H. Gabra
Western General Hospital
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by H. Gabra.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
A. J. W. Paige; Karen Taylor; C. Taylor; S. G. Hillier; Susan M. Farrington; Diane Scott; David J. Porteous; John F. Smyth; H. Gabra; Janet Elizabeth Vivienne Watson
We previously reported the construction of a P1-derived artificial chromosome (PAC) contig encompassing a set of homozygous deletions of chromosome 16q23–24.1 found in primary ovarian tumor material and several tumor cell lines. Using these PAC clones in a cDNA selection experiment, we have isolated a Sau3A fragment homologous to the WWOX transcript (GenBank accession no. AF211943) from normal human ovarian surface epithelial (HOSE) cells. We demonstrate the homozygous deletion of WWOX exons from ovarian cancer cells and three different tumor cell lines. We also identify an internally deleted WWOX transcript from a further primary ovarian tumor. In three of these samples the deletions result in frameshifts, and in each case the resulting WWOX transcripts lack part, or all, of the short chain dehydrogenase domain and the putative mitochondrial localization signal. Sequencing revealed several missense polymorphisms in tumor cell lines and identified a high level of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) within the WWOX gene. This evidence strengthens the case for WWOX as a tumor suppressor gene in ovarian cancer and other tumor types.
British Journal of Cancer | 2001
Taane G. Clark; Moira E. Stewart; Douglas G. Altman; H. Gabra; John F. Smyth
About 6000 women in the United Kingdom develop ovarian cancer each year and about two-thirds of the women will die from the disease. Establishing the prognosis of a woman with ovarian cancer is an important part of her evaluation and treatment. Prognostic models and indices in ovarian cancer should be developed using large databases and, ideally, with complete information on both prognostic indicators and long-term outcome. We developed a prognostic model using Cox regression and multiple imputation from 1189 primary cases of epithelial ovarian cancer (with median follow-up of 4.6 years). We found that the significant (P≤ 0.05) prognostic factors for overall survival were age at diagnosis, FIGO stage, grade of tumour, histology (mixed mesodermal, clear cell and endometrioid versus serous papillary), the presence or absence of ascites, albumin, alkaline phosphatase, performance status on the ZUBROD-ECOG-WHO scale, and debulking of the tumour. This model is consistent with other models in the ovarian cancer literature; it has better predictive ability and, after simplification and validation, could be used in clinical practice.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2009
David Sp Tan; Mb Lambros; Sydonia Rayter; Rachael Natrajan; Radost Vatcheva; Q Gao; Caterina Marchiò; Felipe C. Geyer; Kay Savage; Suzanne Parry; Kerry Fenwick; Narinder Tamber; Alan Mackay; Tim Dexter; Charles Jameson; Wg McCluggage; Alistair Williams; A Graham; D Faratian; Mona El-Bahrawy; A. J Paige; H. Gabra; Martin Gore; Marketa Zvelebil; Christopher J. Lord; Stan B. Kaye; Alan Ashworth; Js Reis-Filho
Purpose: To identify therapeutic targets in ovarian clear cell carcinomas, a chemoresistant and aggressive type of ovarian cancer. Experimental Design: Twelve ovarian clear cell carcinoma cell lines were subjected to tiling path microarray comparative genomic hybridization and genome-wide expression profiling analysis. Regions of high-level amplification were defined and genes whose expression levels were determined by copy number and correlated with gene amplification were identified. The effects of inhibition of PPM1D were assessed using short hairpin RNA constructs and a small-molecule inhibitor (CCT007093). The prevalence of PPM1D amplification and mRNA expression was determined using chromogenic in situ hybridization and quantitative real-time reverse transcription-PCR in a cohort of pure ovarian clear cell carcinomas and on an independent series of unselected epithelial ovarian cancers. Results: Array-based comparative genomic hybridization analysis revealed regions of high-level amplification on 1q32, 1q42, 2q11, 3q24-q26, 5p15, 7p21-p22, 11q13.2-q13.4, 11q22, 17q21-q22, 17q23.2, 19q12-q13, and 20q13.2. Thirty-four genes mapping to these regions displayed expression levels that correlated with copy number gains/amplification. PPM1D had significantly higher levels of mRNA expression in ovarian clear cell carcinoma cell lines harboring gains/amplifications of 17q23.2. PPM1D inhibition revealed that PPM1D expression and phosphatase activity are selectively required for the survival of ovarian clear cell carcinoma cell lines with 17q23.2 amplification. PPM1D amplification was significantly associated with ovarian clear cell carcinoma histology (P = 0.0003) and found in 10% of primary ovarian clear cell carcinomas. PPM1D expression levels were significantly correlated with PPM1D gene amplification in primary ovarian clear cell carcinomas. Conclusion: Our data provide strong circumstantial evidence that PPM1D is a potential therapeutic target for a subgroup of ovarian clear cell carcinomas.
