Investigator

Daniel Schmolze

Assistant Clinical Professor · City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center, Pathology

DSDaniel Schmolze
Papers(1)
Hyperthermic Intraper…
Collaborators(10)
Ernest HanHyejin ChoLorna Rodirguez-Rodri…Marianne RazaviMark T. WakabayashiMehdi KebriaMustafa RaoofPeter LeeThanh H. DellingerWinnie S. Liang
Institutions(4)
City Of Hope National…City of HopeCity Of HopeTranslational Genomic…

Papers

Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy–Induced Molecular Changes in Humans Validate Preclinical Data in Ovarian Cancer

PURPOSE Hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) confers a survival benefit in epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and in preclinical models. However, the molecular changes induced by HIPEC have not been corroborated in humans. PATIENTS AND METHODS A feasibility trial evaluated clinical and safety outcomes of HIPEC with cisplatin during optimal cytoreductive surgery (CRS) in patients with EOC diagnosed with stage III, IV, or recurrent EOC. Pre- and post-HIPEC biopsies were comprehensively profiled with genomic and transcriptomic sequencing to identify mutational and RNAseq signatures correlating with response; the tumor microenvironment was profiled to identify potential immune biomarkers; and transcriptional signatures of tumors and normal samples before and after HIPEC were compared to investigate HIPEC-induced acute transcriptional changes. RESULTS Thirty-five patients had HIPEC at the time of optimal CRS; all patients had optimal CRS. The median progression-free survival (PFS) was 24.7 months for primary patients and 22.4 for recurrent patients. There were no grade 4 or 5 adverse events. Anemia was the most common grade 3 adverse event (43%). Hierarchical cluster analyses identified distinct transcriptomic signatures of good versus poor responders to HIPEC correlating with a PFS of 29.9 versus 7.3 months, respectively. Among good responders, significant HIPEC-induced molecular changes included immune pathway upregulation and DNA repair pathway downregulation. Within cancer islands, % programmed cell death protein 1 expression in CD8+ T cells significantly increased after HIPEC. An exceptional responder (PFS 58 months) demonstrated the highest programmed cell death protein 1 increase. Heat shock proteins comprised the top differentially upregulated genes in HIPEC-treated tumors. CONCLUSION Distinct transcriptomic signatures identify responders to HIPEC, and preclinical model findings are confirmed for the first time in a human cohort.

52Works
1Papers
10Collaborators
1Trials

Positions

2016–

Assistant Clinical Professor

City of Hope Comprehensive Cancer Center · Pathology

2002–

Software Engineer

Jackson Laboratory

Education

2016

Breast Pathology Fellowship

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center · Pathology

2015

Residency

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center · Pathology

2011

M.D.

UMass Memorial Medical Center Memorial Campus

2004

University at Buffalo - The State University of New York

2002

B.S.

Rochester Institute of Technology · Information Technology