Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stuart L. Goldberg is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stuart L. Goldberg.


Leukemia | 2008

Dasatinib induces durable cytogenetic responses in patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia in chronic phase with resistance or intolerance to imatinib

Andreas Hochhaus; Michele Baccarani; Michael W. Deininger; Jane F. Apperley; J H Lipton; Stuart L. Goldberg; S. Corm; Neil P. Shah; Francisco Cervantes; Richard T. Silver; Dietger Niederwieser; Richard Stone; Hervé Dombret; Richard A. Larson; Lydia Roy; Timothy P. Hughes; Markus Müller; Rana Ezzeddine; Athena M. Countouriotis; Hagop M. Kantarjian

Dasatinib, a potent inhibitor of BCR–ABL in vitro, is effective for patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) resistant or intolerant to imatinib. To provide a more definitive assessment of dasatinib in chronic-phase (CP)-CML, we report extended follow-up of a phase II trial, presenting data for the entire patient cohort (N=387). Dasatinib (70 mg) twice daily was administered to patients with imatinib-resistant or -intolerant CP-CML. With median follow-up of 15.2 months (treatment duration, <1–18.4 months), a complete hematologic response was attained or maintained in 91% of patients. A major cytogenetic response (MCyR) was attained or maintained by 59% (52% imatinib resistant and 80% imatinib intolerant); this was complete in 49% of patients (40% imatinib resistant and 75% imatinib intolerant). Of 230 patients achieving an MCyR, 7 experienced disease progression. Fifteen-month progression-free survival was 90% while overall survival was 96%. Grade 3/4 thrombocytopenia and neutropenia were reported in 48 and 49% of patients, respectively. Non-hematologic toxicity (any grade) consisted primarily of diarrhea (37%), headache (32%), fatigue (31%), dyspnea (30%) and pleural effusion (27%). Pleural effusions were classified as grade 3 in 6% of reported events, with no incidence of grade 4. Dasatinib is associated with high response rates in patients with imatinib-resistant or -intolerant CP-CML.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Phase I Trial of Intravenous Administration of PV701, an Oncolytic Virus, in Patients With Advanced Solid Cancers

Andrew Pecora; Naiyer Rizvi; Gary I. Cohen; Neal J. Meropol; Daniel Sterman; John L. Marshall; Stuart L. Goldberg; Peter A. Gross; James D. O'Neil; William S. Groene; M. Scot Roberts; Harvey Rabin; Michael K. Bamat; Robert M. Lorence

PURPOSE PV701, a replication-competent strain of Newcastle disease virus, causes regression of tumor xenografts after intravenous administration. This phase I study was designed to define the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) and safety of single and multiple intravenous doses of PV701 as a single agent in patients with cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS Seventy-nine patients with advanced solid cancers that were unresponsive to standard therapy were enrolled. Four PV701 intravenous dosing regimens were evaluated: (1) single dose: one dose every 28 days; (2) repeat dose: three doses in 1 week every 28 days; (3) desensitizing: one lower dose followed by two higher doses in 1 week every 28 days; and (4) two week: one lower dose followed by five higher doses over 2 weeks every 21 days. RESULTS A 100-fold dose intensification was achieved over 195 cycles. A first-dose MTD of 12 x 10(9) plaque-forming units (PFU)/m(2) was established for outpatient dosing. After an initial dose of 12 x 10(9) PFU/m(2), patients tolerated an MTD for subsequent doses of 120 x 10(9) PFU/m(2). The most common adverse events were flu-like symptoms that occurred principally after the first dose and were decreased in number and severity with each subsequent dose. Tumor site-specific adverse events and acute dosing reactions were also observed but not cumulative toxicity. Objective responses occurred at higher dose levels, and progression-free survival ranged from 4 to 31 months. Tumor tissue from one patient was obtained after 11 months of therapy and showed evidence of PV701 particles budding from the tumor cell membrane by electron microscopy and a pronounced lymphoplasmacytic infiltrate by histologic examination. CONCLUSION PV701 warrants further study as a novel therapeutic agent for cancer patients.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Phase III, Randomized, Open-Label Study of Daily Imatinib Mesylate 400 mg Versus 800 mg in Patients With Newly Diagnosed, Previously Untreated Chronic Myeloid Leukemia in Chronic Phase Using Molecular End Points: Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Optimization and Selectivity Study

