Sir Peter MacCallum Department of Oncology - Research Publications

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    Changes in Pulmonary Function Following Single and Multi-Fraction Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy for Pulmonary Oligometastatic Disease
    Bucknell, NW ; Ball, D ; Bressel, M ; Moore, A ; Kron, T ; Hardcastle, N ; Siva, S (Elsevier, 2023-11)
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    The Australian New Zealand Consortium in Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults Oncofertility action plan
    Lau, LS ; Allingham, C ; Anazodo, A ; Sullivan, M ; Peate, M ; Hunter, S ; Stern, C ; Ryan, AL ; Super, L ; Orme, LM ; Mccarthy, M ; Gook, D ; Lewin, J ; Marino, J ; Ryan, J ; Downie, P ; Manudhane, R ; Winstanley, M ; Pettit, T ; Lantsberg, D ; Irving, H ; Reid, S ; Heath, JA ; Kabalan-Baeza, P ; Wanaguru, D ; Moore, L ; Gillam, L ; Zacharin, M ; Assis, M ; Rozen, G ; Hunter, T ; Julania, S ; Sharwood, E ; Ameratunga, D ; Jayasinghe, Y (WILEY, 2024-07)
    International and national oncofertility networks, including the US-led Oncofertility Consortium, FertiProtekt, and the Danish Network, have played pivotal roles in advancing the discipline of oncofertility over the last decade. Many other countries lack a shared approach to pediatric oncofertility health service delivery. This study aims to describe baseline oncofertility practices at Australian New Zealand Children's Haematology/Oncology Group centers in 2019-2021, describe binational priorities for care, and propose a 5-year action plan for best practice to be implemented by the newly formed Australian New Zealand Consortium in Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults (CAYA) Oncofertility (ANZCO).
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    FDG PET in the evaluation of immune-related hypophysitis and thyroiditis following combination ipilimumab and nivolumab in advanced melanoma
    Iravani, A ; Galligan, A ; Lasocki, A ; Wallace, R ; Weppler, A ; Yeung, GA ; Akhurst, T ; Sachithanandan, N ; Chiang, C ; Sandhu, S ; Hicks, R (Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging, 2020-05-01)
    Objectives: Hypophysitis and thyroiditis are among the most commonly reported immune-related adverse events (irAEs) following combined ipilimumab/nivolumab therapy for melanoma. The role of 18F-FDG PET/CT (FDG-PET) in the evaluation of these endocrinopathies has not been systematically assessed. Methods: Between 2016 to 2019, all patients (pts) with advanced melanoma who received combined ipilimumab/nivolumab therapy were reviewed. Pts with a pre-treatment and post-treatment FDG-PET were included. On FDG-PET, PET-hypophysitis was defined as a discernable new uptake in the pituitary fossa and PET-thyroiditis as new diffuse uptake in the thyroid. Pre- and post-treatment SUVmax of pituitary and thyroid gland was measured. ROC analysis was used to derive the optimal threshold for metabolic changes on FDG-PET for distinguishing endocrinopathy. FDG-PET, clinical data and brain MRI were reviewed independently by a Nuclear Medicine physician, endocrinologist, and radiologist, respectively, and then findings were correlated. Results: Of 162 pts, 133 and 134 had assessable FDG-PET for hypophysitis and thyroiditis, respectively, with post-treatment FDG-PET performed at a median 76 days (IQR 52-83, range 18-225) from the start of immunotherapy. Overall 41/133 (29%) pts had PET-hypophysitis, of which 18 were clinically-confirmed, 3 were false-positive and 20 were not clinically-assessable due to receiving high-dose glucocorticoids for a concurrent irAE at the time of imaging, although 6 of these also had supportive contemporaneous MRI findings. For PET-hypophysitis pts, median pre- and post-treatment pituitary SUVmax were 2.7 (IQR 2.5-2.9, range 1.9-3.9) and 4.7 (IQR 3.6-5.5, range 2.6-16.2), with a percentage increase of 63% (IQR 39-94%, range 13-431%). The abnormal PET findings preceded the clinical diagnosis in 7/18 pts by a median of 16 days (range 5-50). FDG-PET was negative for hypophysitis in 12/29 pts with a prior or subsequent clinical diagnosis of hypophysitis. Where the clinical presentation was not masked by high-dose glucocorticoids, the positive and negative predictive value of FDG-PET for hypophysitis was 86% and 87%, respectively. Based on ROC analysis the optimal percentage change in SUVmax was 30% for distinguishing hypophysitis. PET-thyroiditis was detected in 30/134(22%) pts. The pre- and post-treatment SUVmax were 2.1 (IQR 1.7-2.3, range 1.3-3.3) and 4.8 (IQR 3.8-5.9, range 2.8-9.1), respectively, with an increase of 116% (IQR 84-177%, range 52-300%). Overall 41/134 (31%) pts had documented biochemical evidence of thyroiditis. The positive and negative predictive value of PET was 97% and 89%, respectively. Based on ROC analysis, the optimal percentage change in SUVmax for distinguishing thyroiditis was 42%. Further follow-up FDG-PET (30/39 pts with PET-hypophysitis and 25/30 pts with PET-thyroiditis) revealed resolution of SUVmax to baseline in all cases by a median of 104 days (IQR 77-133, range 40-484) and 32 days (IQR 79-194, range 49-1045), respectively. Conclusions: FDG-PET detects transient increases in FDG uptake in the pituitary and thyroid gland following combined ipilimumab/nivolumab which appears to be highly predictive of the development of these endocrinopathies, therefore prompting more stringent monitoring. A high incidence of uninterpretable biochemical assessment of the pituitary-adrenal axis likely contributed to the underestimation of hypophysitis incidence. A multimodality approach is important in the timely diagnosis of immune-related endocrinopathies.
