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Featured researches published by Sushanth Reddy.


Journal of The National Comprehensive Cancer Network | 2017

Pancreatic adenocarcinoma, version 2.2017: Clinical practice guidelines in Oncology

Margaret A. Tempero; Mokenge P. Malafa; Mahmoud M. Al-Hawary; Horacio J. Asbun; Andrew Bain; Stephen W. Behrman; Al B. Benson; Ellen F. Binder; Dana Backlund Cardin; Charles Cha; E. Gabriela Chiorean; Vincent Chung; Brian G. Czito; Mary Dillhoff; Efrat Dotan; Cristina R. Ferrone; Jeffrey M. Hardacre; William G. Hawkins; Joseph M. Herman; Andrew H. Ko; Srinadh Komanduri; Albert C. Koong; Noelle K. LoConte; Andrew M. Lowy; Cassadie Moravek; Eric K. Nakakura; Eileen Mary O'Reilly; Jorge Obando; Sushanth Reddy; Courtney L. Scaife

Ductal adenocarcinoma and its variants account for most pancreatic malignancies. High-quality multiphase imaging can help to preoperatively distinguish between patients eligible for resection with curative intent and those with unresectable disease. Systemic therapy is used in the neoadjuvant or adjuvant pancreatic cancer setting, as well as in the management of locally advanced unresectable and metastatic disease. Clinical trials are critical for making progress in treatment of pancreatic cancer. The NCCN Guidelines for Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma focus on diagnosis and treatment with systemic therapy, radiation therapy, and surgical resection.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2018

JQ1 Induces DNA Damage and Apoptosis, and Inhibits Tumor Growth in a Patient-Derived Xenograft Model of Cholangiocarcinoma

Patrick L. Garcia; Aubrey L. Miller; Tracy L. Gamblin; John D. Christein; J. Pablo Arnoletti; Marty J. Heslin; Sushanth Reddy; Joseph H. Richardson; Xiangqin Cui; Robert C.A.M. van Waardenburg; James E. Bradner; Eddy S. Yang; Karina J. Yoon

Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a fatal disease with a 5-year survival of <30%. For a majority of patients, chemotherapy is the only therapeutic option, and virtually all patients relapse. Gemcitabine is the first-line agent for treatment of CCA. Patients treated with gemcitabine monotherapy survive ∼8 months. Combining this agent with cisplatin increases survival by ∼3 months, but neither regimen produces durable remissions. The molecular etiology of this disease is poorly understood. To facilitate molecular characterization and development of effective therapies for CCA, we established a panel of patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of CCA. We used two of these models to investigate the antitumor efficacy and mechanism of action of the bromodomain inhibitor JQ1, an agent that has not been evaluated for the treatment of CCA. The data show that JQ1 suppressed the growth of the CCA PDX model CCA2 and demonstrate that growth suppression was concomitant with inhibition of c-Myc protein expression. A second model (CCA1) was JQ1-insensitive, with tumor progression and c-Myc expression unaffected by exposure to this agent. Also selective to CCA2 tumors, JQ1 induced DNA damage and apoptosis and downregulated multiple c-Myc transcriptional targets that regulate cell-cycle progression and DNA repair. These findings suggest that c-Myc inhibition and several of its transcriptional targets may contribute to the mechanism of action of JQ1 in this tumor type. We conclude that BET inhibitors such as JQ1 warrant further investigation for the treatment of CCA. Mol Cancer Ther; 17(1); 107–18. ©2017 AACR.


American Journal of Surgery | 2017

Increased pancreatic cancer survival with greater lymph node retrieval in the National Cancer Data Base

Carlo M. Contreras; Chee Paul Lin; Robert A. Oster; Sushanth Reddy; Thomas N. Wang; Selwyn M. Vickers; Martin J. Heslin

BACKGROUNDnWe evaluated the role of lymph node (LN) retrieval in pancreatic adenocarcinoma (PA) patients undergoing pancreaticoduodenectomy (PD).nnnMETHODSnWe utilized the National Cancer Data Base; Cox regression models and logistic regression models were used for statistical evaluation.nnnRESULTSnWe evaluated 26,792 patients with PA who underwent PD. The mean LN retrieved in LN(-) patients was 10.8 vs 14.4 for LN(+) patients (Pxa0<xa00.0001). Greater LN retrieval is an independent predictor of a negative microscopic margin and decreased length of stay. The median survival of LN(-) patients exceeded that of LN(+) patients (24.5 vs 15.1 months, Pxa0<xa00.0001). Increasing LN retrieval is a significant predictor of survival in all patients, and in LN(-) patients. The relationship of increased LN retrieval and enhanced survival is a nearly linear trend.nnnCONCLUSIONSnRather than demonstrating an inflection point that defines the extent of adequate lymphadenectomy, this dataset demonstrates an incremental relationship between LN retrieval and survival.


