Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jesse J. Jenkins is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jesse J. Jenkins.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Clinical and Outcome Characteristics of Children With Adrenocortical Tumors: A Report From the International Pediatric Adrenocortical Tumor Registry

E. Michalkiewicz; R. Sandrini; Bonald C. Figueiredo; E.C.M. Miranda; E. Caran; A.G. Oliveira-Filho; R. Marques; Mara Albonei Dudeque Pianovski; L. Lacerda; Lilian Maria Cristofani; Jesse J. Jenkins; Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo; Raul C. Ribeiro

PURPOSE We created a registry for pediatric adrenocortical tumors (ACTs), which are rare and are not well characterized. We provide a descriptive analysis of 254 patients registered on the International Pediatric Adrenocortical Tumor Registry. PATIENTS AND METHODS Between January 1990 and December 2001, 254 patients younger than 20 years of age with newly diagnosed or previously treated ACTs were registered. A histologic diagnosis of ACT was required, although central review was not mandatory. Follow-up information was periodically requested from the referring physician. Treatment was chosen by the primary physician. RESULTS The overall female-male ratio was 1.6:1, but it varied widely among age groups. The most common presenting sign (84.2%) was virilization. Cushings syndrome without virilization was uncommon (5.5%). Tumors were completely resected in 83% of patients. Patients with disseminated or residual disease received mitotane, cisplatin, etoposide, and/or doxorubicin, and rarely, radiation therapy. At a median follow-up of 2 years and 5 months, 157 patients (61.8%) survived without evidence of disease and 97 patients (38.2%) had died. The 5-year event-free survival estimate was 54.2% (95% CI, 48.2% to 60.2%). In a multivariate analysis, disease stage, presenting signs of endocrine dysfunction, and age were independently associated with prognosis. CONCLUSION Childhood ACTs occur predominantly in females and almost always causes clinical signs. Complete resection is required for cure. Residual or metastatic disease carries a poor prognosis. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of a disease-specific database for obtaining meaningful clinical and outcome information.


Cancer Research | 2004

Gefitinib enhances the antitumor activity and oral bioavailability of irinotecan in mice.

Clinton F. Stewart; Markos Leggas; John D. Schuetz; John C. Panetta; Pamela J. Cheshire; Jennifer K. Peterson; Najat C. Daw; Jesse J. Jenkins; Richard J. Gilbertson; Glen S. Germain; Franklin C. Harwood; Peter J. Houghton

As a single agent the ERBB1 inhibitor, gefitinib (Iressa; ZD1839) showed minimal activity against a panel of 10 pediatric tumor xenografts that do not express the ERBB1 receptor. However, combined with irinotecan (CPT-11), significantly greater than additive activity was observed in four of eight models (P < 0.05), and the combination showed enhanced activity against three additional tumor lines. Breast cancer resistance protein (ABCG2), a transporter that confers resistance to SN-38 (the active metabolite of irinotecan), was readily detected in six of nine xenograft models examined by immunohistochemistry. In vitro gefitinib potently reversed resistance to SN-38 only in a cell line that overexpressed functional ABCG2. However, overexpression of ABCG2 did not decrease accumulation nor increase the rate of efflux of [14C]gefitinib. On the basis of these results and the distribution of Abcg2 in mouse tissues, we assessed the ability of gefitinib to modulate irinotecan pharmacokinetics. Oral gefitinib coadministration resulted in no change in clearance of intravenously administered irinotecan. However, gefitinib treatment dramatically increased the oral bioavailability of irinotecan after simultaneous oral administration. It is concluded that gefitinib may modulate SN-38 activity at the cellular level to reverse tumor resistance mediated by ABCG2 through inhibiting drug efflux and may be used potentially in humans to modulate the oral bioavailability of a poorly absorbed camptothecin such as irinotecan.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005

Penetrance of adrenocortical tumours associated with the germline TP53 R337H mutation

Bonald C. Figueiredo; Romolo Sandrini; Gerard P. Zambetti; Rosana Marques Pereira; Cheng Cheng; Wei Liu; Luiz Alkimin de Lacerda; Mara Albonei Dudeque Pianovski; Edson Michalkiewicz; Jesse J. Jenkins; Carlos Rodriguez-Galindo; Maria José Mastellaro; Sonia Maria Rossi Vianna; Flora Watanabe; Fabiano Sandrini; Sohaila I. B. Arram; Paolo Boffetta; Raul C. Ribeiro

