for baseline myeloma variables. Combined with the GEP70 risk score, TLG > 205 g identifies a high-risk–behaving subgroup with poor expected survival. In addition, TLG > 205 g accurately divides ISS stage II patients into two subgroups with similar outcomes to ISS stage I and ISS stage III, respectively. Conclusions: TLG and MTV have significant survival implications at baseline and offer a more precise quantitation of the glycolytic phenotype of active disease. These measures can be assessed more readily than before using FDA-approved software and should be standardized and incorporated into clinical trials moving forward. Clin Cancer Res; 23(8); 1981–7. ©2016 AACR.


Oncology | 2011

Ifosfamide, Carboplatin and Etoposide in Recurrent Malignant Glioma

Niklas Schäfer; Julia Tichy; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Young Kim; Moritz Stuplich; Frederic Mack; Johannes Rieger; Matthias Simon; Björn Scheffler; Jan Boström; Joachim P. Steinbach; Ulrich Herrlinger; Martin Glas

After failure of temozolomide, there is no established standard salvage chemotherapy for patients with recurrent glioblastoma (GBM). Two phase II trials combining ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide chemotherapy (ICE) showed favorable results. We therefore applied the ICE protocol to 13 patients (10 GBM, 3 anaplastic astrocytomas). Partial or complete remissions were not observed. None of the 13 patients survived progression-free for 6 months. Our retrospective analysis suggests that the ICE regimen is not effective in patients with recurrent high-grade glioma if applied at second or third relapse.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2017

Bi-allelic inactivation is more prevalent at relapse in multiple myeloma, identifying RB1 as an independent prognostic marker

Shweta S. Chavan; Jie He; Ruslana Tytarenko; Shayu Deshpande; Purvi Patel; Mark Bailey; Caleb K. Stein; Owen Stephens; Niels Weinhold; Nathan Petty; Douglas Steward; Leo Rasche; Michael Bauer; Cody Ashby; Erich Allen Peterson; Siraj M. Ali; Jeff Ross; Vincent A. Miller; P.J. Stephens; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Carolina Schinke; Maurizio Zangari; F van Rhee; B Barlogie; Tariq I. Mughal; Faith E. Davies; Gareth J. Morgan; Brian A. Walker

The purpose of this study is to identify prognostic markers and treatment targets using a clinically certified sequencing panel in multiple myeloma. We performed targeted sequencing of 578 individuals with plasma cell neoplasms using the FoundationOne Heme panel and identified clinically relevant abnormalities and novel prognostic markers. Mutational burden was associated with maf and proliferation gene expression groups, and a high-mutational burden was associated with a poor prognosis. We identified homozygous deletions that were present in multiple myeloma within key genes, including CDKN2C, RB1, TRAF3, BIRC3 and TP53, and that bi-allelic inactivation was significantly enriched at relapse. Alterations in CDKN2C, TP53, RB1 and the t(4;14) were associated with poor prognosis. Alterations in RB1 were predominantly homozygous deletions and were associated with relapse and a poor prognosis which was independent of other genetic markers, including t(4;14), after multivariate analysis. Bi-allelic inactivation of key tumor suppressor genes in myeloma was enriched at relapse, especially in RB1, CDKN2C and TP53 where they have prognostic significance.


Blood Cancer Journal | 2016

Dose-dense and less dose-intense Total Therapy 5 for gene expression profiling-defined high-risk multiple myeloma

Yogesh Jethava; Alan Mitchell; Maurizio Zangari; Sarah Waheed; Carolina Schinke; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; J. Sawyer; Daisy Alapat; Erming Tian; Caleb K. Stein; Rashid Z Khan; Christoph Heuck; Nathan Petty; D Avery; Douglas Steward; R Smith; Clyde Bailey; Joshua Epstein; Shmuel Yaccoby; Antje Hoering; John Crowley; Gareth J. Morgan; B Barlogie; F van Rhee

Multiple myeloma (MM) is a heterogeneous disease with high-risk patients progressing rapidly despite treatment. Various definitions of high-risk MM are used and we reported that gene expression profile (GEP)-defined high risk was a major predictor of relapse. In spite of our best efforts, the majority of GEP70 high-risk patients relapse and we have noted higher relapse rates during drug-free intervals. This prompted us to explore the concept of less intense drug dosing with shorter intervals between courses with the aim of preventing inter-course relapse. Here we report the outcome of the Total Therapy 5 trial, where this concept was tested. This regimen effectively reduced early mortality and relapse but failed to improve progression-free survival and overall survival due to relapse early during maintenance.


Leukemia research and treatment | 2011

Wnt/ß-catenin: a new therapeutic approach to acute myeloid leukemia.

Young Kim; Sharmilan Thanendrarajan; Ingo G.H. Schmidt-Wolf

Recent studies have shown genetic and epigenetic aberrations resulting in aberrant activation of the Wingless-Int (Wnt) pathway, thus influencing the initiation and progression of acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Of major importance, these findings may lead to novel treatment strategies exploiting targeted modulation of Wnt signaling. This paper comprises the latest status of knowledge concerning the role of Wnt pathway alteration in AML and outlines future lines of research and their clinical perspectives.

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Faith E. Davies

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Gareth J. Morgan

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Maurizio Zangari

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Carolina Schinke

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Frits van Rhee

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Bart Barlogie

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Niels Weinhold

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Joshua Epstein

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Christoph Heuck

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Brian A. Walker

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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