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    The Role of 68Ga-DOTA-Octreotate PET/CT in Follow-Up of SDH-Associated Pheochromocytoma and Paraganglioma
    Kong, G ; Schenberg, T ; Yates, CJ ; Trainer, A ; Sachithanandan, N ; Iravani, A ; Ravi Kumar, A ; Hofman, MS ; Akhurst, T ; Michael, M ; Hicks, RJ (ENDOCRINE SOCIETY, 2019-11-01)
    Purpose: Germline succinate dehydrogenase (SDHx) mutation carriers, especially SDHB, are at increased risk for malignancy and require life-long surveillance. Current guidelines recommend periodic whole-body MRI imaging. We assessed the incremental value of 68Ga-DOTA-octreotate (GaTate) positron emission tomography (PET)/CT compared with conventional imaging in such patients. Methods: SDHx mutation carriers who had GaTate PET/CT were retrospectively reviewed. Detection of lesions were compared with MRI or CT on a per-patient and per-lesion basis. Proof of lesions were based on histopathology or clinical/imaging follow-up. Results: Twenty consecutive patients (median age, 46 years; 10 males) were reviewed. Fourteen patients had SDHB, four, SDHD, one SDHC, and one SDHA mutation. Fifteen had prior surgery and/or radiotherapy. Indications for PET/CT were as follows: 7 patients for surveillance for previously treated disease, 9 residual disease, 2 asymptomatic mutation carriers, and 2 for elevated catecholamines. Median time between modalities was 1.5 months. GaTate PET/CT had higher sensitivity and specificity than conventional imaging. On a per-patient basis: PET/CT sensitivity 100%, specificity 100%; MRI/CT 85% and 50%. Per-lesion basis: PET/CT sensitivity 100%, specificity 75%; MRI/CT 80% and 25%. PET/CT correctly identified additional small nodal and osseous lesions. MRI/CT had more false-positive findings. Change of management resulted in 40% (8/20 patients): 3 received localized treatment instead of observation, 1 changed to observation given extra disease detected, 4 with metastases had radionuclide therapy. Conclusions: GaTate PET/CT provided incremental diagnostic information with consequent management impact in SDHx-pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma. Incorporating this modality as part of a surveillance program seems prudent. Further research is needed to define the optimal surveillance strategy including use of MRI.
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    OR32-06 Opportunistic Assessment of Pituitary Gland with Routine MRI and PET/CT Can Guide in Earlier and Increased Identification of Hypophysitis in Patients Treated with Combination Checkpoint Inhibitors
    Galligan, A ; Iravani, A ; Lasocki, A ; Wallace, R ; Weppler, A ; Au-Yeung, G ; Sachithanandan, N ; Chiang, CY ; Wentworth, J ; Colman, PG ; Kay, TW ; Krishnamurthy, B ; Sandhu, S (The Endocrine Society, 2020-05-08)
    Abstract Background: Hypophysitis is one of the commonly reported adverse events related to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI), and the incidence is expected to rise with increased use of combined programmed cell death protein 1 (PD1) and cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated protein 4 (CTLA4) blockade. The clinical diagnosis can be delayed due to non-specific symptoms. At our centre, subjects undergo periodic imaging to assess tumour response to ICI. We reviewed whether neuroimaging studies can guide us in the diagnosis of hypophysitis and whether early changes can be detected before the onset of the clinical syndrome. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed the medical charts, biochemistry, structural brain imaging and whole-body positron emission tomography (PET) with specific reference to hypophysitis in 162 patients treated with combination ICI at a tertiary melanoma referral centre. Suspected cases were identified based on meeting one or more of the following criteria: 1) A documented diagnosis of hypophysitis or pituitary dysfunction found on chart review, 2) A relative change in pituitary size or appearance from baseline on neuroimaging studies, or 3) An increase in pituitary maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) greater than 25% from baseline on 18F-FDG PET. Results: 58/162 patients (36%) met criteria for suspected hypophysitis. Only 4 patients were identified on routine screening of early morning cortisol. 14 patients presented with symptoms leading to biochemical work up. A further 40 patients were found to have suspicious imaging changes, 13 of which went on to receive a formal diagnosis of hypophysitis. Of the remaining 27 patients, 23 were receiving high dose glucocorticoids for concomitant immune related adverse events at the time of the abnormal imaging study.Conclusion: We report the highest incidence to date of suspected hypophysitis in cohort of patients treated with combination ICI. This study highlights the important role of structural and functional neuroimaging in the early recognition of hypophysitis. Imaging may also play a role when the clinical syndrome is masked by concurrent glucocorticoid use.
