Claire Weston
University of Leicester
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Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2005
David W. Ellison; Olabisi E. Onilude; Janet C. Lindsey; Claire Weston; Roger E. Taylor; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Steven C. Clifford
PURPOSE Identifying pathobiological correlates of clinical behavior or therapeutic response currently represents a key challenge for medulloblastoma research. Nuclear accumulation of the beta-catenin protein is associated with activation of the Wnt/Wg signaling pathway, and mutations affecting components of this pathway have been reported in approximately 15% of sporadic medulloblastomas. We tested the hypothesis that nuclear immunoreactivity for beta-catenin is a prognostic marker in medulloblastoma, and assessed the relationship between nuclear beta-catenin immunoreactivity and mutations of CTNNB1 and APC. PATIENTS AND METHODS Medulloblastomas from children entered onto the International Society for Pediatric Oncology (SIOP)/United Kingdom Childrens Cancer Study Group (UKCCSG) PNET3 trial (n = 109) were examined for beta-catenin immunoreactivity, and where tissue was available, evidence of CTNNB1 and APC mutations. The results were correlated with clinicopathologic variables, principally outcome. RESULTS Children with medulloblastomas that showed a nucleopositive beta-catenin immunophenotype (27 of 109; 25%) had significantly better overall (OS) and event-free (EFS) survivals than children with tumors that showed either membranous/cytoplasmic beta-catenin immunoreactivity or no immunoreactivity (P = .0015 and P = .0026, respectively). For beta-catenin nucleopositive and nucleonegative medulloblastomas, 5-year OS was 92.3% (95% CI, 82% to 100%) versus 65.3% (95% CI, 54.8 to 75.7%), and 5-year EFS was 88.9% (95% CI, 77% to 100%) versus 59.5% (95% CI, 48.8 to 70.2%), respectively. Mutations in CTNNB1 were found exclusively among medulloblastomas that demonstrated nuclear beta-catenin immunoreactivity, but no evidence of APC mutation was found in these cases. All children with beta-catenin nucleopositive large cell/anaplastic medulloblastomas and beta-catenin nucleopositive medulloblastomas presenting with metastatic disease are alive at least 5 years postdiagnosis. CONCLUSION Nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin appears to be a marker of favorable outcome in medulloblastoma, and should be investigated further in large group-wide trials.
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003
Roger E. Taylor; Clifford C. Bailey; Kath Robinson; Claire Weston; David W. Ellison; James Ironside; Helen Lucraft; Richard J. Gilbertson; D. Tait; David Walker; Barry Pizer; John Imeson; Linda S Lashford
PURPOSE To determine whether preradiotherapy (RT) chemotherapy would improve outcome for Chang stage M0-1 medulloblastoma when compared with RT alone. Chemotherapy comprised vincristine 1.5 mg/m2 weekly for 10 weeks and four cycles of etoposide 100 mg/m2 daily for 3 days, and carboplatin 500 mg/m2 daily for 2 days alternating with cyclophosphamide 1.5 g/m2. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients aged 3 to 16 years inclusive were randomly assigned to receive 35 Gy craniospinal RT with a 20 Gy posterior fossa boost, or chemotherapy followed by RT. RESULTS Of 217 patients randomly assigned to treatment, 179 were eligible for analysis (chemotherapy + RT, 90 patients; RT alone, 89 patients). Median age was 7.67 years, and median follow-up was 5.40 years. Overall survival (OS) at 3 and 5 years was 79.5% and 70.7%, respectively. Event-free survival (EFS) at 3 and 5 years was 71.6% and 67.0%, respectively. EFS was significantly better for chemotherapy and RT (P =.0366), with EFS of 78.5% at 3 years and 74.2% at 5 years compared with 64.8% at 3 years and 59.8% at 5 years for RT alone. There was no statistically significant difference in 3-year and 5-year OS between the two arms (P =.0928). Multivariate analysis identified use of chemotherapy (P =.0248) and time to complete RT (P =.0100) as having significant effect on EFS. CONCLUSION This is the first large multicenter randomized study to demonstrate improved EFS for chemotherapy compared with RT alone. It is anticipated that this regimen could reduce ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity compared with cisplatin-containing schedules. The importance of avoiding interruptions to RT has been confirmed.
Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2006
Christine Juergens; Claire Weston; Ian D. Lewis; Jeremy Whelan; Michael Paulussen; Odile Oberlin; Jean Michon; Andreas Zoubek; Herbert Juergens; Alan W. Craft
The EUROpean Ewing tumour Working Initiative of National Groups 1999 (EURO‐E.W.I.N.G. 99) protocol prescribes six courses of vincristine, ifosfamide, doxorubicin, and etoposide (VIDE) as intensive induction chemotherapy for Ewing tumors (ET). Granulocyte‐colony stimulating factor (G‐CSF) is recommended. Adverse reactions (AR) were evaluated; quality assurance of data collection reviewed.
Lancet Oncology | 2007
Richard Grundy; Sophie Wilne; Claire Weston; Kath Robinson; Linda S Lashford; James Ironside; Tim Cox; W Kling Chong; Richard H A Campbell; Cliff C Bailey; Rao Gattamaneni; Sue Picton; Nicky Thorpe; Conor Mallucci; Martin English; J. Punt; David Walker; David W. Ellison; David Machin
BACKGROUND Over half of childhood intracranial ependymomas occur in children younger than 5 years. As an adjuvant treatment, radiotherapy can be effective, but has the potential to damage the childs developing nervous system at a crucial time-with a resultant reduction in IQ and cognitive impairment, endocrinopathy, and risk of second malignancy. We aimed to assess the role of a primary chemotherapy strategy in avoiding or delaying radiotherapy in children younger than 3 years with intracranial ependymoma. METHODS Between December, 1992, and April, 2003, we enrolled 89 children with ependymoma who were aged 3 years or younger at diagnosis, of whom nine had metastatic disease on pre-operative imaging. After maximal surgical resection, children received alternating blocks of myelosuppressive and non-myelosuppressive chemotherapy every 14 days for an intended duration of 1 year. Radiotherapy was withheld unless local imaging (ie, from the childs treatment centre) showed progressive disease. FINDINGS 50 of the 80 patients with non-metastatic disease progressed, 34 of whom were irradiated for progression. The 5-year cumulative incidence of freedom from radiotherapy for the 80 non-metastatic patients was 42% (95% CI 32-53). With a median follow-up of 6 years (range 1.5-11.3), overall survival for the non-metastatic patients at 3 years was 79.3% (95% CI 68.5-86.8) and at 5 years 63.4% (51.2-73.4). The corresponding values for event-free survival were 47.6% (36.2-58.1) and 41.8% (30.7-52.6). There was no significant difference in event-free or overall survival between complete and incomplete surgical resection, nor did survival differ according to histological grade, age at diagnosis, or site of disease. In 47 of 59 (80%) patients who progressed, relapse resulted from local control only. The median time to progression for the 59 patients who progressed was 1.6 years (range 0.1-10.2 years). The median age at irradiation of the whole group was 3.6 years (range 1.5-11.9). For the 80 non-metastatic patients, the 23 who achieved the highest relative dose intensity of chemotherapy had the highest post-chemotherapy 5-year overall survival of 76% (95% CI 46.6-91.2), compared with 52% (33.3-68.1) for the 32 patients who achieved the lowest relative dose intensity of chemotherapy. INTERPRETATION This protocol avoided or delayed radiotherapy in a substantial proportion of children younger than 3 years without compromising survival. These results suggest, therefore, that primary chemotherapy strategies have an important role in the treatment of very young children with intracranial ependymoma.
British Journal of Haematology | 2008
Mary Gerrard; Mitchell S. Cairo; Claire Weston; Anne Auperin; Ross Pinkerton; Anne Lambilliote; Richard Sposto; Keith McCarthy; Marie José T Lacombe; Sherrie L. Perkins; Catherine Patte
High cure rates are possible in children with localized mature B‐cell lymphoma (B NHL) using a variety of chemotherapeutic strategies. To reduce late sequelae, the duration and intensity of chemotherapy has been progressively reduced. The Lymphome Malins de Burkitt (LMB) 89 study reported long‐term survival in almost all children with localized resected disease treated with two courses of COPAD (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisolone and doxorubicin). This study was designed to confirm the effectiveness of this approach in a larger number of patients in a multinational co‐operative study. The patient cohort was part of an international study (French‐American‐British LMB 96), which included all disease stages and involved three national groups. Patients in this part of the study had resected stage I or completely resected abdominal stage II disease. Following surgery, two courses of COPAD were given, without intrathecal (IT) chemotherapy. One hundred and thirty‐two children were evaluable. Two of 264 (0·9%) courses were associated with grade IV toxicity (one stomatitis and one infection). With a median follow up of 50·5 months, the 4 year event‐free survival is 98·3% and overall survival is 99·2%. Children with resected localized B‐NHL can be cured with minimal toxicity following two courses of low intensity treatment without IT chemotherapy.