Jorge Cortes; Michele Baccarani; François Guilhot; Brian J. Druker; Susan Branford; Dong-Wook Kim; Fabrizio Pane; Ricardo Pasquini; Stuart L. Goldberg; Matt Kalaycio; Beatriz Moiraghi; Jacob M. Rowe; Elena Tothova; Carmino Antonio de Souza; Marc Rudoltz; Richard N. Yu; Tillmann Krahnke; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Jerald P. Radich; Timothy P. Hughes

PURPOSE To evaluate the safety and efficacy of initial treatment with imatinib mesylate 800 mg/d (400 mg twice daily) versus 400 mg/d in patients with newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 476 patients were randomly assigned 2:1 to imatinib 800 mg (n = 319) or 400 mg (n = 157) daily. The primary end point was the major molecular response (MMR) rate at 12 months. RESULTS At 12 months, differences in MMR and complete cytogenetic response (CCyR) rates were not statistically significant (MMR, 46% v 40%; P = .2035; CCyR, 70% v 66%; P = .3470). However, MMR occurred faster among patients randomly assigned to imatinib 800 mg/d, who had higher rates of MMR at 3 and 6 months compared with those in the imatinib 400-mg/d arm (P = .0035 by log-rank test). CCyR also occurred faster in the 800-mg/d arm (CCyR at 6 months, 57% v 45%; P = .0146). The most common adverse events were edema, gastrointestinal problems, and rash, and all were more common in patients in the 800-mg/d arm. Grades 3 to 4 hematologic toxicity also occurred more frequently in patients receiving imatinib 800 mg/d. CONCLUSION MMR rates at 1 year were similar with imatinib 800 mg/d and 400 mg/d, but MMR and CCyR occurred earlier in patients treated with 800 mg/d. Continued follow-up is needed to determine the clinical significance of earlier responses on high-dose imatinib.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Incidence and Clinical Complications of Myelodysplastic Syndromes Among United States Medicare Beneficiaries

Stuart L. Goldberg; Er Chen; Mitra Corral; Amy Guo; Nikita Mody-Patel; Andrew Pecora; Marianne Laouri

PURPOSE To determine the incidence and complications of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) among Medicare beneficiaries. METHODS Retrospective review of 2003 Medicare Standard Analytic Files utilizing International Classification of Diseases for Oncology ninth edition CM code 238.7 to identify new MDS patients, with 3-year follow-up. RESULTS Among 1,394,343 individuals in Medicare Standard Analytic Files age > or = 65 years, 162 per 100,000 were coded as newly diagnosed MDS during 2003 yielding a calculated 45,000 new cases in the United States Medicare > or = 65 years population. Patients with MDS were older (median age, 77 years), and over-represented by males. Among patients with MDS diagnosed during first quarter of 2003, 73.2% suffered cardiac-related events during 3-year follow-up, which exceeded the Medicare population (54.5%; P < .01) even when age adjusted (odds ratio, 2.10; P < .01). Significant increases in prevalence of diabetes (40.0% v 33.1%), dyspnea (49.4% v 28.5%), hepatic diseases (0.8% v 0.2%), and infections (sepsis: 22.5% v 6.1%) were noted in MDS (all P < .01) compared with the Medicare population. Patients with MDS requiring RBC transfusions had greater prevalence of these comorbidities. Acute myeloid leukemia developed within 3 years in 9.6%, with increased transformation among transfused (24.6%; P < .001). The 3-year Kaplan-Meier age-adjusted survival for MDS was 60.0%, which was significantly lower than the Medicare population (84.7%; hazard ratio, 3.08; P < .001), and mortality was further increased among transfused MDS (P < .01). In 2003, median payment for MDS was


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Clofarabine Plus Cytarabine Compared With Cytarabine Alone in Older Patients With Relapsed or Refractory Acute Myelogenous Leukemia: Results From the CLASSIC I Trial

Stefan Faderl; Meir Wetzler; David A. Rizzieri; Gary J. Schiller; Madan Jagasia; Robert K. Stuart; Siddhartha Ganguly; David Avigan; Michael Craig; Robert H. Collins; Michael B. Maris; Tibor Kovacsovics; Stuart L. Goldberg; Karen Seiter; Parameswaran Hari; Jochen Greiner; Norbert Vey; Christian Recher; Farhad Ravandi; Eunice S. Wang; Michael J. Vasconcelles; Dirk Huebner; Hagop M. Kantarjian

16,181, compared to


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2000

PROMPT AND DURABLE ENGRAFTMENT IN TWO OLDER ADULT PATIENTS WITH HIGH RISK CHRONIC MYELOGENOUS LEUKEMIA (CML) USING EX VIVO EXPANDED AND UNMANIPULATED UNRELATED UMBILICAL CORD BLOOD

