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Dive into the research topics where Fiona E. Craig is active.

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Featured researches published by Fiona E. Craig.


Blood | 2008

Flow cytometric immunophenotyping for hematologic neoplasms

Fiona E. Craig; Kenneth A. Foon

Flow cytometric immunophenotyping remains an indispensable tool for the diagnosis, classification, staging, and monitoring of hematologic neoplasms. The last 10 years have seen advances in flow cytometry instrumentation and availability of an expanded range of antibodies and fluorochromes that have improved our ability to identify different normal cell populations and recognize phenotypic aberrancies, even when present in a small proportion of the cells analyzed. Phenotypically abnormal populations have been documented in many hematologic neoplasms, including lymphoma, chronic lymphoid leukemias, plasma cell neoplasms, acute leukemia, paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria, mast cell disease, myelodysplastic syndromes, and myeloproliferative disorders. The past decade has also seen refinement of the criteria used to identify distinct disease entities with widespread adoption of the 2001 World Health Organization (WHO) classification. This classification endorses a multiparametric approach to diagnosis and outlines the morphologic, immunophenotypic, and genotypic features characteristic of each disease entity. When should flow cytometric immunophenotyping be applied? The recent Bethesda International Consensus Conference on flow cytometric immunophenotypic analysis of hematolymphoid neoplasms made recommendations on the medical indications for flow cytometric testing. This review discusses how flow cytometric testing is currently applied in these clinical situations and how the information obtained can be used to direct other testing.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1998

Antitumor activity of DAB389IL-2 fusion toxin in mycosis fungoides

Mansoor N. Saleh; C. F. LeMaistre; Timothy M. Kuzel; Francine M. Foss; Leonidas C. Platanias; Gary K. Schwartz; Mark J. Ratain; Alain H. Rook; Cesar O. Freytes; Fiona E. Craig; James Reuben; Mitchell W. Sams; Jean Nichols

BACKGROUND DAB389IL-2 is a novel fusion toxin that retargets the cytotoxic A-chain of diphtheria toxin to interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor-expressing tumors. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this phase I trial was to study the toxicity, maximum tolerated dose, and clinical efficacy of DAB389IL-2 in IL-2 receptor expressing lymphoproliferative malignancies, including cutaneous T-cell lymphoma. METHODS DAB389IL-2 was administered intravenously daily for 5 days every 3 weeks. Dose escalation occurred between patient groups. Patients were monitored for laboratory and clinical toxicity, kinetics, immune response, and clinical efficacy. RESULTS Thirty-five patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (including 30 patients with mycosis fungoides) were treated. Previously, conventional therapy had not worked for 34 of the patients. Thirteen patients (37%) achieved an objective response, including a complete response in five patients (14%). Complete response was achieved in patients with extensive erythroderma and tumor stage mycosis fungoides. Adverse events consisted of reversible fever/chills, hypotension, nausea/vomiting, and elevation of hepatic transaminase. Doses of less than 31 microg/kg per day were well tolerated. Clinical responses were observed at all dose levels. CONCLUSION DAB389IL-2 is well tolerated at doses of less than 31 microg/kg per day, and it induced clinical responses in previously treated mycosis fungoides, providing evidence for the antitumor activity of this molecule.


BMJ | 2015

Comparison of the two most commonly used treatments for pyoderma gangrenosum:Results of the STOP GAP randomised controlled trial

A.D. Ormerod; Kim S Thomas; Fiona E. Craig; Eleanor Mitchell; Nicola Greenlaw; John Norrie; James Mason; S. Walton; Graham A. Johnston; Hywel C. Williams

