Literature DB >> 15756056

Nucleosomes in pancreatic cancer patients during radiochemotherapy.

Andreas Kremer1, Ralf Wilkowski, Stefan Holdenrieder, Dorothea Nagel, Petra Stieber, Dietrich Seidel.   

Abstract

Nucleosomes appear spontaneously in elevated concentrations in the serum of patients with malignant diseases as well as during chemo- and radiotherapy. We analyzed whether their kinetics show typical characteristics during radiochemotherapy and enable an early estimation of therapy efficacy. We used the Cell Death Detection Elisa plus (Roche Diagnostics) and investigated the course of nucleosomes in the serum of 32 patients with a local stage of pancreatic cancer who were treated with radiochemotherapy for several weeks. Ten of them received postsurgical therapy, 21 received primary therapy and 1 received therapy for local relapse. Blood was taken before the beginning of therapy, daily during the first week, once weekly during the following weeks and at the end of radiochemotherapy. The response to therapy was defined according to the kinetics of CA 19-9: a decrease of CA 19-9 > or =50% after radiochemotherapy was considered as 'remission'; an increase of > or =100% (which was confirmed by two following values) was defined as 'progression'. Patients with 'stable disease' ranged intermediately. Most of the examined patients showed a decrease of the concentration of nucleosomes within 6 h after the first dose of radiation. Afterwards, nucleosome levels increased rapidly, reaching their maximum during the following days. Patients receiving postsurgery, primary or relapse therapies did not show significant differences in nucleosome values during the time of treatment. Single nucleosome values, measured at 6, 24 and 48 h after the application of therapy, could not discriminate significantly between patients with no progression and those with progression of disease. However, the area under the curve of the first 3 days, which integrated all variables of the initial therapeutic phase, showed a significant correlation with the progression-free interval (p=0.008). Our results indicate that the area under the curve of nucleosomes during the initial phase of radiochemotherapy could be valuable for the early prediction of the progression-free interval.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15756056     DOI: 10.1159/000084339

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tumour Biol        ISSN: 1010-4283


  12 in total

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2.  Combination of SELDI-TOF-MS and data mining provides early-stage response prediction for rectal tumors undergoing multimodal neoadjuvant therapy.

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Review 3.  Role of Circulating Cell-Free DNA in Cancers.

Authors:  Raghu Aarthy; Samson Mani; Sridevi Velusami; Shirley Sundarsingh; Thangarajan Rajkumar
Journal:  Mol Diagn Ther       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 4.074

4.  Circulating immunogenic cell death biomarkers HMGB1 and RAGE in breast cancer patients during neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  Oliver J Stoetzer; Debora M I Fersching; Christoph Salat; Oliver Steinkohl; Christian J Gabka; Ulrich Hamann; Michael Braun; Axel-Mario Feller; Volker Heinemann; Barbara Siegele; Dorothea Nagel; Stefan Holdenrieder
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2012-09-15

5.  Circulating nucleic acids damage DNA of healthy cells by integrating into their genomes.

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Journal:  J Biosci       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 1.826

6.  Relevance of circulating nucleosomes and oncological biomarkers for predicting response to transarterial chemoembolization therapy in liver cancer patients.

Authors:  Nikolaus Kohles; Dorothea Nagel; Dietrich Jüngst; Jürgen Durner; Petra Stieber; Stefan Holdenrieder
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7.  Predictive and prognostic value of circulating nucleosomes and serum biomarkers in patients with metastasized colorectal cancer undergoing Selective Internal Radiation Therapy.

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Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2012-01-04       Impact factor: 4.430

8.  Early prediction of therapy response in patients with acute myeloid leukemia by nucleosomal DNA fragments.

Authors:  Susanne Mueller; Stefan Holdenrieder; Petra Stieber; Torsten Haferlach; Andreas Schalhorn; Jan Braess; Dorothea Nagel; Dietrich Seidel
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2006-05-30       Impact factor: 4.430

Review 9.  Release and activity of histone in diseases.

Authors:  R Chen; R Kang; X-G Fan; D Tang
Journal:  Cell Death Dis       Date:  2014-08-14       Impact factor: 8.469

10.  Circulating nucleosomes as epigenetic biomarkers in pancreatic cancer.

Authors:  Monika Bauden; Dorian Pamart; Daniel Ansari; Marielle Herzog; Mark Eccleston; Jake Micallef; Bodil Andersson; Roland Andersson
Journal:  Clin Epigenetics       Date:  2015-10-07       Impact factor: 6.551

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