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Meri‐Sisko Vuoristo

Tampere University Hospital

Publishes on Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers, Melanoma and MAPK Pathways, Cutaneous Melanoma Detection and Management. 21 papers and 412 citations.

21Publications
412Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

High Serum Levels of Matrix Metalloproteinase-9 and Matrix Metalloproteinase-1 Are Associated with Rapid Progression in Patients with Metastatic Melanoma
Johanna Nikkola, Pia Vihinen, Meri‐Sisko Vuoristo et al.|Clinical Cancer Research|2005
Cited by 196Open Access

PURPOSE: Matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) are proteolytic enzymes that play an important role in various aspects of cancer progression. In the present work, we have studied the prognostic significance of serum levels of gelatinase B (MMP-9), collagenase-1 (MMP-1), and collagenase-3 (MMP-13) in patients with advanced melanoma. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Total pretreatment serum levels of MMP-9 in 71 patients and MMP-1 and MMP-13 in 48 patients were determined by an assay system based on ELISA. Total MMP levels were also assessed in eight healthy controls. The active and latent forms of MMPs were defined by using Western blot analysis and gelatin zymography. RESULTS: Patients with high serum levels of MMP-9 (> or = 376.6 ng/mL; n = 19) had significantly poorer overall survival (OS) than patients with lower serum MMP-9 levels (n = 52; median OS, 29.1 versus 45.2 months; P = 0.033). High MMP-9 levels were also associated with visceral or bone metastasis (P = 0.027), elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level (P = 0.0009), and presence of liver metastases (P = 0.032). Serum levels of MMP-1 and MMP-13 did not correlate with OS. MMP-1 and MMP-9 were found mainly in latent forms in serum, whereas the majority of MMP-13 in serum was active (48 kDa) form. MMP-13 was found more often in active form in patients (mean, 99% of the total MMP-13 level) than in controls (mean, 84% of the total MMP-13 level; P < 0.0001). After initiating the therapy, patients with elevated levels of MMP-1 (> or = 29.8 ng/mL, n = 10) progressed more rapidly than patients with lower levels (median, 1.9 versus 3.5 months; P = 0.023). Serum levels of MMP-9 and MMP-13 did not correlate with the time to progression (TTP). In multivariate analysis with age and gender, MMP-9 or MMP-1 turned out to be independent prognostic factors for OS [P = 0.039; hazard ratio (HR), 1.8; 95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.03-3.3] or TTP (P = 0.023; HR, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.15-6.4), respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide evidence that MMP-1, MMP-9, and MMP-13 play important roles at different phases of metastatic melanoma spread and that serum MMP-9, in particular, could have clinical value in identifying patients at high risk for melanoma progression.

A phase II trial of bevacizumab with dacarbazine and daily low-dose interferon-α2a as first line treatment in metastatic melanoma
Pia Vihinen, Micaela Hernberg, Meri‐Sisko Vuoristo et al.|Melanoma Research|2010
Cited by 56

Metastatic melanomas are hypervascular tumours with poor prognosis. We hypothesized that treatment of metastatic melanoma with a combination of bevacizumab, a monoclonal antibody against vascular endothelial growth factor, dacarbazine (DTIC) and low-dose interferon alpha-2a (IFN-alpha2a) might lead to a synergistic inhibition of angiogenesis and regression of tumours. Patients with metastatic melanoma were treated with bevacizumab (5 mg/kg every 2 weeks), DTIC (200 mg/m days 1-5 every 4 weeks) and IFN-alpha2a (three MIU subcutaneously daily from day 15 onwards). Patients exhibiting response or stable disease after 6 months were treated with bevacizumab+/-IFN-alpha2a until disease progression. The primary study objectives were progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival and safety. Twenty-six patients were accrued. Response rate was 23% (two complete responses, four partial responses), and six patients showed stable disease. The median PFS for all patients was 2.3 months and for responders 8.1 months. The median overall survival for all patients was 11.5 months. Four life-threatening adverse events were seen: two pulmonary thromboembolisms, an intracerebral haemorrhage, and one grade 4 hypertension. One of the pulmonary emboli and the intracerebral haemorrhage were observed > or =3 months after the last bevacizumab-DTIC dose. Serum matrix metalloproteinase-9 and vascular endothelial growth factor levels changed during therapy. There was a trend towards favourable PFS among patients with only minimal or moderate change in these marker expression levels. The present regimen was active in this patient group but was also associated with remarkable vascular events.

Randomized trial of dacarbazine versus bleomycin, vincristine, lomustine and dacarbazine (BOLD) chemotherapy combined with natural or recombinant interferon-?? in patients with advanced melanoma
Cited by 34

This randomized phase II study was designed to compare the efficacy and tolerability of dacarbazine (DTIC) and bleomycin, vincristine, lomustine and DTIC (BOLD) combined with natural interferon-alpha (nIFN-alpha) or recombinant interferon-alpha2b (rIFN-alpha2b) in patients with advanced melanoma. The treatment arms were: A, DTIC plus nIFN-alpha; B, BOLD plus nIFN-alpha; C, DTIC plus rIFN-alpha2b; D, BOLD plus rIFN-alpha2b. One hundred and eight patients were randomized, of whom 106 were eligible to be analysed for efficacy. Overall, 56% of patients had abdominal visceral and/or bone involvement. The response rates were 8% (2/25) in arm A, 13% (4/31) in arm B, 12% (3/25) in arm C and 24% (6/25) in arm D. The differences were not statistically significant by the usual chi-squared test. However, when analysed using the Cochran-Armitage trend test, the one-sided P values were close to significant (0.085 and 0.033). All of the eight complete responses occurred in patients with soft tissue and/or lung metastases and the BOLD regimens produced six of them. There were no significant differences in survival (arm A, 11.1 months; arm B, 9.8 months; arm C, 9.1 months; arm D, 7.5 months; P=0.62). BOLD was more toxic than DTIC. With the present sample size, there were no statistically significant differences in efficacy between the arms, but there was a trend towards a higher response rate with BOLD plus rIFN-alpha2b. Patients with soft tissue or lung metastases may achieve more complete responses with BOLD regimens.

Serum VEGF-C is associated with metastatic site in patients with malignant melanoma
Pia Vihinen, Johanna Hilli, Meri‐Sisko Vuoristo et al.|Acta Oncologica|2006
Cited by 31Open Access

Vascular endothelial growth factor-C (VEGF-C) is involved in lymphatic metastatic spread. Metastatic site is a prognostic factor in melanoma. We assessed whether serum levels of VEGF-C are associated with metastatic sites or prognosis in patients treated for stage IV melanoma. The study included 64 patients, who received dacarbazine or four-drug chemotherapy (dacarbazine, vincristine, bleomycin and lomustine; BOLD) both combined with interferon-alfa. Serum samples for VEGF-C were analyzed by ELISA. The patients (n =22) with only skin and subcutaneous metastases had significantly lower mean VEGF-C levels (1 643 pg/ml) then the patients (n =42) with other distant metastases (2 584 pg/ml, Mann-Whitney, p =0.033). VEGF-C levels above the median (1 590 pg/ml) were significantly related to deep lymph node involvement (OR 3.763; 95% CI 1.038 - 13.646, p =0.034). There were no other significant associations between VEGF-C levels and tumour burden, nor were the levels significantly related to the response to therapy or survival. Those eight patients, who had received previous adjuvant IFN-alfa therapy had lower mean VEGF-C levels (1 738 pg/ml) as compared to those 56 patients without previous IFN-alfa therapy (2 335 pg/ml, ANOVA, p =0.026). This is the first study exploring serum VEGF-C in melanoma. VEGF-C might be involved in the deep lymphatic dissemination and progression of melanoma metastasis.