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Dive into the research topics where Susan G. Kreissman is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan G. Kreissman.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010

Anti-GD2 Antibody with GM-CSF, Interleukin-2, and Isotretinoin for Neuroblastoma

Alice L. Yu; Andrew L. Gilman; M. Fevzi Ozkaynak; Wendy B. London; Susan G. Kreissman; Helen X. Chen; Malcolm A. Smith; Barry Anderson; Judith G. Villablanca; Katherine K. Matthay; Hiro Shimada; Stephan A. Grupp; Robert C. Seeger; C. Patrick Reynolds; Allen Buxton; Ralph A. Reisfeld; S. D. Gillies; Susan L. Cohn; John M. Maris; Paul M. Sondel

BACKGROUND Preclinical and preliminary clinical data indicate that ch14.18, a monoclonal antibody against the tumor-associated disialoganglioside GD2, has activity against neuroblastoma and that such activity is enhanced when ch14.18 is combined with granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) or interleukin-2. We conducted a study to determine whether adding ch14.18, GM-CSF, and interleukin-2 to standard isotretinoin therapy after intensive multimodal therapy would improve outcomes in high-risk neuroblastoma. METHODS Patients with high-risk neuroblastoma who had a response to induction therapy and stem-cell transplantation were randomly assigned, in a 1:1 ratio, to receive standard therapy (six cycles of isotretinoin) or immunotherapy (six cycles of isotretinoin and five concomitant cycles of ch14.18 in combination with alternating GM-CSF and interleukin-2). Event-free survival and overall survival were compared between the immunotherapy group and the standard-therapy group, on an intention-to-treat basis. RESULTS A total of 226 eligible patients were randomly assigned to a treatment group. In the immunotherapy group, a total of 52% of patients had pain of grade 3, 4, or 5, and 23% and 25% of patients had capillary leak syndrome and hypersensitivity reactions, respectively. With 61% of the number of expected events observed, the study met the criteria for early stopping owing to efficacy. The median duration of follow-up was 2.1 years. Immunotherapy was superior to standard therapy with regard to rates of event-free survival (66±5% vs. 46±5% at 2 years, P=0.01) and overall survival (86±4% vs. 75±5% at 2 years, P=0.02 without adjustment for interim analyses). CONCLUSIONS Immunotherapy with ch14.18, GM-CSF, and interleukin-2 was associated with a significantly improved outcome as compared with standard therapy in patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00026312.)


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996

Predicting the risk of bacteremia in childen with fever and neutropenia.

Wayne Rackoff; R Gonin; C Robinson; Susan G. Kreissman; P B Breitfeld

PURPOSE We sought to identify factors assessable at the time of admission for fever and neutropenia that predict bacteremia in children with cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODS One hundred fifteen consecutive episodes of fever and absolute neutrophil count (ANC) less than 500/microliter in 72 children with cancer were studied prospectively to determine the risk of bacteremia using data assessable at the time of presentation. After exploratory analysis identified admission temperature and absolute monocyte count (AMoC) as the strongest predictive factors, recursive partitioning was used to determine cutpoints for these variables that resulted in discrimination between episodes associated with a lower or higher risk of bacteremia. RESULTS There were 24 episodes of bacteremia (21% of episodes). Episodes were grouped using the cutpoints for AMoC and temperature: 17% were classified as low risk for bacteremia (AMoC > or = 100/microliter), 65% as intermediate risk (AMoC < 100/microliter and temperature < 39.0 degrees C), and 18% as high risk (AMoC < 100/microliter and temperature > or = 39.0 degrees C). No episodes classified as low risk were associated with bacteremia; 19% of intermediate-risk and 48% of high-risk episodes were associated with bacteremia. The odds ratio of bacteremia for the high-risk versus the intermediate-risk group is 4.4 (95% confidence interval, 1.6 to 12.9). The risk classification was validated using data from 57 different episodes of fever and neutropenia treated in the same hospital. CONCLUSION Three levels of risk for bacteremia are defined using the AMoC and temperature at the time of admission for fever and neutropenia. Trials now should be conducted to test whether these factors may be used to assign some children to less intensive or outpatient antibiotic therapy at the time of presentation with fever and neutropenia.


