Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>This study was performed to determine if a chemotherapy-induced apoptosis assay (MiCK) could predict the best therapy for patients with ovarian cancer.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A prospective, multi-institutional...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Salom Emery, Penalver Manuel, Homesley Howard, Burrell Matthew, Garrett Audrey, Presant Cary A, Rutledge James, Chernick Michael, Hallquist Allan, Perree Mathieu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-08-01
Series:Journal of Translational Medicine
Online Access:http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/10/1/162
id doaj-aa9a3d2a78ef40bc8f7c5a65ee244236
record_format Article
spelling doaj-aa9a3d2a78ef40bc8f7c5a65ee2442362020-11-24T21:44:57ZengBMCJournal of Translational Medicine1479-58762012-08-0110116210.1186/1479-5876-10-162Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical responseSalom EmeryPenalver ManuelHomesley HowardBurrell MatthewGarrett AudreyPresant Cary ARutledge JamesChernick MichaelHallquist AllanPerree Mathieu<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>This study was performed to determine if a chemotherapy-induced apoptosis assay (MiCK) could predict the best therapy for patients with ovarian cancer.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A prospective, multi-institutional and blinded trial of the assay was conducted in 104 evaluable ovarian cancer patients treated with chemotherapy. The MiCK assay was performed prior to therapy, but treating physicians were not told of the results and selected treatment only on clinical criteria. Outcomes (response, time to relapse, and survival) were compared to the drug-induced apoptosis observed in the assay.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Overall survival in primary therapy, chemotherapy naïve patients with Stage III or IV disease was longer if patients received a chemotherapy which was best in the MiCK assay, compared to shorter survival in patients who received a chemotherapy that was not the best. (p < 0.01, hazard ratio HR 0.23). Multivariate model risk ratio showed use of the best chemotherapy in the MiCK assay was the strongest predictor of overall survival (p < 0.01) in stage III or IV patients. Standard therapy with carboplatin plus paclitaxel (C + P) was not the best chemotherapy in the MiCK assay in 44% of patients. If patients received C + P and it was the best chemotherapy in the MiCK assay, they had longer survival than those patients receiving C + P when it was not the best chemotherapy in the assay (p = 0.03). Relapse-free interval in primary therapy patients was longer if patients received the best chemotherapy from the MiCK assay (p = 0.03, HR 0.52). Response rates (CR + PR) were higher if physicians used an active chemotherapy based on the MiCK assay (p = 0.03).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The MiCK assay can predict the chemotherapy associated with better outcomes in ovarian cancer patients. This study quantifies outcome benefits on which a prospective randomized trial can be developed.</p> http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/10/1/162
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Salom Emery
Penalver Manuel
Homesley Howard
Burrell Matthew
Garrett Audrey
Presant Cary A
Rutledge James
Chernick Michael
Hallquist Allan
Perree Mathieu
spellingShingle Salom Emery
Penalver Manuel
Homesley Howard
Burrell Matthew
Garrett Audrey
Presant Cary A
Rutledge James
Chernick Michael
Hallquist Allan
Perree Mathieu
Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
Journal of Translational Medicine
author_facet Salom Emery
Penalver Manuel
Homesley Howard
Burrell Matthew
Garrett Audrey
Presant Cary A
Rutledge James
Chernick Michael
Hallquist Allan
Perree Mathieu
author_sort Salom Emery
title Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
title_short Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
title_full Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
title_fullStr Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
title_full_unstemmed Correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
title_sort correlation of pretreatment drug induced apoptosis in ovarian cancer cells with patient survival and clinical response
publisher BMC
series Journal of Translational Medicine
issn 1479-5876
publishDate 2012-08-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>This study was performed to determine if a chemotherapy-induced apoptosis assay (MiCK) could predict the best therapy for patients with ovarian cancer.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A prospective, multi-institutional and blinded trial of the assay was conducted in 104 evaluable ovarian cancer patients treated with chemotherapy. The MiCK assay was performed prior to therapy, but treating physicians were not told of the results and selected treatment only on clinical criteria. Outcomes (response, time to relapse, and survival) were compared to the drug-induced apoptosis observed in the assay.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Overall survival in primary therapy, chemotherapy naïve patients with Stage III or IV disease was longer if patients received a chemotherapy which was best in the MiCK assay, compared to shorter survival in patients who received a chemotherapy that was not the best. (p < 0.01, hazard ratio HR 0.23). Multivariate model risk ratio showed use of the best chemotherapy in the MiCK assay was the strongest predictor of overall survival (p < 0.01) in stage III or IV patients. Standard therapy with carboplatin plus paclitaxel (C + P) was not the best chemotherapy in the MiCK assay in 44% of patients. If patients received C + P and it was the best chemotherapy in the MiCK assay, they had longer survival than those patients receiving C + P when it was not the best chemotherapy in the assay (p = 0.03). Relapse-free interval in primary therapy patients was longer if patients received the best chemotherapy from the MiCK assay (p = 0.03, HR 0.52). Response rates (CR + PR) were higher if physicians used an active chemotherapy based on the MiCK assay (p = 0.03).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The MiCK assay can predict the chemotherapy associated with better outcomes in ovarian cancer patients. This study quantifies outcome benefits on which a prospective randomized trial can be developed.</p>
url http://www.translational-medicine.com/content/10/1/162
work_keys_str_mv AT salomemery correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT penalvermanuel correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT homesleyhoward correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT burrellmatthew correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT garrettaudrey correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT presantcarya correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT rutledgejames correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT chernickmichael correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT hallquistallan correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
AT perreemathieu correlationofpretreatmentdruginducedapoptosisinovariancancercellswithpatientsurvivalandclinicalresponse
_version_ 1725907551415959552