Objective To determine whether ciclosporin is superior to prednisolone for the treatment of pyoderma gangrenosum, a painful, ulcerating skin disease with a poor evidence base for management. Design Multicentre, parallel group, observer blind, randomised controlled trial. Setting 39 UK hospitals, recruiting from June 2009 to November 2012. Participants 121 patients (73 women, mean age 54 years) with clinician diagnosed pyoderma gangrenosum. Clinical diagnosis was revised in nine participants after randomisation, leaving 112 participants in the analysis set (59 ciclosporin; 53 prednisolone). Intervention Oral prednisolone 0.75 mg/kg/day compared with ciclosporin 4 mg/kg/day, to a maximum dose of 75 and 400 mg/day, respectively. Main outcome measures The primary outcome was speed of healing over six weeks, captured using digital images and assessed by blinded investigators. Secondary outcomes were time to healing, global treatment response, resolution of inflammation, self reported pain, quality of life, number of treatment failures, adverse reactions, and time to recurrence. Outcomes were assessed at baseline and six weeks and when the ulcer had healed (to a maximum of six months). Results Of the 112 participants, 108 had complete primary outcome data at baseline and six weeks (57 ciclosporin; 51 prednisolone). Groups were balanced at baseline. The mean (SD) speed of healing at six weeks was −0.21 (1.00) cm2/day in the ciclosporin group compared with −0.14 (0.42) cm2/day in the prednisolone group. The adjusted mean difference showed no between group difference (0.003 cm2/day, 95% confidence interval −0.20 to 0.21; P=0.97). By six months, ulcers had healed in 28/59 (47%) participants in the ciclosporin group compared with 25/53 (47%) in the prednisolone group. In those with healed ulcers, eight (30%) receiving ciclosporin and seven (28%) receiving prednisolone had a recurrence. Adverse reactions were similar for the two groups (68% ciclosporin and 66% prednisolone), but serious adverse reactions, especially infections, were more common in the prednisolone group. Conclusion Prednisolone and ciclosporin did not differ across a range of objective and patient reported outcomes. Treatment decisions for individual patients may be guided by the different side effect profiles of the two drugs and patient preference. Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN35898459.


The Lancet | 2017

Doxycycline versus prednisolone as an initial treatment strategy for bullous pemphigoid: a pragmatic, non-inferiority, randomised controlled trial

Hywel C. Williams; F. Wojnarowska; Gudula Kirtschig; James Mason; Thomas R. Godec; Enno Schmidt; Joanne R. Chalmers; Margaret Childs; S. Walton; K. E. Harman; Anna Chapman; Diane Whitham; Andrew Nunn; J Adams; V Akhras; Alexander Vincent Anstey; C Barnard; Hazel K. Bell; S Blackford; Eva-B. Bröcker; A Carmichael; R.R. Coelho; Fiona E. Craig; K Davies; R Ellis; John C. English; Regine Gläser; Richard Groves; C Günthert; P J Hampton

Summary Background Bullous pemphigoid is a blistering skin disorder with increased mortality. We tested whether a strategy of starting treatment with doxycycline gives acceptable short-term blister control while conferring long-term safety advantages over starting treatment with oral corticosteroids. Methods We did a pragmatic, multicentre, parallel-group randomised controlled trial of adults with bullous pemphigoid (three or more blisters at two or more sites and linear basement membrane IgG or C3). Participants were randomly assigned to doxycycline (200 mg per day) or prednisolone (0·5 mg/kg per day) using random permuted blocks of randomly varying size, and stratified by baseline severity (3–9, 10–30, and >30 blisters for mild, moderate, and severe disease, respectively). Localised adjuvant potent topical corticosteroids (<30 g per week) were permitted during weeks 1–3. The non-inferiority primary effectiveness outcome was the proportion of participants with three or fewer blisters at 6 weeks. We assumed that doxycycline would be 25% less effective than corticosteroids with a 37% acceptable margin of non-inferiority. The primary safety outcome was the proportion with severe, life-threatening, or fatal (grade 3–5) treatment-related adverse events by 52 weeks. Analysis (modified intention to treat [mITT] for the superiority safety analysis and mITT and per protocol for non-inferiority effectiveness analysis) used a regression model adjusting for baseline disease severity, age, and Karnofsky score, with missing data imputed. The trial is registered at ISRCTN, number ISRCTN13704604. Findings Between March 1, 2009, and Oct 31, 2013, 132 patients were randomly assigned to doxycycline and 121 to prednisolone from 54 UK and seven German dermatology centres. Mean age was 77·7 years (SD 9·7) and 173 (68%) of 253 patients had moderate-to-severe baseline disease. For those starting doxycycline, 83 (74%) of 112 patients had three or fewer blisters at 6 weeks compared with 92 (91%) of 101 patients on prednisolone, an adjusted difference of 18·6% (90% CI 11·1–26·1) favouring prednisolone (upper limit of 90% CI, 26·1%, within the predefined 37% margin). Related severe, life-threatening, and fatal events at 52 weeks were 18% (22 of 121) for those starting doxycycline and 36% (41 of 113) for prednisolone (mITT), an adjusted difference of 19·0% (95% CI 7·9–30·1), p=0·001. Interpretation Starting patients on doxycycline is non-inferior to standard treatment with oral prednisolone for short-term blister control in bullous pemphigoid and significantly safer in the long-term. Funding NIHR Health Technology Assessment Programme.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2017

Ciclosporin compared with prednisolone therapy for patients with pyoderma gangrenosum: cost-effectiveness analysis of the STOP GAP trial

James Mason; Kim S Thomas; A.D. Ormerod; Fiona E. Craig; Eleanor Mitchell; J. Norrie; Hywel C. Williams

Pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) is a painful, ulcerating skin disease with poor evidence for management. Prednisolone and ciclosporin are the most commonly used treatments, although not previously compared within a randomized controlled trial (RCT).