Andrew Pecora; P Stiff; Aa Jennis; Stuart L. Goldberg; R Rosenbluth; P Price; Kl Goltry; J Douville; Rd Armstrong; Ak Smith; Ra Preti

1,575 for the Medicare population (P < .001). CONCLUSION MDS is a common hematologic malignancy of the elderly, which places patients at risk for comorbid conditions. Transfusion dependency identifies patients with MDS at additional increased risk of organ impairment and shortened survival.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2013

High-Dose Vincristine Sulfate Liposome Injection for Advanced, Relapsed, and Refractory Adult Philadelphia Chromosome–Negative Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Susan O'Brien; Gary J. Schiller; John Lister; Lloyd E. Damon; Stuart L. Goldberg; Walter E. Aulitzky; Dina Ben-Yehuda; Wendy Stock; Steven Coutre; Dan Douer; Leonard T. Heffner; Melissa C. Larson; Karen Seiter; Scott E. Smith; Sarit Assouline; Philip Kuriakose; Lori J. Maness; Arnon Nagler; Jacob M. Rowe; Markus Schaich; Ofer Shpilberg; Karen Yee; Guenter Schmieder; Jeffrey A. Silverman; Deborah A. Thomas; Steven R. Deitcher; Hagop M. Kantarjian

PURPOSE To compare the receipt of clofarabine plus cytarabine (Clo+Ara-C arm) with cytarabine (Ara-C arm) in patients ≥ 55 years old with refractory or relapsed acute myelogenous leukemia (AML). PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients were randomly assigned to receive either clofarabine (Clo) 40 mg/m(2) or a placebo followed by Ara-C 1 g/m(2) for five consecutive days. The primary end point was overall survival (OS). Secondary end points included event-free survival (EFS), 4-month EFS, overall remission rate (ORR; complete remission [CR] plus CR with incomplete peripheral blood count recovery), disease-free survival (DFS), duration of remission (DOR), and safety. RESULTS Among 320 patients with confirmed AML (median age, 67 years), the median OS was 6.6 months in the Clo+Ara-C arm and 6.3 months in the Ara-C arm (hazard ratio [HR], 1.00; 95% CI, 0.78 to 1.28; P = 1.00). The ORR was 46.9% in the Clo+Ara-C arm (35.2% CR) versus 22.9% in the Ara-C arm (17.8% CR; P < .01). EFS (HR: 0.63; 95% CI, 0.49 to 0.80; P < .01) and 4-month EFS (37.7% v 16.6%; P < .01) favored the Clo+Ara-C arm compared with Ara-C arm, respectively. DFS and DOR were similar in both arms. Overall 30-day mortality was 16% and 5% for CLO+Ara-C and Ara-C arms, respectively. In the Clo+Ara-C and Ara-C arms, the most common grade 3 to 4 toxicities were febrile neutropenia (47% v 35%, respectively), hypokalemia (18% v 11%, respectively), thrombocytopenia (16% v 17%, respectively), pneumonia (14% v 10%, respectively), anemia (13% v 0%, respectively), neutropenia (11% v 9%, respectively), increased AST (11% v 2%, respectively), and increased ALT (10% v 3%, respectively). CONCLUSION Although the primary end point of OS did not differ between arms, Clo+Ara-C significantly improved response rates and EFS. Study follow-up continues, and the role of clofarabine in the treatment of adult patients with AML continues to be investigated.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

High-Dose Imatinib in Newly Diagnosed Chronic-Phase Chronic Myeloid Leukemia: High Rates of Rapid Cytogenetic and Molecular Responses

Jorge Cortes; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Stuart L. Goldberg; Bayard L. Powell; Francis J. Giles; Meir Wetzler; Luke P. Akard; John M. Burke; Robert Kerr; Mansoor N. Saleh; August J. Salvado; Karen McDougall; Maher Albitar; Jerald P. Radich

Delayed engraftment, graft failure, and adverse transplant-related events have been observed in unrelated umbilical cord blood (UCB) recipients, particularly in those receiving a low leukocyte cell dose and in CML patients. We report the outcomes of two older adult patients with high risk CML who received a low leukocyte cell dose of unmanipulated UCB cells supplemented with ex vivo expanded (AastromReplicell System) UCB cells. Each engrafted promptly and neither patient experienced GVHD or life-threatening infection. Both remain engrafted with cells exclusively of donor origin and are in cytogenetic remission at 19 and 8 months follow-up. Ex vivoexpanded UCB cells appear to facilitate hematopoietic recovery and therefore may increase the number of CML patients eligible for unrelated UCB transplant. Bone Marrow Transplantation (2000) 25, 797–799.


