A Gentry-Maharaj
University College London
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Featured researches published by A Gentry-Maharaj.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2012
Hunter; A Gentry-Maharaj; Andrew M. Ryan; Matthew Burnell; Anne Lanceley; Lindsay Fraser; Ian Jacobs; Usha Menon
Please cite this paper as: Hunter M, Gentry‐Maharaj A, Ryan A, Burnell M, Lanceley A, Fraser L, Jacobs I, Menon U. Prevalence, frequency and problem rating of hot flushes persist in older postmenopausal women: impact of age, body mass index, hysterectomy, hormone therapy use, lifestyle and mood in a cross‐sectional cohort study of 10 418 British women aged 54–65. BJOG 2012;119:40–50.
British Journal of Cancer | 2013
Johannes W. Pedersen; A Gentry-Maharaj; Evangelia-Ourania Fourkala; Anne Dawnay; Matthew Burnell; Alexey Zaikin; Anders Elm Pedersen; Ian Jacobs; Usha Menon; Hans H. Wandall
Background:Recent reports from cancer screening trials in high-risk populations suggest that autoantibodies can be detected before clinical diagnosis. However, there is minimal data on the role of autoantibody signatures in cancer screening in the general population.Methods:Informative p53 peptides were identified in sera from patients with colorectal cancer using an autoantibody microarray with 15-mer overlapping peptides covering the complete p53 sequence. The selected peptides were evaluated in a blinded case–control study using stored serum from the multimodal arm of the United Kingdom Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening where women gave annual blood samples. Cases were postmenopausal women who developed colorectal cancer following recruitment, with 2 or more serum samples preceding diagnosis. Controls were age-matched women with no history of cancer.Results:The 50 640 women randomised to the multimodal group were followed up for a median of 6.8 (inter-quartile range 5.9–8.4) years. Colorectal cancer notification was received in 101 women with serial samples of whom 97 (297 samples) had given consent for secondary studies. They were matched 1 : 1 with 97 controls (296 serial samples). The four most informative peptides identified 25.8% of colorectal cancer patients with a specificity of 95%. The median lead time was 1.4 (range 0.12–3.8) years before clinical diagnosis.Conclusion:Our findings suggest that in the general population, autoantibody signatures are detectable during preclinical disease and may be of value in cancer screening. In colorectal cancer screening in particular, where the current need is to improve compliance, it suggests that p53 autoantibodies may contribute towards risk stratification.
British Journal of Cancer | 2009
Celeste Leigh Pearce; Aimee M. Near; D. J. Van Den Berg; Susan J. Ramus; A Gentry-Maharaj; Usha Menon; Simon A. Gayther; A. R. Anderson; Christopher K. Edlund; A. H. Wu; Xiaoqing Chen; Jonathan Beesley; Penelope M. Webb; Sarah K. Holt; Chu Chen; Jennifer A. Doherty; Mary Anne Rossing; Alice S. Whittemore; Valerie McGuire; Richard A. DiCioccio; Marc T. Goodman; Galina Lurie; Michael E. Carney; Lynne R. Wilkens; Roberta B. Ness; Kirsten B. Moysich; Robert P. Edwards; E. Jennison; Sk Kjaer; Estrid Høgdall
The search for genetic variants associated with ovarian cancer risk has focused on pathways including sex steroid hormones, DNA repair, and cell cycle control. The Ovarian Cancer Association Consortium (OCAC) identified 10 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in genes in these pathways, which had been genotyped by Consortium members and a pooled analysis of these data was conducted. Three of the 10 SNPs showed evidence of an association with ovarian cancer at P⩽0.10 in a log-additive model: rs2740574 in CYP3A4 (P=0.011), rs1805386 in LIG4 (P=0.007), and rs3218536 in XRCC2 (P=0.095). Additional genotyping in other OCAC studies was undertaken and only the variant in CYP3A4, rs2740574, continued to show an association in the replication data among homozygous carriers: ORhomozygous(hom)=2.50 (95% CI 0.54-11.57, P=0.24) with 1406 cases and 2827 controls. Overall, in the combined data the odds ratio was 2.81 among carriers of two copies of the minor allele (95% CI 1.20–6.56, P=0.017, phet across studies=0.42) with 1969 cases and 3491 controls. There was no association among heterozygous carriers. CYP3A4 encodes a key enzyme in oestrogen metabolism and our finding between rs2740574 and risk of ovarian cancer suggests that this pathway may be involved in ovarian carcinogenesis. Additional follow-up is warranted.
Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2012
Aarti Sharma; Sophia Apostolidou; Matthew Burnell; Stewart Campbell; Mariam Habib; A Gentry-Maharaj; Nazar Najib Amso; Mourad W. Seif; Gwendolen Fletcher; N. Singh; Elizabeth Benjamin; Carol Brunell; Gill Turner; Rani Rangar; Keith M. Godfrey; David H. Oram; Jonathan Herod; Karin Williamson; Howard Jenkins; Tim Mould; Robert Woolas; John Murdoch; Stephen Dobbs; Simon Leeson; Derek Cruickshank; Evangelia-Ourania Fourkala; Andrew M. Ryan; M. Parmar; Ian Jacobs; Usha Menon
To estimate the risk of primary epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) and slow growing borderline or Type I and aggressive Type II EOC in postmenopausal women with adnexal abnormalities on ultrasound.
British Journal of Cancer | 2013
Brian Burford; A Gentry-Maharaj; Rosalind Graham; Diane S. Allen; Johannes W. Pedersen; A S Nudelman; Ola Blixt; Evangelia-Ourania Fourkala; D Bueti; Anne Dawnay; Jeremy Ford; R Desai; Leonor David; P Trinder; Bruce Acres; T Schwientek; Alexander Gammerman; Celso A. Reis; Luis F. Santos Silva; Hugo Osório; Rachel Hallett; Hans H. Wandall; Ulla Mandel; Michael A. Hollingsworth; Ian Jacobs; Ian S. Fentiman; Henrik Clausen; Joyce Taylor-Papadimitriou; Usha Menon; Joy Burchell
Background:Autoantibodies have been detected in sera before diagnosis of cancer leading to interest in their potential as screening/early detection biomarkers. As we have found autoantibodies to MUC1 glycopeptides to be elevated in early-stage breast cancer patients, in this study we analysed these autoantibodies in large population cohorts of sera taken before cancer diagnosis.Methods:Serum samples from women who subsequently developed breast cancer, and aged-matched controls, were identified from UK Collaborative Trial of Ovarian Cancer Screening (UKCTOCS) and Guernsey serum banks to formed discovery and validation sets. These were screened on a microarray platform of 60mer MUC1 glycopeptides and recombinant MUC1 containing 16 tandem repeats. Additional case–control sets comprised of women who subsequently developed ovarian, pancreatic and lung cancer were also screened on the arrays.Results:In the discovery (273 cases, 273 controls) and the two validation sets (UKCTOCS 426 cases, 426 controls; Guernsey 303 cases and 606 controls), no differences were found in autoantibody reactivity to MUC1 tandem repeat peptide or glycoforms between cases and controls. Furthermore, no differences were observed between ovarian, pancreatic and lung cancer cases and controls.Conclusion:This robust, validated study shows autoantibodies to MUC1 peptide or glycopeptides cannot be used for breast, ovarian, lung or pancreatic cancer screening. This has significant implications for research on the use of MUC1 in cancer detection.
British Journal of Cancer | 2009
Julie M. Cunningham; Robert A. Vierkant; Tom Sellers; Catherine M. Phelan; David N. Rider; Mark Liebow; Joellen M. Schildkraut; Andrew Berchuck; Fergus J. Couch; Xianshu Wang; Brooke L. Fridley; A Gentry-Maharaj; Usha Menon; Estrid Høgdall; Sk Kjaer; Alice S. Whittemore; Richard A. DiCioccio; Honglin Song; Simon A. Gayther; Susan J. Ramus; P. D. P. Pharaoh; Ellen L. Goode
Background:Dysregulation of the cell cycle is a hallmark of many cancers including ovarian cancer, a leading cause of gynaecologic cancer mortality worldwide.Methods:We examined single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (n=288) from 39 cell cycle regulation genes, including cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) and CDK inhibitors, in a two-stage study. White, non-Hispanic cases (n=829) and ovarian cancer-free controls (n=941) were genotyped using an Illumina assay.Results:Eleven variants in nine genes (ABL1, CCNB2, CDKN1A, CCND3, E2F2, CDK2, E2F3, CDC2, and CDK7) were associated with risk of ovarian cancer in at least one genetic model. Seven SNPs were then assessed in four additional studies with 1689 cases and 3398 controls. Association between risk of ovarian cancer and ABL1 rs2855192 found in the original population [odds ratio, ORBB vs AA 2.81 (1.29–6.09), P=0.01] was also observed in a replication population, and the association remained suggestive in the combined analysis [ORBB vs AA 1.59 (1.08–2.34), P=0.02]. No other SNP associations remained suggestive in the replication populations.Conclusion:ABL1 has been implicated in multiple processes including cell division, cell adhesion and cellular stress response. These results suggest that characterization of the function of genetic variation in this gene in other ovarian cancer populations is warranted.
British Journal of Cancer | 2009
Lydia Quaye; Honglin Song; Susan J. Ramus; A Gentry-Maharaj; Estrid Høgdall; Richard A. DiCioccio; Valerie McGuire; A. H. Wu; D. J. Van Den Berg; Malcolm C. Pike; Eva Wozniak; Jennifer A. Doherty; Mary Anne Rossing; Roberta B. Ness; Kirsten B. Moysich; Claus Høgdall; Jan Blaakær; Doug Easton; B A J Ponder; Ian Jacobs; Usha Menon; Alice S. Whittemore; Susanne Kruger-Kjaer; Celeste Leigh Pearce; Paul Pharoah; Simon A. Gayther
Low–moderate risk alleles that are relatively common in the population may explain a significant proportion of the excess familial risk of ovarian cancer (OC) not attributed to highly penetrant genes. In this study, we evaluated the risks of OC associated with common germline variants in five oncogenes (BRAF, ERBB2, KRAS, NMI and PIK3CA) known to be involved in OC development. Thirty-four tagging SNPs in these genes were genotyped in ∼1800 invasive OC cases and 3000 controls from population-based studies in Denmark, the United Kingdom and the United States. We found no evidence of disease association for SNPs in BRAF, KRAS, ERBB2 and PIK3CA when OC was considered as a single disease phenotype; but after stratification by histological subtype, we found borderline evidence of association for SNPs in KRAS and BRAF with mucinous OC and in ERBB2 and PIK3CA with endometrioid OC. For NMI, we identified a SNP (rs11683487) that was associated with a decreased risk of OC (unadjusted Pdominant=0.004). We then genotyped rs11683487 in another 1097 cases and 1792 controls from an additional three case–control studies from the United States. The combined odds ratio was 0.89 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.80–0.99) and remained statistically significant (Pdominant=0.032). We also identified two haplotypes in ERBB2 associated with an increased OC risk (Pglobal=0.034) and a haplotype in BRAF that had a protective effect (Pglobal=0.005). In conclusion, these data provide borderline evidence of association for common allelic variation in the NMI with risk of epithelial OC.
