
Sunita D. Nasta
· MD, FACPVerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 2002–2024
Research topics
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Cancer research
- Immunology
- Oncology
- Surgery
- Gastroenterology
Selected publications
T cell lymphoma and secondary primary malignancy risk after commercial CAR T cell therapy
Nature Medicine · 2024 · 250 citations
- Medicine
- Oncology
- Internal medicine
ONCOLOGY · 2022 · 8 citations
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Gastroenterology
A Mexican woman, aged 60 years, presented with fevers and abdominal pain. She had initially presented to an outside emergency department with weakness, malaise, nausea, vomiting, tachycardia to 110s, and fever to 102 °F. Her medical history was relevant for hypertension, prediabetes, and tobacco use (4-5 cigarettes/day for 12 years). There was no significant family history. Pertinent labs included hemoglobin 8.0 g/dL, white blood cells 13.1 × 109/L, absolute neutrophil count 10.2 × 109/L, creatinine 1.3 mg/dL, calcium 9.2 mg/dL, and lactate dehydrogenase 682 U/L. Initial imaging showed a large 14-cm right renal mass, with tumor in vein in the right renal vein and inferior vena cava, and extensive bilateral pulmonary emboli. A pulmonary thrombectomy was performed, with pathology on the right lung thrombus consistent with metastatic clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC), cT4N0M1, categorized as intermediate risk per the International Metastatic RCC Database Consortium.
Blood Advances · 2020 · 206 citations
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
Castleman disease (CD) includes a group of rare and heterogeneous disorders with characteristic lymph node histopathological abnormalities. CD can occur in a single lymph node station, which is referred to as unicentric CD (UCD). CD can also involve multicentric lymphadenopathy and inflammatory symptoms (multicentric CD [MCD]). MCD includes human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8)-associated MCD, POEMS-associated MCD, and HHV-8-/idiopathic MCD (iMCD). The first-ever diagnostic and treatment guidelines were recently developed for iMCD by an international expert consortium convened by the Castleman Disease Collaborative Network (CDCN). The focus of this report is to establish similar guidelines for the management of UCD. To this purpose, an international working group of 42 experts from 10 countries was convened to establish consensus recommendations based on review of treatment in published cases of UCD, the CDCN ACCELERATE registry, and expert opinion. Complete surgical resection is often curative and is therefore the preferred first-line therapy, if possible. The management of unresectable UCD is more challenging. Existing evidence supports that asymptomatic unresectable UCD may be observed. The anti-interleukin-6 monoclonal antibody siltuximab should be considered for unresectable UCD patients with an inflammatory syndrome. Unresectable UCD that is symptomatic as a result of compression of vital neighboring structures may be rendered amenable to resection by medical therapy (eg, rituximab, steroids), radiotherapy, or embolization. Further research is needed in UCD patients with persisting constitutional symptoms despite complete excision and normal laboratory markers. We hope that these guidelines will improve outcomes in UCD and help treating physicians decide the best therapeutic approach for their patients.
Recent grants
Radiobiology and Imaging Program
NIH · $93.0M · 1997–2027
Frequent coauthors
- 604 shared
Stephen J. Schuster
University of Pennsylvania
- 501 shared
Jakub Svoboda
University of Pennsylvania
- 424 shared
Daniel J. Landsburg
- 419 shared
Elise A. Chong
Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
- 212 shared
Anthony R. Mato
- 210 shared
Stefan K. Barta
- 149 shared
James N. Gerson
University of Pennsylvania
- 125 shared
Carl H. June
Parker Institute for Cancer Immunotherapy
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