Lancet Oncology | 2013

Purged versus non-purged peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation for high-risk neuroblastoma (COG A3973): a randomised phase 3 trial

Susan G. Kreissman; Robert C. Seeger; Katherine K. Matthay; Wendy B. London; Richard Sposto; Stephan A. Grupp; Daphne A. Haas-Kogan; Michael P. LaQuaglia; Alice L. Yu; Lisa Diller; Allen Buxton; Julie R. Park; Susan L. Cohn; John M. Maris; C. Patrick Reynolds; Judith G. Villablanca

BACKGROUND Myeloablative chemoradiotherapy and immunomagnetically purged autologous bone marrow transplantation has been shown to improve outcome for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. Currently, peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) are infused after myeloablative therapy, but the effect of purging is unknown. We did a randomised study of tumour-selective PBSC purging in stem-cell transplantation for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. METHODS Between March 16, 2001, and Feb 24, 2006, children and young adults (<30 years) with high-risk neuroblastoma were randomly assigned at diagnosis by a web-based system (in a 1:1 ratio) to receive either non-purged or immunomagnetically purged PBSC. Randomisation was done in blocks stratified by International Neuroblastoma Staging System stage, age, MYCN status, and International Neuroblastoma Pathology classification. Patients and treating physicians were not masked to treatment assignment. All patients were treated with six cycles of induction chemotherapy, myeloablative consolidation, and radiation therapy to the primary tumour site plus meta-iodobenzylguanidine avid metastases present before myeloablative therapy, followed by oral isotretinoin. PBSC collection was done after two induction cycles. For purging, PBSC were mixed with carbonyl iron and phagocytic cells removed with samarium cobalt magnets. Remaining cells were mixed with immunomagnetic beads prepared with five monoclonal antibodies targeting neuroblastoma cell surface antigens and attached cells were removed using samarium cobalt magnets. Patients underwent autologous stem-cell transplantation with PBSC as randomly assigned after six cycles of induction therapy. The primary endpoint was event-free survival and was analysed by intention-to-treat. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00004188. FINDINGS 495 patients were enrolled, of whom 486 were randomly assigned to treatment: 243 patients to receive non-purged PBSC and 243 to received purged PBSC. PBSC were collected from 229 patients from the purged group and 236 patients from the non-purged group, and 180 patients from the purged group and 192 from the non-purged group received transplant. 5-year event-free survival was 40% (95% CI 33-46) in the purged group versus 36% (30-42) in the non-purged group (p=0·77); 5-year overall survival was 50% (95% CI 43-56) in the purged group compared with 51% (44-57) in the non-purged group (p=0·81). Toxic deaths occurred in 15 patients during induction (eight in the purged group and seven in the non-purged group) and 12 during consolidation (eight in the purged group and four in the non-purged group). The most common adverse event reported was grade 3 or worse stomatitis during both induction (87 of 242 patients in the purged group and 93 of 243 patients in the non-purged group) and consolidation (131 of 177 in the purged group vs 145 of 191 in the non-purged group). Serious adverse events during induction were grade 3 or higher decreased cardiac function (four of 242 in the purged group and five of 243 in the non-purged group) and elevated creatinine (five of 242 in the purged group and six of 243 non-purged group) and during consolidation were sinusoidal obstructive syndrome (12 of 177 in the purged group and 17 of 191 in the non-purged group), acute vascular leak (11 of 177 in the purged group and nine of 191 in the non-purged group), and decreased cardiac function (one of 177 in the purged group and four of 191 in the non-purged group). INTERPRETATION Immunomagnetic purging of PBSC for autologous stem-cell transplantation did not improve outcome, perhaps because of incomplete purging or residual tumour in patients. Non-purged PBSC are acceptable for support of myeloablative therapy of high-risk neuroblastoma.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Clinical Significance of Tumor-Associated Inflammatory Cells in Metastatic Neuroblastoma

Shahab Asgharzadeh; Jill Salo; Lingyun Ji; André Oberthuer; Matthias Fischer; Frank Berthold; Michael Hadjidaniel; Cathy Wei-Yao Liu; Leonid S. Metelitsa; Roger Pique-Regi; Peter Wakamatsu; Judith G. Villablanca; Susan G. Kreissman; Katherine K. Matthay; Hiroyuki Shimada; Wendy B. London; Richard Sposto; Robert C. Seeger