Leukemia | 2010

Nilotinib is active in chronic and accelerated phase chronic myeloid leukemia following failure of imatinib and dasatinib therapy

Francis J. Giles; Elisabetta Abruzzese; Gianantonio Rosti; Dongho Kim; Ravi Bhatia; André Bosly; Stuart L. Goldberg; G.L.S. Kam; Madan Jagasia; W. Mendrek; Thomas Fischer; T. Facon; U. Dünzinger; D. Marin; M.C. Mueller; Yaping Shou; Neil Gallagher; Richard A. Larson; François-Xavier Mahon; Michele Baccarani; J. Cortes; Hagop M. Kantarjian

PURPOSE Relapsed adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is associated with high reinduction mortality, chemotherapy resistance, and rapid progression leading to death. Vincristine sulfate liposome injection (VSLI), sphingomyelin and cholesterol nanoparticle vincristine (VCR), facilitates VCR dose-intensification and densification plus enhances target tissue delivery. We evaluated high-dose VSLI monotherapy in adults with Philadelphia chromosome (Ph) -negative ALL that was multiply relapsed, relapsed and refractory to reinduction, and/or relapsed after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT). PATIENTS AND METHODS Sixty-five adults with Ph-negative ALL in second or greater relapse or whose disease had progressed following two or more leukemia therapies were treated in this pivotal phase II, multinational trial. Intravenous VSLI 2.25 mg/m(2), without dose capping, was administered once per week until response, progression, toxicity, or pursuit of HCT. The primary end point was achievement of complete response (CR) or CR with incomplete hematologic recovery (CRi). RESULTS The CR/CRi rate was 20% and overall response rate was 35%. VSLI monotherapy was effective as third-, fourth-, and fifth-line therapy and in patients refractory to other single- and multiagent reinduction therapies. Median CR/CRi duration was 23 weeks (range, 5 to 66 weeks); 12 patients bridged to a post-VSLI HCT, and five patients were long-term survivors. VSLI was generally well tolerated and associated with a low 30-day mortality rate (12%). CONCLUSION High-dose VSLI monotherapy resulted in meaningful clinical outcomes including durable responses and bridging to HCT in advanced ALL settings. The toxicity profile of VSLI was predictable, manageable, and comparable to standard VCR despite the delivery of large, normally unachievable, individual and cumulative doses of VCR.


Cancer | 2015

Phase II, multicenter, randomized trial of CPX-351 (cytarabine:daunorubicin) liposome injection versus intensive salvage therapy in adults with first relapse AML.

Jorge Cortes; Stuart L. Goldberg; Eric J. Feldman; David A. Rizzeri; Donna E. Hogge; Melissa L. Larson; Arnaud Pigneux; Christian Recher; Gary J. Schiller; Krzysztof Warzocha; Hagop M. Kantarjian; Arthur C. Louie; Jonathan E. Kolitz

PURPOSE Long-term clinical outcome data have established imatinib 400 mg/d as standard front-line treatment for newly diagnosed patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). PATIENTS AND METHODS The Rationale and Insight for Gleevec High-Dose Therapy (RIGHT) trial is a multicenter study of imatinib 400 mg twice a day as initial therapy in 115 patients (70% Sokal low risk) with newly diagnosed CML in chronic phase who were observed for both molecular and cytogenetic responses for up to 18 months. Eighty-three patients (72%) completed the study, 10 patients (9%) discontinued the study because of adverse events, and six patients (5%) discontinued because of unsatisfactory therapeutic effect. RESULTS Polymerase chain reaction analysis demonstrated rapid kinetics of major molecular response (MMR), with 48% of patients achieving MMR by 6 months, 54% by 12 months, and 63% by 18 months. Corresponding complete molecular response rates were 39%, 44%, and 55%, respectively. Median dose-intensity was 98%. Overall, 79% of patients who received at least 90% dose-intensity achieved MMR. The most frequent adverse events included myelosuppression, rash, fatigue, and musculoskeletal symptoms. CONCLUSION This study suggests that imatinib 400 mg twice a day results in more rapid reduction in tumor burden than imatinib 400 mg/d with minimal added toxicity.

Collaboration


Dive into the Stuart L. Goldberg's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew L. Pecora

Hackensack University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jorge Cortes

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andre Goy

Hackensack University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew Pecora

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hagop M. Kantarjian

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michele L. Donato

Hackensack University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tatyana Feldman

Hackensack University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael J. Mauro

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Siegel

Hackensack University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge