We undertook a Phase I/II trial in patients with apparent recurrent glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) based on imaging studies to determine the safety and tumor response of repetitive intravenous administration of NDV-HUJ, the oncolytic HUJ strain of Newcastle disease virus. The first part of the study utilized an accelerated intrapatient dose-escalation protocol with one-cycle dosage steps of 0.1, 0.32, 0.93, 5.9, and 11 billion infectious units (BIU) of NDV-HUJ (1 BIU = 1 x 10(9) EID(50) 50% egg infectious dose) followed by three cycles of 55 BIU. Virus was administered by intravenous infusion over 15 min. In the second part, patients received three cycles of 11 BIU. All patients without progressive disease were maintained with two doses of 11 BIU iv weekly. Eleven of the 14 enrolled patients (11-58 years, Karnofsky performance scale 50-90%) received treatment. Toxicity was minimal with Grade I/II constitutional fever being seen in 5 patients. Maximum tolerated dose was not achieved. Anti-NDV hemagglutinin antibodies appeared within 5-29 days. NDV-HUJ was recovered from blood, saliva, and urine samples and one tumor biopsy. One patient achieved a complete response. Intravenous NDV-HUJ is well tolerated. The findings of good tolerability and encouraging responses warrant the continued evaluation of NDV-HUJ in GBM, as well as other cancers.
A comprehensive multicompartmental analysis of HCO-3 kinetics was carried out on five normal, resting, fasted adults on three separate occasions at 1-wk to 1-mo intervals to obtain a set of bicarbonate kinetic parameters and estimates of their inter- and intraindividual variations for use in the design and analysis of future nutrient oxidation studies. Following a rapid bolus of NaH13CO3 (10 mumol . kg-1 iv), the decay of 13C enrichment of breath CO2 could be described by a three-exponential decay process and a linearly time-dependent term that accounted for changes in the 13C enrichment of metabolic fuels. The data were fitted subsequently to a mammillary multicompartmental model that consisted of a central pool and two peripheral pools of 3,310, 3,490, and 8,070 mumol . kg-1 HCO-3-CO2. Labeled CO2 was eliminated from the central pool by respiratory and nonrespiratory routes at rates of 101 and 97 mumol . kg-1 . min-1, respectively. The within-subject and among-subject variances were similar for the amount of freely exchangeable bicarbonate (14,870 mumol . kg-1), CO2 output (101 mumol . kg-1 . min-1), bicarbonate flux (198 mumol . kg-1 . min-1), and the fraction of administered bicarbonate recovered in breath (0.51). Comparison of variances associated with the assignment of a population mean value to a new subject and the variance associated with the use of a value obtained in the same individual on another day indicated that there was no advantage to making a determination on an alternate day over using a population value. Efforts should be made to compile population values for bicarbonate kinetics in different age groups and metabolic, nutritional, and pathological states for use in interpretation of nutrient oxidation data.
The data demonstrate an excellent sensitivity (100%) of the FFS values in patients with uncomplicated fatty infiltration. This was also the only group of patients in whom the FFS score was superior to the radiologists' best score. The FFS method can be used as a tool to follow up the response to a clinical or research treatment and to obtain standardization of pattern interpretation independently of the individual reader.
PurposeRetinal pigment epithelium (RPE) dysfunction underlies the retinal degenerative process in age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and thus RPE cell replacement provides an optimal treatment target. We characterized longitudinally the efficacy of RPE cells derived under xeno-free conditions from clinical and xeno-free grade human embryonic stem cells (OpRegen) following transplantation into the subretinal space of Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rats.MethodsPostnatal (P) day 20 to 25 RCS rats (n = 242) received a single subretinal injection of 25,000 (low)-, 100,000 (mid)-, or 200,000 (high)-dose xeno-free RPE cells. BSS+ (balanced salt solution) (vehicle) and unoperated eyes served as controls. Optomotor tracking (OKT) behavior was used to quantify functional efficacy. Histology and immunohistochemistry were used to evaluate photoreceptor rescue and transplanted cell survival at 60, 100, 150, and 200 days of age.ResultsOKT was rescued in a dose-dependent manner. Outer nuclear layer (ONL) was significantly thicker in cell-treated eyes than controls up to P150. Transplanted RPE cells were identified in both the subretinal space and integrated into the host RPE monolayer in animals of all age groups, and often contained internalized photoreceptor outer segments. No pathology was observed.ConclusionsOpRegen RPE cells survived, rescued visual function, preserved rod and cone photoreceptors long-term in the RCS rat. Thus, these data support the use of OpRegen RPE cells for the treatment of human RPE cell disorders including AMD.Translational RelevanceOur novel xeno-free RPE cells minimize concerns of animal derived contaminants while providing a promising prospective therapy to the diseased retina.
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