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Dive into the research topics where Wolfram E. Samlowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Wolfram E. Samlowski.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Metastatic Melanoma in Pregnancy: Risk of Transplacental Metastases in the Infant

April Alexander; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Douglas Grossman; Carol S. Bruggers; Ronald M. Harris; John J. Zone; R. Dirk Noyes; Glen M. Bowen; Sancy A. Leachman

PURPOSE Although metastases to the fetus via the placenta are rare, melanoma is the most common culprit. When it occurs, maternally derived melanoma metastasis in the infant is almost invariably fatal. PATIENTS AND METHODS This article reviews current guidelines for placental evaluation in pregnant women with metastatic melanoma and presents surveillance recommendations for their infants. Comprehensive literature reviews were performed on melanoma in pregnancy and melanoma metastasis to the placenta and fetus. The use of interferon alfa in the pediatric population was also reviewed. A comprehensive search of the MEDLINE database (1966 to 2002) was performed. Articles were reviewed and additional references were obtained from the bibliographies. Translation of non-English articles was performed, and authors of previous publications were contacted. RESULTS Eighty-seven patients with placental or fetal metastasis were identified. Twenty-seven occurrences were attributed to melanoma (31%). The fetus was affected in six of 27 melanoma patients (22%), with five of six infants dying of disease. The use of high-dose interferon alfa adjuvant therapy in pediatric patients has not been reported. CONCLUSION The placentas of women with known or suspected metastatic melanoma should be carefully examined grossly and histologically by pathologists. With placental involvement, fetal risk of melanoma metastasis is approximately 22%. Neonates delivered with concomitant placental involvement should be considered a high-risk population. The risk-benefit ratio of adjuvant treatment for a potentially affected infant should be carefully weighed.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1991

Effects of supravital fluorochromes used to analyze the in vivo homing of murine lymphocytes on cellular function

Wolfram E. Samlowski; Bekkie Robertson; Bradley K. Draper; Elizabeth Prystas; John R. McGregor

A number of supravital fluorochromes are available to study lymphocyte homing in vivo. These include fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), which binds to cell surface proteins; Hoechst 33342, which binds to AT rich regions of cellular DNA; and the lipid bilayer incorporated dyes PKH-2 and PKH-26. The relative advantages and disadvantages of each of these probes for analyzing murine lymphocyte homing are as yet poorly understood. We evaluated the effects of each dye on labeling efficiency, as well as cell viability, homing, mitogen responsiveness and cytotoxicity. PKH-26 provided long-term labeling (up to 15 days) with the least detrimental effects on cellular function. Detection of FITC in vivo was impaired by tissue autofluorescence, and the dye acted as a co-mitogen for lectin or IL-2-induced proliferation. Hoechst 33342 eluted from cells over a few hours and inhibited lymphocyte proliferation. PKH-2 had detrimental effects on cell viability and resulted in the down-modulation of peripheral lymph node homing receptor expression. None of the probes interfered with the induction of cytotoxic lymphocytes by IL-2. While these fluorochromes are easy to use and provide powerful tools to analyze the lymphocyte localization in vivo, our experiments demonstrate that important limitations are imposed by each probe that need to be considered by investigators during the design and interpretation of experiments.


Cancer | 2009

A phase 2 clinical trial of nab-Paclitaxel in previously treated and chemotherapy-naive patients with metastatic melanoma

Evan M. Hersh; Steven O'Day; Antoni Ribas; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Michael S. Gordon; Deganit E. Shechter; Alicia A. Clawson; Rene Gonzalez

nab‐Paclitaxel (ABI‐007, Abraxane), a 130‐nM, albumin‐bound (nab) particle form of Cremophor‐free paclitaxel, is approved for metastatic breast cancer. In the current study, the efficacy and safety of nab‐paclitaxel were evaluated in previously treated and chemotherapy‐naive patients with metastatic melanoma (MM).