British Journal of Cancer | 2014
Martin Köbel; J Madore; Susan J. Ramus; Blaise Clarke; Paul Pharoah; Suha Deen; David Bowtell; Kunle Odunsi; Usha Menon; Carl Morrison; S.B. Lele; Wiam Bshara; Lara Sucheston; Matthias W. Beckmann; Alexander Hein; Falk C. Thiel; Arndt Hartmann; David L. Wachter; Michael S. Anglesio; Estrid Høgdall; Allan Jensen; Claus Høgdall; Kimberly R. Kalli; Brooke L. Fridley; Gary L. Keeney; Zachary C. Fogarty; Robert A. Vierkant; Suzanne Liu; S Cho; Gregg Nelson
Background:Folate receptor 1 (FOLR1) is expressed in the majority of ovarian carcinomas (OvCa), making it an attractive target for therapy. However, clinical trials testing anti-FOLR1 therapies in OvCa show mixed results and require better understanding of the prognostic relevance of FOLR1 expression. We conducted a large study evaluating FOLR1 expression with survival in different histological types of OvCa.Methods:Tissue microarrays composed of tumour samples from 2801 patients in the Ovarian Tumour Tissue Analysis (OTTA) consortium were assessed for FOLR1 expression by centralised immunohistochemistry. We estimated associations for overall (OS) and progression-free (PFS) survival using adjusted Cox regression models. High-grade serous ovarian carcinomas (HGSC) from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) were evaluated independently for association between FOLR1 mRNA upregulation and survival.Results:FOLR1 expression ranged from 76% in HGSC to 11% in mucinous carcinomas in OTTA. For HGSC, the association between FOLR1 expression and OS changed significantly during the years following diagnosis in OTTA (Pinteraction=0.01, N=1422) and TCGA (Pinteraction=0.01, N=485). In OTTA, particularly for FIGO stage I/II tumours, patients with FOLR1-positive HGSC showed increased OS during the first 2 years only (hazard ratio=0.44, 95% confidence interval=0.20–0.96) and patients with FOLR1-positive clear cell carcinomas (CCC) showed decreased PFS independent of follow-up time (HR=1.89, 95% CI=1.10–3.25, N=259). In TCGA, FOLR1 mRNA upregulation in HGSC was also associated with increased OS during the first 2 years following diagnosis irrespective of tumour stage (HR: 0.48, 95% CI: 0.25–0.94).Conclusions:FOLR1-positive HGSC tumours were associated with an increased OS in the first 2 years following diagnosis. Patients with FOLR1-negative, poor prognosis HGSC would be unlikely to benefit from anti-FOLR1 therapies. In contrast, a decreased PFS interval was observed for FOLR1-positive CCC. The clinical efficacy of FOLR1-targeted interventions should therefore be evaluated according to histology, stage and time following diagnosis.
British Journal of Cancer | 2015
Ds Thomas; Evangelia-Ourania Fourkala; Sophia Apostolidou; Richard Gunu; Andrew M. Ryan; Ian Jacobs; Usha Menon; W Alderton; A Gentry-Maharaj; John F. Timms
Background:Blood-borne biomarkers for early detection of colorectal cancer (CRC) could markedly increase screening uptake. The aim of this study was to evaluate serum carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), CYFRA21-1 and CA125 for the early detection of CRC in an asymptomatic cohort.Methods:This nested case–control study within UKCTOCS used 381 serial serum samples from 40 women subsequently diagnosed with CRC, 20 women subsequently diagnosed with benign disease and 40 matched non-cancer controls with three to four samples per subject taken annually up to 4 years before diagnosis. CEA, CYFRA21-1 and CA125 were measured using validated assays and performance of markers evaluated for different pre-diagnosis time groups.Results:CEA levels increased towards diagnosis in a third of all cases (half of late-stage cases), whereas longitudinal profiles were static in both benign and non-cancer controls. At a threshold of >5 ng ml−1 the sensitivities for detecting CRC up to 1 and 4 years before clinical presentation were 25% and 13%, respectively, at 95% specificity. At a threshold of >2.5 ng ml−1, sensitivities were 57.5% and 38.4%, respectively, with specificities of 81% and 83.5%. CYFRA21-1 and CA125 had no utility as screening markers and did not enhance CEA performance when used in combination. CEA gave average lead times of 17–24 months for test-positive cases.Conclusions:CEA is elevated in a significant proportion of individuals with preclinical CRC, but would not be useful alone as a screening tool. This work sets a baseline from which to develop panels of biomarkers which combine CEA for improved early detection of CRC.
Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2013
A Gentry-Maharaj; Aarti Sharma; Matthew Burnell; Andrew M. Ryan; Nazar Najib Amso; Mourad W. Seif; Gill Turner; Carol Brunell; Gwendolen Fletcher; Rani Rangar; Lesley Fallowfield; Stewart Campbell; Ian Jacobs; Usha Menon
To assess pain and overall experience of transvaginal sonography (TVS) in asymptomatic postmenopausal women.