Clinical Pathology - Research Publications

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    Genetic and Environmental Causes of Variation in an Automated Breast Cancer Risk Factor Based on Mammographic Textures
    Ye, Z ; Dite, GS ; Nguyen, TL ; Macinnis, RJ ; Schmidt, DF ; Makalic, E ; Al-Qershi, OM ; Nguyen-Dumont, T ; Goudey, B ; Stone, J ; Dowty, JG ; Giles, GG ; Southey, MC ; Hopper, JL ; Li, S (AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH, 2024-02-06)
    BACKGROUND: Cirrus is an automated risk predictor for breast cancer that comprises texture-based mammographic features and is mostly independent of mammographic density. We investigated genetic and environmental variance of variation in Cirrus. METHODS: We measured Cirrus for 3,195 breast cancer-free participants, including 527 pairs of monozygotic (MZ) twins, 271 pairs of dizygotic (DZ) twins, and 1,599 siblings of twins. Multivariate normal models were used to estimate the variance and familial correlations of age-adjusted Cirrus as a function of age. The classic twin model was expanded to allow the shared environment effects to differ by zygosity. The SNP-based heritability was estimated for a subset of 2,356 participants. RESULTS: There was no evidence that the variance or familial correlations depended on age. The familial correlations were 0.52 (SE, 0.03) for MZ pairs and 0.16(SE, 0.03) for DZ and non-twin sister pairs combined. Shared environmental factors specific to MZ pairs accounted for 20% of the variance. Additive genetic factors accounted for 32% (SE = 5%) of the variance, consistent with the SNP-based heritability of 36% (SE = 16%). CONCLUSION: Cirrus is substantially familial due to genetic factors and an influence of shared environmental factors that was evident for MZ twin pairs only. The latter could be due to nongenetic factors operating in utero or in early life that are shared by MZ twins. IMPACT: Early-life factors, shared more by MZ pairs than DZ/non-twin sister pairs, could play a role in the variation in Cirrus, consistent with early life being recognized as a critical window of vulnerability to breast carcinogens.
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    Background and Breakthrough Opioid Choice May Determine Different Pain Outcomes
    Wong, AK ; Vogrin, S ; Le, B ; Klepstad, P ; Rubio, JP ; Somogyi, AA ; Philip, J (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2024-03)
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    A MXI1-NUTM1 fusion protein with MYC-like activity suggests a novel oncogenic mechanism in a subset ofNUTM1-rearranged tumors
    McEvoy, CR ; Holliday, H ; Thio, N ; Mitchell, C ; Choong, DY ; Yellapu, B ; Leong, HS ; Xu, H ; Lade, S ; Browning, J ; Takano, EA ; Byrne, DJ ; Gill, AJ ; Duong, CP ; Li, J ; Fellowes, AP ; Fox, SB ; Swarbrick, A ; Prall, OWJ (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2021-01)
    Most NUTM1-rearranged neoplasms (NRNs) have fusions between NUTM1 and BRD (bromodomain-containing) family members and are termed NUT carcinomas (NCs) because they show some squamous differentiation. However, some NRNs are associated with fusions between NUTM1 and members of the MAD (MAX dimerization) gene family of MYC antagonists. Here we describe a small round cell malignancy from the gastro-esophageal junction with a previously unreported fusion between NUTM1 and the MAD family member MXI1. In contrast to NCs, the MXI1-NUTM1 tumor did not show squamous differentiation and did not express MYC, TP63 or SOX2, genes known to be targets of BRD-NUTM1 proteins and critical for NC oncogenesis. Transcriptome analysis showed paradoxical enrichment of MYC target genes in the MXI1-NUTM1 tumor despite the lack of MYC expression. When expressed in vitro MXI1-NUTM1 partially phenocopied MYC, enhancing cell proliferation and cooperating with oncogenic HRAS to produce anchorage-independent cell growth. These data provide evidence that MAD family members, which are normally repressors of MYC activity, can be converted into MYC-like mimics by fusion to NUTM1. The pathological features and novel oncogenic mechanism of the MXI1-NUTM1 tumor show that identification of NUTM1 fusion partners can be important for accurate diagnostic classification of some NRN subtypes, and potentially may guide therapeutic options.