Cancer Research | 2015

Abstract 1779: Bromodomain inhibitor JQ1 inhibits cholangiocarcinoma tumor growth in patient-derived xenograft models

Patrick L. Garcia; Aubrey L. Miller; Kelly M. Kreitzburg; Tracy L. Gamblin; John D. Christein; Pablo J. Arnoletti; Marty J. Heslin; Sushanth Reddy; Joseph H. Richardson; Eddy S. Yang; Jun Qi; James E. Bradner; Karina J. Yoon

Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a lethal malignancy of the biliary epithelium that can arise in any part of the biliary tree. Surgery is the only curative treatment for CCA, but only ∼30% of patients present with resectable disease. The remaining 70% of patients present with advanced or metastatic disease and, if eligible, undergo systemic chemotherapy with the first-line combination of gemcitabine and cisplatin. This combination was shown in a phase II clinical trial to significantly increase median survival from 8.1 to 11.7 months, compared to gemcitabine alone. In order to improve on current treatment, pre-clinical evaluation of novel therapeutics is essential to improving outcome. Unfortunately, the paucity of data describing characteristics common to CCA make development of targeted therapy difficult. However, as is true for other types of solid tumors, c-Myc expression likely contributes to CCA phenotype: c-Myc expression has been observed in 95% of CCA tumors, and experimental down-regulation of c-Myc decreases the invasive potential of CCA cells in vitro. Recently it has become possible to inhibit expression of c-Myc using BET inhibitors. Therefore, we evaluated the efficacy of the bromodomain (BET) inhibitor JQ1 using in vivo models of CCA. The five patient-derived xenograft (PDX) models of CCA that we developed are the first such models to be reported. These models retain the heterogeneity, architecture and specific genetic characteristics of the primary tumors from which they were derived. We used three of these models to examine whether the BET inhibitor JQ1 inhibited CCA tumor growth and generated expression profiles of vehicle- and drug-treated tumors. We administered 50 mg/kg of JQ1 i.p. daily for 20 days and monitored tumor growth. This treatment regimen was well tolerated by tumor-bearing mice, without apparent toxicity. Our data demonstrate that JQ1 suppressed tumor growth in two of the three models, compared to vehicle control treated mice. The data also showed that JQ1-treated tumors had lower levels of c-Myc RNA (↓5-fold) and protein and of RNA encoding multiple transcriptional targets downstream of this oncogenic transcription factor. We conclude that BET inhibitors such as JQ1 warrant further investigation as potentially effective drugs for the treatment of CCA. Citation Format: Patrick L. Garcia, Aubrey L. Miller, Kelly Kreitzburg, Tracy L. Gamblin, Leona N. Council, John D. Christein, Pablo Arnoletti, Marty Heslin, Sushanth Reddy, Joseph H. Richardson, Eddy S. Yang, Jun Qi, James E. Bradner, Karina J. Yoon. Bromodomain inhibitor JQ1 inhibits cholangiocarcinoma tumor growth in patient-derived xenograft models. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 106th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2015 Apr 18-22; Philadelphia, PA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2015;75(15 Suppl):Abstract nr 1779. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2015-1779


Journal of The National Comprehensive Cancer Network | 2014

Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma, Version 2.2014

Margaret A. Tempero; Mokenge P. Malafa; Stephen W. Behrman; Al B. Benson; Ephraim S. Casper; E. Gabriela Chiorean; Vincent Chung; Steven J. Cohen; Brian G. Czito; Anitra Engebretson; Mary Feng; William G. Hawkins; Joseph M. Herman; John P. Hoffman; Andrew H. Ko; Srinadh Komanduri; Albert C. Koong; Andrew M. Lowy; Wen Wee Ma; Nipun B. Merchant; Sean J. Mulvihill; Peter Muscarella; Eric K. Nakakura; Jorge Obando; Martha B. Pitman; Sushanth Reddy; Aaron R. Sasson; Sarah P. Thayer; Colin D. Weekes; Robert A. Wolff


Hpb | 2016

Early hyperglycemia following pancreaticoduodenectomy for pancreatic cancer is a marker for tumor recurrence

Sushanth Reddy; C. Contreras; Thomas N. Wang; M. Heslin


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Retrospective review of FOLFIRINOX in local advanced pancreatic cancer: Single institution experience.

Ashish Manne; Sushanth Reddy; Martin J. Heslin; Rojymon Jacob; Selwyn M. Vickers; Carlo M. Contreras; Anup Kasi; John D. Christein; Peng Li; James A. Posey; Ravi Kumar Paluri


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Effect of nodal status compared to tumor response after neoadjuvant radiation on outcomes for patients with esophageal cancer.

Sushanth Reddy; Jacob A. Swords; Mary Glenn Waldrop; Carlo M. Contreras; Martin J. Heslin; Benjamin Wei; Robert J. Cerfolio; Thomas N. Wang


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2017

Clinical outcomes of early-stage ampullary carcinoma: A single institutional experience.

Ashish Manne; Sushanth Reddy; Peng Li; Carlo M. Contreras; John D. Christein; Selwyn M. Vickers; Martin J. Heslin; Rojymon Jacob; Thomas N. Wang; Anup Kasi; James A. Posey; Ravi Kumar Paluri


Gastroenterology | 2016

1037 Increased Pancreatic Cancer Survival with Greater Lymph Node Retrieval in the National Cancer Data Base

Carlo M. Contreras; Chee P. Lin; Robert A. Oster; Sushanth Reddy; Thomas N. Wang; Selwyn M. Vickers; Martin M. Heslin

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Carlo M. Contreras

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Thomas N. Wang

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Martin J. Heslin

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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John D. Christein

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Selwyn M. Vickers

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Al B. Benson

Northwestern University

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Albert C. Koong

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Andrew H. Ko

University of California

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Andrew M. Lowy

University of California

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