British Journal of Cancer | 1994
David Cameron; H. Gabra; R.C.F. Leonard
Prolonged infusions of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) have been used since the early 1960s, but recently there has been a major resurgence of interest, partly because of the advent of electronically controlled portable infusion pumps. This paper looks at the published data on continuously infused 5-FU in breast cancer. As a single agent, bolus 5-FU has a response rate of around 25%; this includes many patients in older series who were chemotherapy naive. The overall response rate across all the studies with continuously infused 5-FU is 29%. However, the majority of these patients were heavily pretreated, and response rates of up to 54% have been reported. What is more encouraging is the response rate in combination chemotherapy--even for pretreated patients with metastatic disease, response rates up to 89% have been found. However, this level of benefit brings a new toxicity--palmar--plantar erythrodysaesthesia; and of course myelotoxicity still remains a problem in the combination regimens. Randomised trials to assess the role of infusional 5-FU are now indicated.
British Journal of Cancer | 1995
H. Gabra; L. Taylor; B. B. Cohen; A. Lessels; D. M. Eccles; R. C. F. Leonard; John F. Smyth; C. M. Steel
Allele imbalance on chromosome 11 loci in ovarian cancer is a frequent event, suggesting the presence of tumour-suppressor genes for ovarian carcinogenesis on this chromosome. Ten highly polymorphic (CA) repeat microsatellites were used to determine allele imbalance in 60 primary ovarian tumours, including 47 epithelial ovarian cancers (EOCs). Forty EOCs (85%) showed allele imbalance at one or more loci, and in 39 of these (83%) the data suggested subchromosomal deletions: eight of 11p only; six of 11q only; and 25 of both 11p and 11q. Three consensus regions of deletion were indicated at 11p15.5-p15.3, 11q12-q22 and 11q23.3-q24.1. Allele imbalance at the 11q subtelomeric region (D11S912) correlated significantly with adverse survival, while imbalance at 11q14.3 and retention of heterozygosity at 11q22 (close to the site of the progesterone receptor gene) were associated with favourable clinicopathological features. The findings allow development of a preliminary model for the molecular evolution of epithelial ovarian cancer.
British Journal of Cancer | 2008
P. Vasey; Martin Gore; Richard J. Wilson; Gordon Rustin; H. Gabra; Jean Paul Guastalla; Eric Pujade Lauraine; James Paul; Karen Carty; Stanley B. Kaye
The safety and maximum tolerated dose (MTD) of erlotinib with docetaxel/carboplatin were assessed in patients with ovarian cancer. Chemonaive patients received intravenous docetaxel (75u2009mgu2009m−2) and carboplatin (area under the curve 5) on day 1 of a 3-week cycle, and oral erlotinib at 50 (cohort 1), 100 (cohort 2a) or 75u2009mgu2009day−1 (cohort 2b) for up to six cycles. Dose-limiting toxicities were determined in cycle 1. Forty-five patients (median age 59 years) received treatment. Dose-limiting toxicities occurred in 1/5/5 patients (cohorts 1/2a/2b). The MTD of erlotinib in this regimen was determined to be 75u2009mgu2009day−1 (cohort 2b; the erlotinib dose was escalated to 100u2009mgu2009day−1 in 11 out of 19 patients from cycle 2 onwards). Neutropaenia was the predominant grade 3/4 haematological toxicity (85/100/95% respectively). Common non-haematological toxicities were diarrhoea, fatigue, nausea and rash. There were five complete and seven partial responses in 23 evaluable patients (52% response rate). Docetaxel/carboplatin had no measurable effect on erlotinib pharmacokinetics. In subsequent single-agent maintenance, erlotinib was given at 100–150u2009mgu2009day−1, with manageable toxicity, until tumour progression. Further investigation of erlotinib in epithelial ovarian carcinoma may be warranted, particularly as maintenance therapy.