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    Type of anesthesia for cancer resection surgery: No differential impact on cancer recurrence in mouse models of breast cancer
    Dubowitz, J ; Ziegler, AI ; Beare, R ; Jost-Brinkmann, F ; Walker, AK ; Gillis, RD ; Chang, A ; Chung, N-C ; Martin, OA ; Hollande, F ; Riedel, B ; Sloan, EK ; Faisal, SM (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2023-11-27)
    BACKGROUND: Surgery is essential for curative treatment of solid tumors. Evidence from recent retrospective clinical analyses suggests that use of propofol-based total intravenous anesthesia during cancer resection surgery is associated with improved overall survival compared to inhaled volatile anesthesia. Evaluating these findings in prospective clinical studies is required to inform definitive clinical guidelines but will take many years and requires biomarkers to monitor treatment effect. Therefore, we examined the effect of different anesthetic agents on cancer recurrence in mouse models of breast cancer with the overarching goal of evaluating plausible mechanisms that could be used as biomarkers of treatment response. METHODS: To test the hypothesis that volatile anesthesia accelerates breast cancer recurrence after surgical resection of the primary tumor, we used three mouse models of breast cancer. We compared volatile sevoflurane anesthesia with intravenous propofol anesthesia and used serial non-invasive bioluminescent imaging to track primary tumor recurrence and metastatic recurrence. To determine short-term perioperative effects, we evaluated the effect of anesthesia on vascular integrity and immune cell changes after surgery in animal models. RESULTS: Survival analyses found that the kinetics of cancer recurrence and impact on survival were similar regardless of the anesthetic agent used during cancer surgery. Vascular permeability, immune cell infiltration and cytokine profiles showed no statistical difference after resection with inhaled sevoflurane or intravenous propofol anesthesia. CONCLUSIONS: These preclinical studies found no evidence that choice of anesthetic agent used during cancer resection surgery affected either short-term perioperative events or long-term cancer outcomes in mouse models of breast cancer. These findings raise the possibility that mouse models do not recapitulate perioperative events in cancer patients. Nonetheless, the findings suggest that future evaluation of effects of anesthesia on cancer outcomes should focus on cancer types other than breast cancer.
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    Ultrasound-Stimulated Microbubbles Enhance Radiation-Induced Cell Killing
    Mccorkell, G ; Nakayama, M ; Feltis, B ; Piva, T ; Geso, M (Elsevier, 2022-12)
    Recent in vivo studies using ultrasound-stimulated microbubbles as a localized radiosensitizer have had impressive results. While in vitro studies have also obtained similar results using human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), studies using other cell lines have had varying results. This study was aimed at investigating any increases in radiation-induced cell killing in vitro using two carcinoma lines not previously investigated before (metastatic follicular thyroid carcinoma cells [FTC-238] and non-small cell lung carcinoma cells [NCI-H727]), in addition to HUVEC. Cells were treated using a combination of 1.6% (v/v) microbubbles, ∼90 s of 2-MHz ultrasound (mechanical index = 0.8) and 0–6 Gy of kilovolt or MV X-rays. Cell viability assays obtained 72 h post-treatment were normalized to untreated controls, and analysis of variance was used to determine statistical significance. All cells treated with combined ultrasound-stimulated microbubbles and radiation exhibited decreased normalized survival, with statistically significant effects observed for the NCI-H727 cells. No statistically significant differences in effects were observed using kV compared with MV radiation. Further studies using increased microbubble concentrations may be required to achieve statistically significant results for the FTC-238 and HUVEC lines.