PURPOSE Children diagnosed at age ≥ 18 months with metastatic MYCN-nonamplified neuroblastoma (NBL-NA) are at high risk for disease relapse, whereas those diagnosed at age < 18 months are nearly always cured. In this study, we investigated the hypothesis that expression of genes related to tumor-associated inflammatory cells correlates with the observed differences in survival by age at diagnosis and contributes to a prognostic signature. METHODS Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in localized and metastatic neuroblastomas (n = 71) were assessed by immunohistochemistry. Expression of 44 genes representing tumor and inflammatory cells was quantified in 133 metastatic NBL-NAs to assess age-dependent expression and to develop a logistic regression model to provide low- and high-risk scores for predicting progression-free survival (PFS). Tumors from high-risk patients enrolled onto two additional studies (n = 91) served as independent validation cohorts. RESULTS Metastatic neuroblastomas had higher infiltration of TAMs than locoregional tumors, and metastatic tumors diagnosed in patients at age ≥ 18 months had higher expression of inflammation-related genes than those in patients diagnosed at age < 18 months. Expression of genes representing TAMs (CD33/CD16/IL6R/IL10/FCGR3) contributed to 25% of the accuracy of a novel 14-gene tumor classification score. PFS at 5 years for children diagnosed at age ≥ 18 months with NBL-NA with a low- versus high-risk score was 47% versus 12%, 57% versus 8%, and 50% versus 20% in three independent clinical trials, respectively. CONCLUSION These data suggest that interactions between tumor and inflammatory cells may contribute to the clinical metastatic neuroblastoma phenotype, improve prognostication, and reveal novel therapeutic targets.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2013

Semiquantitative mIBG Scoring as a Prognostic Indicator in Patients with Stage 4 Neuroblastoma: A Report from the Children’s Oncology Group

Gregory A. Yanik; Marguerite T. Parisi; Barry L. Shulkin; Arlene Naranjo; Susan G. Kreissman; Wendy B. London; Judith G. Villablanca; John M. Maris; Julie R. Park; Susan L. Cohn; Patrick McGrady; Katherine K. Matthay

Radiolabeled metaiodobenzylguanidine (mIBG) is a highly sensitive and specific marker for detecting neuroblastoma. A semiquantitative mIBG score (Curie score [CS]) was assessed for utility as a prognostic indicator for a cohort of patients with high-risk metastatic disease. Methods: mIBG scans from 280 patients with mIBG-avid, stage 4 neuroblastoma enrolled on the Children’s Oncology Group (COG) protocol A3973 were evaluated at diagnosis (n = 280), after induction chemotherapy (n = 237), and after an autologous stem cell transplantation (n = 178). Individual mIBG scans were evaluated at 10 different anatomic regions, with the scoring of each site (0–3) based on the extent of disease at that anatomic region. Results: There was no correlation between CS at diagnosis and subsequent treatment outcome. Patients with a CS > 2 after induction therapy had a significantly worse event-free survival (EFS) than those with scores ≤ 2 (3-y EFS: 15.4% ± 5.3% vs. 44.9% ± 3.9%, respectively; P < 0.001). A postinduction CS > 2 identified a cohort of patients at greater risk for an event, independent of other known neuroblastoma factors, including age, MYCN status, ploidy, mitosis-karyorrhexis index, and histologic grade. For MYCN-amplified tumors, the presence (CS > 0) versus absence (CS = 0) of residual mIBG avidity after induction was associated with a significantly worse outcome (3-y EFS: 11.8% ± 7.8% vs. 49.6% ± 7.7%, respectively; P = 0.003). After transplantation, patients with a CS > 0 had an EFS inferior to that of patients with a CS of 0 (3-y EFS: 28.9% ± 6.8% vs. 49.3% ± 4.9%, respectively [n = 133]; P = 0.009). Conclusion: Curie scoring carries prognostic significance in the management of patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. In particular, patients with CSs > 2 after induction have extremely poor outcomes and should be considered for alternative therapeutic strategies.


Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 1999

Prognostic significance of early response to a single dose of asparaginase in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Barbara L. Asselin; Susan G. Kreissman; David J. Coppola; Samuel D. Bernal; Pearl Leavitt; Richard D. Gelber; Stephen E. Sallan; Harvey J. Cohen

PURPOSE The in vitro and in vivo efficacy of a single dose of asparaginase in children with newly diagnosed acute lymphoblastic leukemia and the correlation between in vitro and in vivo antileukemic response and long-term outcome were prospectively evaluated. PATIENTS AND METHODS Two hundred fifty-one patients were randomized to receive 1 of 3 asparaginase preparations (Escherichia coli, Erwinia chrysanthemi [Erwinia], or pegaspargase). In vitro assessment of efficacy was expressed as the percent total cell kill (TCK), based on the number of viable cells found after 5 days of culture in the presence of asparaginase. In vivo leukemia cell kill (LCK) was calculated by comparing bone marrow cellularity and percent leukemic blasts in marrow obtained before and 5 days after treatment with a single dose of asparaginase. Acute toxicity was determined by clinical and laboratory assessment. RESULTS There was equivalent cell kill with all three types of asparaginase. The mean in vitro TCKs for E. coli, Erwinia, and pegaspargase were 31%, 39%, and 36%, respectively (P = 0.63). The mean LCKs in marrow of patients exposed to E. coli, Erwinia, and pegaspargase were 69%, 74%, and 65%, respectively (P = 0.88). The lack of response to asparaginase in vitro predicted a higher risk for clinical relapse regardless of risk assignment (12 leukemic events among 21 in vitro nonresponders; 57%, P < 0.001). There was no difference in acute toxicity among the three asparaginase preparations. CONCLUSIONS All three asparaginase preparations produced equivalent LCKs in in vitro and in vivo analyses. In vitro response to asparaginase provided a risk group-independent prognostic factor.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1993

Stage III neuroblastoma over 1 year of age at diagnosis: improved survival with intensive multimodality therapy including multiple alkylating agents.

Daniel C. West; Robert C. Shamberger; Roger M. Macklis; Harry P. Kozakewich; Alan S. Wayne; Susan G. Kreissman; Bruce R. Korf; Beverly Lavally; Holcombe E. Grier

PURPOSE A nonrandomized, single-arm trial was conducted to assess the efficacy of multimodality therapy including intensive chemotherapy with multiple alkylating agents in the treatment of children with Evans stage III neuroblastoma older than 1 year at diagnosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS Twenty-five patients with a median age of 18 months at diagnosis were treated with multimodality therapy including surgery and chemotherapy using either nitrogen mustard (mechlorethamine), doxorubicin, cisplatin, dacarbazine (DTIC), vincristine, and cyclophosphamide (MADDOC) or cisplatin and cyclophosphamide induction followed by maintenance MADDOC (induction MADDOC) protocols. Sixteen of 25 patients also received radiotherapy to the tumor bed and primary lymph nodes. Event-free survival (EFS) was compared with that reported previously in the literature. N-myc amplification was evaluated prospectively and the Shimada classification was evaluated retrospectively as potential prognostic factors. RESULTS We report a 72% EFS (95% confidence interval +/- 18%) with a median follow-up of 85 months. EFS was significantly worse for patients with tumors demonstrating N-myc amplification (P = .018). Patients classified as favorable according to the Shimada system experienced a significantly better EFS (P = .04), but unfavorable patients still maintained a 60% EFS. CONCLUSION Intensive multimodality treatment including MADDOC and induction MADDOC chemotherapy provides a very good EFS for children older than 1 year who have stage III neuroblastoma. Children classified as favorable according to the Shimada system have a better prognosis. Patients whose tumors demonstrate N-myc amplification have a poor prognosis despite therapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

Ototoxicity in Children With High-Risk Neuroblastoma: Prevalence, Risk Factors, and Concordance of Grading Scales—A Report From the Children's Oncology Group

Wendy Landier; Kristin Knight; F. Lennie Wong; Jin Lee; Ola Thomas; Heeyoung Kim; Susan G. Kreissman; Mary Lou Schmidt; Lu Chen; Wendy B. London; James G. Gurney; Smita Bhatia