Brain Pathology | 2007
Charles S. McManamy; Jane Pears; Claire Weston; Zoltan Hanzely; James Ironside; Roger E. Taylor; Richard Grundy; Steven C. Clifford; David W. Ellison
Among the variants of medulloblastoma in the current WHO classification of nervous system tumors, the desmoplastic variant, which has been reported to constitute 5%–25% of pediatric medulloblastomas, is defined by its nodular collections of neurocytic cells bounded by desmoplastic internodular zones. We have studied the frequency, morphological features and biological behavior of medulloblastomas in two contemporaneous SIOP/UKCCSG trial cohorts of children with medulloblastomas, CNS9102 (n = 315) and CNS9204 (n = 35), focusing on tumors with nodular and desmoplastic phenotypes. In children aged 3–16 years (CNS9102), the nodular/desmoplastic medulloblastoma represented 5% of all tumors, while in infants aged <3 years (CNS9204) this variant represented 57% of medulloblastomas. Using iFISH to detect molecular cytogenetic abnormalities in medulloblastomas with a nodular architecture, we demonstrated distinct genetic profiles in desmoplastic and non‐desmoplastic (classic and anaplastic) tumors; in particular, abnormalities of chromosome 17 occurred in the latter, but not the former. Significantly different outcomes were demonstrated for classic, nodular/desmoplastic and large cell/anaplastic medulloblastomas in both cohorts. In conclusion, the nodular/desmoplastic medulloblastoma appears to have clinical, genetic and biological characteristics that set it apart from other variants of this tumor.
British Journal of Haematology | 2002
C. R. Pinkerton; Ian M. Hann; Claire Weston; T. Mapp; Andrew Wotherspoon; R. Hobson; D. A. Kelly; D. Vergani; D. Hadzic; L. Rees; Matt Burke; J. Alero Thomas
Summary. Clinical data and biological samples were prospectively collected in 42 children with lymphoproliferative disease (LPD) secondary to organ/bone marrow transplant‐related immunosuppression (30: 11 liver, 10 heart/lung, 8 kidney and 1 bone marrow), other drug‐induced immunosuppression (2), congenital immunodeficiency (8) or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)‐related immune dysfunction (2). Ages ranged from 10 months to 17 years and there were 15 girls. Pathology was centrally reviewed and showed polymorphic features in 5 cases, monomorphic in 23, mixed pattern in 5 patients and 9 other types. Using the Revised European–American Classification of Lymphoid Neoplasms, 5 were B lymphoblastoid, 24 were high‐grade B and 14 were other subtypes. Using the Pittsburgh classification, 9 were lymphadenopathic, 10 were systemic, 25 were lymphomatous and, with the Murphy grouping for non‐Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL), 10 were localized and 32 non‐localized. Twenty‐four out of 38 evaluable cases were Epstein–Barr virus positive. Thirty‐five patients were evaluable for clonality; 24 were monoclonal and 11 were polyclonal. Reduced immunosuppression in solid organ transplant patients resulted in resolution of disease in 14/24, which was sustained in 11. Nineteen patients received chemotherapy, 14/18 evaluable responded, which was sustained in 8 cases. Seven out of 29 solid organ transplant and 10/13 other immune‐deficient patients died. In the largest group of patients, solid organ transplants, no significant clinical or biological characteristics that predicted outcome were identified. In the transplant group close monitoring of response during reduction in immunosuppression is essential and the early use of B NHL chemotherapy may be effective.
Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2009
Roger E. Taylor; Paul H.J. Donachie; Claire Weston; Helen Lucraft; Frank Saran; David W. Ellison; James Ironside; David Walker; Barry Pizer
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE To evaluate the impact of radiotherapy (RT) parameters on outcome in the SIOP/UKCCSG study of pre-RT chemotherapy for Supratentorial Primitive Neuro-ectodermal Tumours. METHODS AND MATERIALS Sixty-two patients aged 2.9-16.6 (median 6.4 years) were eligible. Forty-eight (77%) had non-pineal sites and 14 (23%) had pineal sites. Eleven were randomized to RT alone (6) and five to pre-RT Vincristine, Etoposide, Carboplatin and Cyclophosphamide. Fifty-one were not randomized, 15 receiving RT alone and 36 receiving pre-RT chemotherapy. Craniospinal RT (CSRT) 35 Gy/21 fractions were followed by 20 Gy/12 fractions to primary tumour. RESULTS Mean CSRT dose was 34.7 Gy and mean total primary dose was 53.4 Gy for those who received radiotherapy. Of 30 relapses, 18 (60%) were local only and 5 (16.7%) were combined local and leptomeningeal. There was no significant impact on Overall Survival (OS) or Event-Free Survival (EFS) of surgery-RT interval for patients treated by pre-RT chemotherapy or RT alone, or duration of RT (completing within 50 days). Planning films were received for 42/54 (77.8%) patients. Fourteen (33%) had one or more targeting deviations (10 cribriform fossa, 11 base of skull). There was a statistically significant increase in the risk of recurrence for patients with cribriform fossa targeting deviations (p=0.033), but not for patients with base of skull targeting deviations (p=0.242). There was no statistically significant difference in OS (p=0.0598) or EFS (p=0.0880) for patients who had one or more targeting deviations compared to those who had none. CONCLUSIONS This study has not demonstrated a statistically significant impact of radiotherapy duration or targeting deviations on OS or EFS, possibly due to small patient numbers. However, multi-institutional SPNET trials should incorporate quality assurance programs including analysis of relapse pattern in relation to primary target volume coverage.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Kamlesh Khunti; Danielle H. Morris; Claire Weston; Laura J. Gray; David R. Webb; Melanie J. Davies
Background Multiple vascular risk factors may confer very high risk, but the degree of commonality between risk factors is unclear, particularly among ethnic minorities. Furthermore, it is unknown what impact this commonality will have on the UK-based NHS Health Check Programme; a vascular disease prevention programme that screens individuals aged 40–74 years. We estimated the joint prevalence of diabetes, impaired glucose regulation (IGR), high cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and chronic kidney disease (CKD) among White Europeans and South Asians who would be eligible for the Programme. Methods Cross-sectional data were analysed for 3707 participants (23.6% South Asian) in a screening study set in Leicestershire, UK. Diabetes and IGR were screen-detected. CKD may have been diagnosed previously. IGR was defined as impaired fasting glucose and/or impaired glucose tolerance, and high CVD risk as 10 year risk greater than 20%. Results Among males, South Asians had higher prevalence than White Europeans of diabetes (9.0% vs. 3.9%, respectively, p<0.001), IGR (12.5% vs. 9.2%, p = 0.06), and high CVD risk (39.1% vs. 33.1%, p = 0.03), but lower prevalence of CKD (1.5% vs. 4.6%, p<0.01). Among females, South Asians had higher prevalence than White Europeans of diabetes (7.4% vs. 3.3%, p<0.001), but lower prevalence of CKD (3.7% vs. 13.0%, p <0.001) and CVD risk (2.4% vs. 4.6%, p = 0.03), and a non-significant difference in IGR prevalence. At least one risk factor was diagnosed in 34% of participants, and all of them in 0.4%, suggesting that 723,589–734,589 more individuals each year will require monitoring following implementation of the Health Check Programme. Conclusions The collective prevalence of risk factors for vascular disease in this population was high, but there was little overlap between the risk factors, and prevalence differed by ethnicity. This has implications for service delivery and resources, and should be considered when planning screening and intervention programmes.
Age and Ageing | 2014
Andrew Wilson; Dawn Coleby; Nick Taub; Claire Weston; Thompson G. Robinson
BACKGROUND rapid specialist assessment of patients with transient ischaemic attack (TIA) reduces the risk of recurrent stroke. National guidelines advise that high-risk patients are assessed within 24 h and low-risk patients within 7 days. AIM to quantify delay and map pathways taken by patients from symptom onset to specialist assessment. DESIGN retrospective cohort study. SETTING rapid access TIA clinic. METHODS structured interviews with 278 patients newly diagnosed with TIA (222) or minor stroke (56), and examination of medical records. RESULTS of the 133 high-risk TIA patients, 11 (8%) attended the clinic within 24 h of symptom onset; of the 89 low-risk TIA patients, 47 (53%) attended within 7 days. Median delay between symptom onset and seeking help from a healthcare professional (HCP) was 4.0 h (IQR 0.5, 41.3). Delay was less if symptoms were correctly interpreted but not reduced by a publicity campaign (FAST) to encourage an urgent response. Most patients (156, 56%) first contacted a general practitioner (GP) and 46 (17%) called an ambulance or attended the emergency department. Over a third (36%) had a second consultation with an HCP before attending the clinic, and this was more likely in those presenting to paramedics, out of hours GP services or optometry. Time to clinic attendance was less if an emergency pathway was used and greater if patients were seen by a second HCP. CONCLUSIONS factors contributing to delay include incorrect interpretation of symptoms and failure to invoke emergency services. Delays after presentation could be addressed by direct referral by out of hours services, paramedics and optometrists.