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Phase II Study of Erlotinib in Patients With Locally Advanced or Metastatic Papillary Histology Renal Cell Cancer: SWOG S0317

Michael S. Gordon; Michael A. Hussey; Raymond B. Nagle; Primo N. Lara; Philip C. Mack; Janice P. Dutcher; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Joseph I. Clark; David I. Quinn; Chong Xian Pan; David Crawford

PURPOSE Patients with advanced papillary renal cell cancer (pRCC) have poor survival after systemic therapy; the reported median survival time is 7 to 17 months. In this trial, we evaluated the efficacy of erlotinib, an oral epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor in patients with advanced pRCC, a tumor type associated with wild-type von Hippel Lindau gene. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients with histologically confirmed, advanced, or metastatic pRCC were treated with erlotinib 150 mg orally once daily. A RECIST (Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors) response rate (RR) of > or = 20% was considered a promising outcome. Secondary end points included overall survival and 6-month probability of treatment failure. RESULTS Of 52 patients registered, 45 were evaluable. The overall RR was 11% (five of 45 patients; 95% CI, 3% to 24%), and the disease control rate was 64% (ie five partial response and 24 stable disease). The median overall survival time was 27 months (95% CI, 13 to 36 months). Probability of freedom from treatment failure at 6 months was 29% (95% CI, 17% to 42%). There was one grade 5 adverse event (AE) of pneumonitis, one grade 4 thrombosis, and nine other grade 3 AEs. CONCLUSION Although the RECIST RR of 11% did not exceed prespecified estimates for additional study, single-agent erlotinib yielded disease control and survival outcomes of interest with an expected toxicity profile. The design of future trials of the EGFR axis in pRCC should be based on preclinical or molecular data that define appropriate patient subgroups, new drug combinations, or potentially more active alternative schedules.


American Heart Journal | 1982

Value of positive myocardial technetium-99m-pyrophosphate scintigraphy in the noninvasive diagnosis of cardiac amyloidosis

Theodore A. Wizenberg; Jaroslaw Muz; Young H. Sohn; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Arnold M. Weissler

Ten consecutive patients with tissue-proven amyloidosis, seven of whom presented with congestive heart failure, were found to exhibit intense diffuse uptake of technetium-99m-pyrophosphate (Tc-99m-PYP) on cardiac radionuclide imaging. The patients exhibited echocardiographic and systolic time interval abnormalities suggesting combined restrictive and congestive cardiomyopathic changes. On M-mode echocardiograms, there was symmetrically increased thickness of the interventricular septum and left ventricular (LV) posterior wall in diastole (10 of 10), decreased fractional shortening of the LV minor axis diameter in systole (eight of nine), and decreased percent thickening of the LV minor axis diameter in systole (eight of nine) and LV posterior wall (10 of 10) in systole. Three patients demonstrated enlarged LV end-diastolic diameter. All 10 patients had abnormal PEP/LVET and eight had shortened LVETI. When combined with noninvasive tests of LV performance, positive myocardial pyrophosphate (PYP) scanning provides a new and useful adjunct in the diagnosis of amyloid heart disease.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2007

Randomized Trial of an Allogeneic Melanoma Lysate Vaccine With Low-Dose Interferon Alfa-2b Compared With High-Dose Interferon Alfa-2b for Resected Stage III Cutaneous Melanoma

Malcolm S. Mitchell; Judith Abrams; John A. Thompson; Mohammed Kashani-Sabet; Ronald C. DeConti; Wen-Jen Hwu; Michael B. Atkins; Eric Whitman; Marc S. Ernstoff; Frank G. Haluska; James G. Jakowatz; Tapas K. Das Gupta; Jon Richards; Wolfram E. Samlowski; John J. Costanzi; Frederick R. Aronson; Albert B. Deisseroth; Arkadiusz Z. Dudek; Vicky Jones