PURPOSE Platinum-based therapy is the mainstay for management of high-risk neuroblastoma. Prevalence of platinum-related ototoxicity has ranged from 13% to 95% in previous reports; variability is attributable to small samples and disparate grading scales. There is no consensus regarding optimal ototoxicity grading. Furthermore, prevalence and predictors of hearing loss in a large uniformly treated high-risk neuroblastoma population are unknown. We address these gaps in our study. PATIENTS AND METHODS Audiologic testing was completed after administration of cisplatin alone (< 400 mg/m(2); exposure one) or after cisplatin (400 mg/m(2)) plus carboplatin (1,700 mg/m(2); exposure two). Hearing loss was graded using four scales (American Speech-Language-Hearing Association; Brock; Chang; and Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events, version 3 [CTCAEv3]). RESULTS Of 489 eligible patients, 333 had evaluable audiologic data. Median age at diagnosis was 3.3 years. Prevalence of severe hearing loss differed by scale. For those in the exposure-one group, prevalence ranged from 8% per Brock to 47% per CTCAEv3 (Brock v CTCAEv3 and Chang, P < .01; CTCAEv3 v Chang, P = .16); for those in the exposure-two group, prevalence ranged from 30% per Brock to 71% per CTCAEv3 (all pair-wise comparisons, P < .01). In patients requiring hearing aids, hearing loss was graded as severe in 49% (Brock), 91% (Chang), and 100% (CTCAEv3). Risk factors for severe hearing loss included exposure to cisplatin and carboplatin compared with cisplatin alone and hospitalization for infection. CONCLUSION Severe hearing loss is prevalent among children with high-risk neuroblastoma. Exposure to cisplatin combined with myeloablative carboplatin significantly increases risk. The Brock scale underestimates severe hearing loss and should be used with caution in this setting.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2011

Comparison of 123I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) and 131I-MIBG semi-quantitative scores in predicting survival in patients with stage 4 neuroblastoma: A report from the Children's Oncology Group†

Arlene Naranjo; Marguerite T. Parisi; Barry L. Shulkin; Wendy B. London; Katherine K. Matthay; Susan G. Kreissman; Gregory A. Yanik

123I‐metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scans are preferable to 131I‐MIBG for neuroblastoma imaging as they deliver less patient radiation yet have greater sensitivity in disease detection. Both 123I‐MIBG and 131I‐MIBG scans were used for disease assessments of neuroblastoma patients enrolled on Childrens Oncology Group (COG) high‐risk study A3973. The hypothesis was that 123I‐MIBG and 131I‐MIBG scans were sufficiently similar for clinical purposes in terms of ability to predict survival.


British Journal of Haematology | 2005

Phase I/II dose escalation study of recombinant human interleukin-11 following ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide in children, adolescents and young adults with solid tumours or lymphoma: a clinical, haematological and biological study*

Mitchell S. Cairo; Virginia Davenport; Olga Bessmertny; Stanton Goldman; Stacy L. Berg; Susan G. Kreissman; Joseph H. Laver; Violet Shen; Rita Secola; Carmella van de Ven; Gregory H. Reaman

Thrombocytopenia remains the major dose‐limiting toxicity of myelosuppressive chemotherapy in children with solid tumours. Recombinant human interleukin‐11 (rhIL‐11) has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration as treatment for adults with solid tumours and lymphomas with severe chemotherapy‐induced thrombocytopenia. We conducted a phase I/II trial of rhIL‐11 following ifosfamide, carboplatin and etoposide (ICE) chemotherapy in children with solid tumours or lymphomas. Patients received ifosfamide 1800 mg/m2/d for 5 d, carboplatin 400 mg/m2/d for 2 d and etoposide 100 mg/m2/d for 5 d with rhIL‐11 subcutaneous (s.c.) at 25–125 μg/kg/d on days 6–33. Forty‐seven patients with median age 10·5 years (range, 0·7–26 years) were studied. Median days to absolute neutrophil count ≥0·5 × 109/l, platelet count ≥50 × 109/l and platelet transfusions were 23, 18, 18, 16·5 and 18·5, 21, 20, 18 and 3, 3, 4, and 2 d at doses 25, 50, 75 and 100 μg/kg respectively. There was a dose‐dependent increase in Cmax (7·6–25·5 ng/ml), AUC0−ρ (57–209 ng·h/ml) and T1/2 (4–8·2 h) respectively. There was a 4% incidence of anti‐IL‐11 antibody formation. Clinically important adverse events to rhIL‐11 were papilloedema and periosteal bone formation. In summary, rhIL‐11 was well tolerated at doses of ≤50 μg/kg (maximal tolerated dose) and associated with improved haematological recovery and reduced platelet transfusion requirements compared with historical controls receiving similar ICE chemotherapy without rhIL‐11.

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Julie R. Park

University of Washington

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John M. Maris

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Judith G. Villablanca

University of Southern California

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Michael D. Hogarty

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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