British Journal of Cancer | 1996
H. Gabra; David Cameron; Lisa Lee; Jean A. Mackay; R.C.F. Leonard
Drug scheduling alterations can improve the therapeutic index of both 5-fluorouracil and anthracyclines. We investigated a regimen of weekly doxorubicin and continuous infusional 5-fluorouracil (AcF) in loco-regionally recurrent and metastatic breast cancer. The aims of this phase II study were to use low-dose weekly anthracyclines in a patient group where liver metastases are a frequent problem, to optimise scheduling of 5-fluorouracil using continuous infusion and to conserve alkylating agent use for late intensification in responding patients. Fifty-six patients received 5-fluorouracil 200 mg m-2 day-1 and doxorubicin 20-30 mg m-2 week-1 for at least 6 weeks. Sixty-two percent were chemonaive. Patients were evaluated for dose intensity, response, toxicity and survival. Of the assessable patients, 76% achieved UICC response criteria (20% complete response, 56% partial response). WHO grade 3+ toxicities were: alopecia, 98%; mucositis, 62%; neutropenia, 22%; and grade 3 palmar-plantar syndrome, 24%. Median survival was 13 months, with visceral metastasis conferring a significantly worse outcome (P = 0.03). Grade 3+ mucositis was more frequent with planned doxorubicin dose intensity > or = 25 mg m-2 week-1 (P = 0.04). AcF is highly active in breast cancer with acceptable toxicities and can be used before alkylating agent-based high-dose therapy.
European Journal of Cancer | 2002
Charlie Gourley; Awatif Al-Nafussi; M. Abdulkader; John F. Smyth; H. Gabra
Mixed mesodermal tumours (MMTs) are relatively rare gynaecological tumours that have been poorly studied in clinical and molecular terms. They are chemosensitive (at least initially), although ultimately they have a poor prognosis. The biology of the tumour is fascinating in view of its composition of both epithelial and mesenchymal entities. We review herein the literature on the clinical and biological aspects of this malignancy.
Cancer Research | 2006
Frances R. Balkwill; Alan Ashworth; Robert C. Bast; Jonathon S. Berek; Jeff Boyd; Mary L. Disis; H. Gabra; Martin Gore; Thomas C. Hamilton; Ian J. Jacobs; Stan B. Kaye; Elise C. Kohn; Gordon B. Mills; Nicole Urban
Improving the prognosis of ovarian cancer patients is a major challenge to scientists and clinicians. At a recent multidisciplinary meeting in Washington DC, advances in identification of precursor lesions, progress in disease biomarkers and animal models, the promise of nanotechnology, and strategies for manipulation of the innate and adaptive immune response offered prospects for real progress in this difficult-to-treat disease.
Methods in molecular medicine | 2000
Charlie Gourley; H. Gabra
Conventional medical approaches are limited in part on the prognosis of ovarian cancer. Although the advent of platinum- and taxane-based combination chemotherapy represents a significant advance in the treatment of ovarian carcinoma, the 5-yr survival of patients with intraperitoneal (ip) disseminated disease remains poor at only 30-40% (1-3). The vast majority of patients present with disease that is advanced because of transcoelomic spread yet remains locoregionally contained, rather than truly metastatic to distant sites by blood or lymphatic spread.