PURPOSE To compare the overall survival (OS) of patients with resected stage III melanoma administered active specific immunotherapy and low-dose interferon alfa-2b (IFN-alpha-2b) with the OS achieved using high-dose IFN-alpha-2b. PATIENTS AND METHODS An Ad Hoc Melanoma Working Group of 25 investigators treated 604 patients from April 1997 to January 2003. Patients were stratified by sex and number of nodes and were randomly assigned to receive either 2 years of treatment with active specific immunotherapy with allogeneic melanoma lysates and low-dose IFN-alpha-2b (arm 1) or high-dose IFN-alpha-2b alone for 1 year (arm 2). Active specific immunotherapy was injected subcutaneously (SC) weekly for 4 weeks, at week 8, and bimonthly thereafter. IFN-alpha-2b SC was begun on week 4 and continued thrice weekly at 5 MU/m2 for 2 years. IFN-alpha-2b in arm 2 was administered according to the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group 1684 study regimen. RESULTS Median follow-up time was 32 months for all patients and 42 months for surviving patients. Median OS time exceeds 84 months in arm 1 and is 83 months in arm 2 (P = .56). Five-year OS rate is 61% in arm 1 and 57% in arm 2. Estimated 5-year relapse-free survival (RFS) rate is 50% in arm 1 and 48% in arm 2, with median RFS times of 58 and 50 months, respectively. The incidence of serious adverse events as a result of treatment was the same in both arms, but more severe neuropsychiatric toxicity was seen in arm 2. CONCLUSION OS and RFS achieved by active specific immunotherapy and low-dose IFN-alpha-2b were indistinguishable from those achieved by high-dose IFN-alpha-2b. Long RFS and OS times were observed in both treatment arms.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

Adoptive Transfer of MART-1 T-Cell Receptor Transgenic Lymphocytes and Dendritic Cell Vaccination in Patients with Metastatic Melanoma

Thinle Chodon; Begonya Comin-Anduix; Bartosz Chmielowski; Richard C. Koya; Zhongqi Wu; Martin Auerbach; Charles Ng; Earl Avramis; Elizabeth Seja; Arturo Villanueva; Tara A. McCannel; Akira Ishiyama; Johannes Czernin; Caius G. Radu; Xiaoyan Wang; David W. Gjertson; Alistair J. Cochran; Kenneth Cornetta; Deborah J.L. Wong; Paula Kaplan-Lefko; Omid Hamid; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Peter A. Cohen; Gregory A. Daniels; Bijay Mukherji; Lili Yang; Jerome A. Zack; Donald B. Kohn; James R. Heath; John A. Glaspy

Purpose: It has been demonstrated that large numbers of tumor-specific T cells for adoptive cell transfer (ACT) can be manufactured by retroviral genetic engineering of autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes and expanding them over several weeks. In mouse models, this therapy is optimized when administered with dendritic cell (DC) vaccination. We developed a short 1-week manufacture protocol to determine the feasibility, safety, and antitumor efficacy of this double cell therapy. Experimental Design: A clinical trial (NCT00910650) adoptively transferring MART-1 T-cell receptor (TCR) transgenic lymphocytes together with MART-1 peptide-pulsed DC vaccination in HLA-A2.1 patients with metastatic melanoma. Autologous TCR transgenic cells were manufactured in 6 to 7 days using retroviral vector gene transfer, and reinfused with (n = 10) or without (n = 3) prior cryopreservation. Results: A total of 14 patients with metastatic melanoma were enrolled and 9 of 13 treated patients (69%) showed evidence of tumor regression. Peripheral blood reconstitution with MART-1–specific T cells peaked within 2 weeks of ACT, indicating rapid in vivo expansion. Administration of freshly manufactured TCR transgenic T cells resulted in a higher persistence of MART-1–specific T cells in the blood as compared with cryopreserved. Evidence that DC vaccination could cause further in vivo expansion was only observed with ACT using noncryopreserved T cells. Conclusion: Double cell therapy with ACT of TCR-engineered T cells with a very short ex vivo manipulation and DC vaccines is feasible and results in antitumor activity, but improvements are needed to maintain tumor responses. Clin Cancer Res; 20(9); 2457–65. ©2014 AACR.