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    Imaging for assessment of cancer treatment response to immune checkpoint inhibitors can be complementary in identifying hypophysitis
    Galligan, A ; Iravani, A ; Lasocki, A ; Wallace, R ; Weppler, AM ; Sachithanandan, N ; Chiang, C ; Colman, PG ; Wentworth, J ; Spain, L ; Au-Yeung, G ; Lee, B ; Kay, TWH ; Hicks, RJ ; Sandhu, S ; Krishnamurthy, B (FRONTIERS MEDIA SA, 2023-11-29)
    INTRODUCTION: Hypophysitis is reported in 8.5%-14% of patients receiving combination immune checkpoint inhibition (cICI) but can be a diagnostic challenge. This study aimed to assess the role of routine diagnostic imaging performed during therapeutic monitoring of combination anti-CTLA-4/anti-PD-1 treatment in the identification of hypophysitis and the relationship of imaging findings to clinical diagnostic criteria. METHODS: This retrospective cohort study identified patients treated with cICI between January 2016 and January 2019 at a quaternary melanoma service. Medical records were reviewed to identify patients with a documented diagnosis of hypophysitis based on clinical criteria. Available structural brain imaging with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computed tomography (CT) of the brain and 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-D-glucose positron emission tomography with computed tomography (FDG-PET/CT) were assessed retrospectively. The main radiological outcome measures were a relative change in pituitary size or FDG uptake temporally attributed to cICI. RESULTS: There were 162 patients (median age 60 years, 30% female) included. A total of 100 and 134 had serial CT/MRI of the brain and FDG-PET/CT, respectively. There were 31 patients who had a documented diagnosis of hypophysitis and an additional 20 who had isolated pituitary imaging findings. The pituitary gland enlargement was mild, and the largest absolute gland size was 13 mm, with a relative increase of 7 mm from baseline. There were no cases of optic chiasm compression. Pituitary enlargement and increased FDG uptake were universally transient. High-dose glucocorticoid treatment for concurrent irAEs prevented assessment of the pituitary-adrenal axis in 90% of patients with isolated imaging findings. CONCLUSION: Careful review of changes in pituitary characteristics on imaging performed for assessment of therapeutic response to iICI may lead to increased identification and more prompt management of cICI-induced hypophysitis.
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    Increased Thyroidal Activity on Routine FDG-PET/CT after Combination Immune Checkpoint Inhibition: Temporal Associations with Clinical and Biochemical Thyroiditis
    Galligan, A ; Wallace, R ; Krishnamurthy, B ; Kay, TWH ; Sachithanandan, N ; Chiang, C ; Sandhu, S ; Hicks, RJ ; Iravani, A (MDPI, 2023-12)
    BACKGROUND: FDG-PET/CT used for immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) response assessment can incidentally identify immune-related adverse events (irAEs), including thyroiditis. This study aimed to correlate the time course of FDG-PET/CT evidence of thyroiditis with clinical and biochemical evolution of thyroid dysfunction. METHODS: A retrospective review was performed by two independent blinded nuclear medicine physicians (NMPs) of thyroidal FDG uptake in 127 patients who underwent PET/CT between January 2016 and January 2019 at baseline and during treatment monitoring of combination ICI therapy for advanced melanoma. Interobserver agreement was assessed and FDG-PET/CT performance defined by a receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve using thyroid function tests (TFTs) as the standard of truth. Thyroid maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) and its temporal changes with respect to the longitudinal biochemistry were serially recorded. RESULTS: At a median of 3 weeks after commencing ICI, 43/127 (34%) had a diagnosis of thyroiditis established by abnormal TFTs. FDG-PET/CT was performed at baseline and at a median of 11 weeks (range 3-32) following the start of therapy. ROC analysis showed an area under the curve of 0.87 (95% CI 0.80, 0.94) for FDG-PET/CT for detection of thyroiditis with a positive predictive value of 93%. Among patients with biochemical evidence of thyroiditis, those with a positive FDG-PET/CT were more likely to develop overt hypothyroidism (77% versus 35%, p < 0.01). In the evaluation of the index test, there was an almost perfect interobserver agreement between NMPs of 93.7% (95% CI 89.4-98.0), kappa 0.83. CONCLUSION: Increased metabolic activity of the thyroid on routine FDG-PET/CT performed for tumoral response of patients undergoing ICI therapy is generally detected well after routine biochemical diagnosis. Elevation of FDG uptake in the thyroid is predictive of overt clinical hypothyroidism and suggests that an ongoing robust inflammatory response beyond the initial thyrotoxic phase may be indicative of thyroid destruction.