British Journal of Dermatology | 2011

Panton-Valentine leucocidin-positive staphylococcal skin infection mimicking pyoderma gangrenosum

F. Hussain; A.D. Ormerod; Fiona E. Craig; E. Husain; S. Rajpara

DP-1 Atypical Spitz lesions: prognosis and best management are uncertain E. Kulakov, N. Bagla* and C. Fuller Departments of Dermatology and *Histopathology, East Kent Hospitals NHS Trust, Canterbury, U.K. Since their first description in 1948, Spitz tumours have represented a diagnostic and prognostic challenge for histopathologists and clinicians. Atypical histological findings are frequently present making the differentiation between a Spitz tumour and melanoma difficult, sometimes impossible. The metastatic potential of these lesions is unknown. Spread to the nodes with no long-term disease progression has been reported, as have lesions initially labelled as benign Spitz naevi causing metastases and death (Barnhill RL, Argenyi ZB, From L et al. Atypical Spitz nevi/tumors: lack of consensus for diagnosis, discrimination from melanoma, and prediction of outcome. Hum Pathol 1999; 30: 513–20). Risk stratification algorithms have been proposed but not validated (Spatz A, Calonje E, Handfield-Jones S, Barnhill RL. Spitz tumours in children. A grading system for risk stratification. Arch Dermatol 1999; 135: 282–5). We present a case of a girl aged 2 and a half years with a flesh-coloured 11-mm nodule on the left knee. It was present for a year, increasing in size and bleeding with minimal trauma. The lesion was excised. Histology demonstrated transdermal expansile melanocytic nodules reaching into the subcutis to a Breslow thickness of 6Æ8 mm. There was ulceration and perineural invasion. The mitotic count was 3 per mm. Amplification of RREB1 was found, a feature seen in malignancy. There are no well-recognized guidelines on the management and follow-up of these lesions. Discussion of the prognosis with patients is difficult due to lack of evidence. Our patient had a re-excision with a follow-up plan made for the future. According to the published grading system our patient would fall in the intermediate-risk category (Spatz et al.). Prognosis is uncertain as reports exist of lesion metastasis and mortality even in low-risk groups. Validation of the grading system to enable better prognostication of patients is essential, as highlighted by our case.


Blood | 2000

Macrophage inflammatory protein 1-alpha is a potential osteoclast stimulatory factor in multiple myeloma.

Sun Jin Choi; Jose C. Cruz; Fiona E. Craig; Hoyeon Chung; Rowena D. Devlin; G. David Roodman; Melissa Alsina


Blood | 1998

Phase I trial of a ligand fusion-protein (DAB389IL-2) in lymphomas expressing the receptor for interkeukin-2

C.F. LeMaistre; Mansoor N. Saleh; Timothy M. Kuzel; Francine M. Foss; Leonidas C. Platanias; Gary J. Schwartz; Mark J. Ratain; Alain H. Rook; Cesar O. Freytes; Fiona E. Craig; James M. Reuben; Jean Nichols


Cancer Research | 1993

Phase I Trial of a 90-Minute Infusion of the Fusion Toxin DAB486IL-2 in Hematological Cancers

Charles F. Lemaistre; Fiona E. Craig; Carole Meneghetti; Becky McMullin; Karen Parker; James M. Reuben; David H. Boldt; Michael G. Rosenblum; Thasia Woodworth


Blood | 2001

Myeloablation and autologous peripheral blood stem cell rescue results in hematologic and clinical responses in patients with myeloid metaplasia with myelofibrosis

Jeanne E. Anderson; Ayalew Tefferi; Fiona E. Craig; Leona Holmberg; Thomas R. Chauncey; Frederick R. Appelbaum; Philippe Guardiola; Natalie S. Callander; Cesar O. Freytes; Yair Gazitt; Betty Razvillas; H. Joachim Deeg

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Kim S Thomas

University of Nottingham

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John Norrie

University of Aberdeen

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Cesar O. Freytes

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Jeanne E. Anderson

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Margaret L. Gulley

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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