Cellular Immunology | 1986

Modification of the murine immune system by glucocorticosteroids: Alterations of the tissue localization properties of circulating lymphocytes

Hun-Taeg Chung; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Raymond A. Daynes

Glucocorticosteroids have proven capable of suppressing both developing and ongoing immune responses via mechanisms that are not fully understood. Most investigations into the mechanisms of glucocorticosteroid-mediated immunosuppression have examined the direct effects of these agents on the lymphocyte itself. In this paper, we have analyzed the effects of glucocorticosteroids on the lymphocyte receptive capacity of lymph nodes and bone marrow in mice. These effects appear to be mediated via reversible changes in the capacity of steroid-treated vascular endothelial cells to interact with normal lymphocytes, and are both dose and time dependent. The most striking effects on lymphocyte localization were observed in mice given microgram quantities of glucocorticosteroids over a 6-day period via a continual release pellet. The direct exposure of lymphocytes to these drugs in vitro was shown to have no effect on their subsequent localization potential in vivo. Further studies revealed that the ability of antigen-sensitized effector lymphocytes to localize into sites of antigen deposition was also markedly depressed in mice pretreated with glucocorticosteroids. Therefore, steroids also appear to have effects on tissue associated endothelial cells which prevent the localization of sensitized effector lymphocytes into sites of active inflammation. Our observations have potential clinical implications, both in understanding the anti-inflammatory effects of glucocorticosteroids more fully, as well as suggesting that low-dose continual-release steroid administration may result in enhanced immunosuppression.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005

Population-Based Analysis of Prognostic Factors and Survival in Familial Melanoma

Scott R. Florell; Kenneth M. Boucher; Gilda Garibotti; John Astle; Richard A. Kerber; Geraldine P. Mineau; Charles L. Wiggins; R. Dirk Noyes; Alex Tsodikov; Lisa A. Cannon-Albright; John J. Zone; Wolfram E. Samlowski; Sancy A. Leachman

PURPOSE Familial melanoma patients are reported to present with thinner melanomas, to be younger at the time of diagnosis, and to have a greater likelihood of developing multiple primary tumors. We sought to determine whether melanomas that occur in a familial setting demonstrate different prognostic and survival statistics relative to sporadic melanoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS This population-based study used the Utah Cancer Registry and Utah Population Database to objectively evaluate prognostic and survival statistics of the familial melanoma population. From 1973 to 1999, there were 7,785 cases of invasive melanoma identified through the Utah Cancer Registry. These were linked to the Utah Population Database, resulting in 2,659 subjects with family-history information from which a familiality score could be calculated. Cases scored in the top ninth percentile were assigned as high familial risk, and the remaining 91% were considered low familial risk. RESULTS Multivariate logistic-regression analysis found no association between sex, Breslow depth, Clark level, or survival and the familial status. Age at first diagnosis of invasive melanoma was slightly lower in the high-familial-risk group (57 v 60 years; P = .03). High-familial-risk subjects had more melanomas diagnosed at age 30 or younger (12% v 6%; P < .001). A significant difference in the overall number of individuals with two or more primary malignant melanomas was not detected among the groups (P = .2). CONCLUSION These data suggest that melanomas occurring in the context of an underlying inherited susceptibility do not have a significantly different biologic behavior.


Cancer | 2007

Multimodality treatment of melanoma brain metastases incorporating stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS)

Wolfram E. Samlowski; Gordon Watson; Michael Wang; Ganesh Rao; Paul Klimo; Kenneth M. Boucher; Dennis C. Shrieve; Randy L. Jensen

Brain metastases are a frequent complication in advanced melanoma. A 3.6 to 4.1‐month median survival has been reported after treatment with whole brain radiotherapy. We performed a retrospective analysis of our institutional experience of multimodality treatment utilizing linear accelerator (Linac)‐based stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS).

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Kinjal Parikh

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Neeraj Agarwal

Huntsman Cancer Institute

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