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    Effect of gene variants on opioid dose, pain and adverse effect outcomes in advanced cancer: an explorative study
    Wong, AK ; Klepstad, P ; Somogyi, AA ; Vogrin, S ; Le, B ; Philip, J ; Rubio, JP (FUTURE MEDICINE LTD, 2023-12)
    Aim: Associations between gene variants and opioid net effect are unclear. We conducted an exploratory pharmacogenetic analysis of 35 gene variants and opioid response in advanced cancer. Patients & methods: This multi-center prospective cohort study included clinical data, questionnaires (pain and adverse effects) and DNA (blood). Negative binomial regression and logistic regression were used. Results: Within 54 participants, eight statistically significant associations (p = 0.002-0.038) were observed between gene variants and opioid dose, pain scores or adverse effects, the majority being within the neuroimmune TLR4 pathway (IL1B [rs1143634], IL2 [rs2069762], IL6 [rs1800795], BDNF [rs6265]) and ARRB2 pathway (ARRB2 [rs3786047], DRD2 [rs6275]). Conclusion: Neuroimmune pathway genes may contribute to differences in opioid response in cancer and may be included in future similar studies.
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    Opioid Switch Dosing in Chronic Cancer Pain: A Prospective Longitudinal Study
    Wong, AK ; Klepstad, P ; Rubio, JP ; Somogyi, AA ; Vogrin, S ; Le, B ; Philip, J (Mary Ann Liebert, 2024-03)
    Background: Opioid switching is common, however, conversion tables have limitations. Guidelines suggest postswitch dose reduction, yet, observations show opioid doses may increase postswitch. Objectives: To document the opioid conversion factor postswitch in cancer, and whether pain and adverse effect outcomes differ between switched opioid groups. Design/Setting: This multicenter prospective longitudinal study included people with advanced cancer in Australia. Clinical data (demographics, opioids) and validated instruments (pain, adverse effects) were collected twice, seven days apart. Results: Opioid switch resulted in dose increase (median oral morphine equivalent daily dose 90 mg [interquartile range {IQR} 45-184] to 150 mg [IQR 79-270]), reduced average pain (5.1 [standard deviation {SD} 1.7] to 3.8 [SD 1.6]), and reduced adverse effects. Hydromorphone dose increased 2.5 times (IQR 1.0-3.6) above the original conversion factor used. Conclusions: Opioid switching resulted in overall dose increase, particularly when switching to hydromorphone. Higher preswitch dosing may require higher dose conversion ratios. Dose reduction postswitch risks undertreatment and may not be always appropriate.
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    CD4+ T cell immunity against cutaneous melanoma encompasses multifaceted MHC II-dependent responses.
    Bawden, EG ; Wagner, T ; Schröder, J ; Effern, M ; Hinze, D ; Newland, L ; Attrill, GH ; Lee, AR ; Engel, S ; Freestone, D ; de Lima Moreira, M ; Gressier, E ; McBain, N ; Bachem, A ; Haque, A ; Dong, R ; Ferguson, AL ; Edwards, JJ ; Ferguson, PM ; Scolyer, RA ; Wilmott, JS ; Jewell, CM ; Brooks, AG ; Gyorki, DE ; Palendira, U ; Bedoui, S ; Waithman, J ; Hochheiser, K ; Hölzel, M ; Gebhardt, T (American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2024-01-19)
    Whereas CD4+ T cells conventionally mediate antitumor immunity by providing help to CD8+ T cells, recent clinical studies have implied an important role for cytotoxic CD4+ T cells in cancer immunity. Using an orthotopic melanoma model, we provide a detailed account of antitumoral CD4+ T cell responses and their regulation by major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC II) in the skin. Intravital imaging revealed prominent interactions of CD4+ T cells with tumor debris-laden MHC II+ host antigen-presenting cells that accumulated around tumor cell nests, although direct recognition of MHC II+ melanoma cells alone could also promote CD4+ T cell control. CD4+ T cells stably suppressed or eradicated tumors even in the absence of other lymphocytes by using tumor necrosis factor-α and Fas ligand (FasL) but not perforin-mediated cytotoxicity. Interferon-γ was critical for protection, acting both directly on melanoma cells and via induction of nitric oxide synthase in myeloid cells. Our results illustrate multifaceted and context-specific aspects of MHC II-dependent CD4+ T cell immunity against cutaneous melanoma, emphasizing modulation of this axis as a potential avenue for immunotherapies.