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    Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists in the perioperative period: to cease or not to cease?
    Martis, WR ; Sachithanandan, N ; Chiang, C ; Riedel, B (WILEY, 2024-04)
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    Potentially modifiable dementia risk factors in all Australians and within population groups: an analysis using cross-sectional survey data
    See, RS ; Thompson, F ; Russell, S ; Quigley, R ; Esterman, A ; Harriss, LR ; Hyde, Z ; Taylor, S ; Radford, K ; LoGiudice, D ; McDermott, R ; Livingston, G ; Strivens, E (ELSEVIER SCI LTD, 2023-09)
    BACKGROUND: Dementia is the second leading cause of disease burden in Australia. We aimed to calculate the population attributable fractions (PAFs) of dementia attributable to 11 of 12 previously identified potentially modifiable health and social risk factors (less education, hearing loss, hypertension, obesity, smoking, depression, social isolation, physical inactivity, diabetes, alcohol excess, air pollution, and traumatic brain injury), for Australians overall and three population groups (First Nations, and those of European and Asian ancestry). METHODS: We calculated the prevalence of dementia risk factors (excluding traumatic brain injury) and PAFs, adjusted for communality, from the cross-sectional National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Survey (2018-19), National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Social Survey (2014-15), National Health Survey (2017-18), and General Social Survey (2014) conducted by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. We conducted sensitivity analyses using proxy estimates for traumatic brain injury (12th known risk factor) for which national data were not available. FINDINGS: A large proportion (38·2%, 95% CI 37·2-39·2) of dementia in Australia was theoretically attributable to the 11 risk factors; 44·9% (43·1-46·7) for First Nations Australians, 36·4% (34·8-38·1) for European ancestry, and 33·6% (30·1-37·2) for Asian ancestry. Including traumatic brain injury increased the PAF to 40·6% (39·6-41·6) for all Australians. Physical inactivity (8·3%, 7·5-9·2), hearing loss (7·0%, 6·4-7·6), and obesity (6·6%, 6·0-7·3) accounted for approximately half of the total PAF estimates across Australia, and for all three population groups. INTERPRETATION: Our PAF estimates indicate a substantial proportion of dementia in Australia is potentially preventable, which is broadly consistent with global trends and results from other countries. The highest potential for dementia prevention was among First Nations Australians, reflecting the enduring effect of upstream social, political, environmental, and economic disadvantage, leading to greater life-course exposure to dementia risk factors. Although there were common dementia risk factors across different population groups, prevention strategies should be informed by community consultation and be culturally and linguistically appropriate. FUNDING: Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and University College London Hospitals' National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre, and North Thames NIHR Applied Research Collaboration.
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    ERG and c-MYC regulate a critical gene network in BCR::ABL1-driven B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia
    Behrens, K ; Brajanovski, N ; Xu, Z ; Viney, EM ; Dirago, L ; Hediyeh-Zadeh, S ; Davis, MJ ; Pearson, RB ; Sanij, E ; Alexander, WS ; Ng, AP (AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE, 2024-03-08)
    Philadelphia chromosome-positive B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), characterized by the BCR::ABL1 fusion gene, remains a poor prognosis cancer needing new therapeutic approaches. Transcriptomic profiling identified up-regulation of oncogenic transcription factors ERG and c-MYC in BCR::ABL1 B-ALL with ERG and c-MYC required for BCR::ABL1 B-ALL in murine and human models. Profiling of ERG- and c-MYC-dependent gene expression and analysis of ChIP-seq data established ERG and c-MYC coordinate a regulatory network in BCR::ABL1 B-ALL that controls expression of genes involved in several biological processes. Prominent was control of ribosome biogenesis, including expression of RNA polymerase I (POL I) subunits, the importance of which was validated by inhibition of BCR::ABL1 cells by POL I inhibitors, including CX-5461, that prevents promoter recruitment and transcription initiation by POL I. Our results reveal an essential ERG- and c-MYC-dependent transcriptional network involved in regulation of metabolic and ribosome biogenesis pathways in BCR::ABL1 B-ALL, from which previously unidentified vulnerabilities and therapeutic targets may emerge.