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    Intratumoral presence of the genotoxic gut bacteria pks+ E. coli, Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis, and Fusobacterium nucleatum and their association with clinicopathological and molecular features of colorectal cancer
    Joo, JE ; Chu, YL ; Georgeson, P ; Walker, R ; Mahmood, K ; Clendenning, M ; Meyers, AL ; Como, J ; Joseland, S ; Preston, SG ; Diepenhorst, N ; Toner, J ; Ingle, DJ ; Sherry, NL ; Metz, A ; Lynch, BM ; Milne, RL ; Southey, MC ; Hopper, JL ; Win, AK ; Macrae, FA ; Winship, IM ; Rosty, C ; Jenkins, MA ; Buchanan, DD (Springer Nature, 2024)
    Background: This study aimed to investigate clinicopathological and molecular tumour features associated with intratumoral pks+ Escherichia coli (pks+E.coli+), pks+E.coli- (non-E.coli bacteria harbouring the pks island), Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF) and Fusobacterium nucleatum (F. nucleatum). Methods: We screened 1697 tumour-derived DNA samples from the Australasian Colorectal Cancer Family Registry, Melbourne Collaborative Cohort Study and the ANGELS study using targeted PCR. Results: Pks+E.coli+ was associated with male sex (P < 0.01) and APC:c.835-8 A > G somatic mutation (P = 0.03). The association between pks+E.coli+ and APC:c.835-8 A > G was specific to early-onset CRCs (diagnosed<45years, P = 0.02). The APC:c.835-A > G was not associated with pks+E.coli- (P = 0.36). F. nucleatum was associated with DNA mismatch repair deficiency (MMRd), BRAF:c.1799T>A p.V600E mutation, CpG island methylator phenotype, proximal tumour location, and high levels of tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (Ps < 0.01). In the stratified analysis by MMRd subgroups, F. nucleatum was associated with Lynch syndrome, MLH1 methylated and double MMR somatic mutated MMRd subgroups (Ps < 0.01). Conclusion: Intratumoral pks+E.coli+ but not pks+E.coli- are associated with CRCs harbouring the APC:c.835-8 A > G somatic mutation, suggesting that this mutation is specifically related to DNA damage from colibactin-producing E.coli exposures. F. nucleatum was associated with both hereditary and sporadic MMRd subtypes, suggesting the MMRd tumour microenvironment is important for F. nucleatum colonisation irrespective of its cause.
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    Modifiable lifestyle risk factors and survival after diagnosis with multiple myeloma
    Cheah, S ; Bassett, JK ; Bruinsma, FJ ; Hopper, J ; Jayasekara, H ; Joshua, D ; Macinnis, RJ ; Prince, HM ; Southey, MC ; Vajdic, CM ; van Leeuwen, MT ; Doo, NW ; Harrison, SJ ; English, DR ; Giles, GG ; Milne, RL (TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2023-10-03)
    BACKGROUND: While remaining incurable, median overall survival for MM now exceeds 5 years. Yet few studies have investigated how modifiable lifestyle factors influence survival. We investigate whether adiposity, diet, alcohol, or smoking are associated with MM-related fatality. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We recruited 760 incident cases of MM via cancer registries in two Australian states during 2010-2016. Participants returned questionnaires on health and lifestyle. Follow-up ended in 2020. Flexible parametric survival models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for lifestyle exposures and risk of all-cause and MM-specific fatality. RESULTS: Higher pre-diagnosis Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI) scores were associated with reduced MM-specific fatality (per 10-unit score, HR = 0.84, 95%CI = 0.70-0.99). Pre-diagnosis alcohol consumption was inversely associated with MM-specific fatality, compared with nondrinkers (0.1-20 g per day, HR = 0.59, 95%CI = 0.39-0.90; >20 g per day, HR = 0.67, 95%CI = 0.40-1.13). Tobacco smoking was associated with increased all-cause fatality compared with never smoking (former smokers: HR = 1.44, 95%CI = 1.10-1.88; current smokers: HR = 1.30, 95%CI = 0.80-2.10). There was no association between pre-enrollment body mass index (BMI) and MM-specific or all-cause fatality. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support established recommendations for healthy diets and against smoking. Higher quality diet, as measured by the AHEI, may improve survival post diagnosis with MM.