Background: An inherited germline P53 mutation has been identified in cases of childhood adrenocortical carcinoma (ACT), a neoplasm with a high incidence in southern Brazil. The penetrance of ACT in carriers of the point mutation, which encodes an arginine-to-histidine substitution at codon 337 of TP53 (R337H), has not been determined. Objective: To investigate the penetrance of childhood ACT in carriers of the R337H TP53 mutation. Methods: The family histories of 30 kindreds of 41 southern Brazilian children with ACT were obtained. A PCR based assay was used to detect this P53 mutation in a large number of relatives of children with ACT. In all, 927 individuals were tested for the mutation, 232 from the non-carrier and 695 (including the 40 probands) from the carrier parental lines. Results: 40 children with ACT carried the TP53 R337H mutation; the remaining child with ACT was not tested. There was no evidence of Li-Fraumeni syndrome in any of the kindreds; however, seven met the criteria for Li-Fraumeni-like syndrome. The carrier parental line was identified in each kindred. Of the 695 individuals tested in the carrier parental line, 240 (34.5%) were positive for the mutation, while none of the 232 individuals in the other parental line carried the mutation. The penetrance of ACT was 9.9% (95% confidence interval, 8.7% to 11.1%). Conclusions: The TP53 R337H mutation dramatically increases predisposition to childhood ACT but not to other cancers, and explains the increased frequency of ACT observed in this geographic region.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1996

CLINICAL VALUE OF PROTON MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY FOR DIFFERENTIATING RECURRENT OR RESIDUAL BRAIN TUMOR FROM DELAYED CEREBRAL NECROSIS

June S. Taylor; James W. Langston; Wilburn E. Reddick; Peter B. Kingsley; Robert J. Ogg; Margaret H. Pui; Larry E. Kun; Jesse J. Jenkins; Gang Chen; Judith Ochs; Robert A. Sanford; Richard L. Heideman

PURPOSE Delayed cerebral necrosis (DN) is a significant risk for brain tumor patients treated with high-dose irradiation. Although differentiating DN from tumor progression is an important clinical question, the distinction cannot be made reliably by conventional imaging techniques. We undertook a pilot study to assess the ability of proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H MRS) to differentiate prospectively between DN or recurrent/residual tumor in a series of children treated for primary brain tumors with high-dose irradiation. METHODS AND MATERIALS Twelve children (ages 3-16 years), who had clinical and MR imaging (MRI) changes that suggested a diagnosis of either DN or progressive/recurrent brain tumor, underwent localized 1H MRS prior to planned biopsy, resection, or other confirmatory histological procedure. Prospective 1H MRS interpretations were based on comparison of spectral peak patterns and quantitative peak area values from normalized spectra: a marked depression of the intracellular metabolite peaks from choline, creatine, and N-acetyl compounds was hypothesized to indicate DN, and median-to-high choline with easily visible creatine metabolite peaks was labeled progressive/recurrent tumor. Subsequent histological studies identified the brain lesion as DN or recurrent/residual tumor. RESULTS The patient series included five cases of DN and seven recurrent/residual tumor cases, based on histology. The MRS criteria prospectively identified five out of seven patients with active tumor, and four out of five patients with histologically proven DN correctly. Discriminant analysis suggested that the primary diagnostic information for differentiating DN from tumor lay in the normalized MRS peak areas for choline and creatine compounds. CONCLUSIONS Magnetic resonance spectroscopy shows promising sensitivity and selectivity for differentiating DN from recurrent/progressive brain tumor. A novel diagnostic index based on peak areas for choline and creatine compounds may provide a simple discriminant for differentiating DN from recurrent or residual primary brain tumors.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1991

Ifosfamide, Fanconi's syndrome, and rickets.

Charles B. Pratt; William H. Meyer; Jesse J. Jenkins; Loraine Avery; Charles P. McKay; Robert J. Wyatt; Michael L. Hancock

Three of 218 children treated with ifosfamide plus the uroprotectant mesna, in single- or combination-agent protocols, have developed Fanconis renal syndrome, all of whom were in a subgroup of 86 children who had also received cisplatin or carboplatin therapy. Patients receiving ifosfamide who have received prior cisplatin (or carboplatin) are at significantly higher risk of developing Fanconis syndrome than are those who have received no prior nephrotoxic therapy (P = .04). The role of prior nephrotoxic therapy, including cisplatin and its derivatives, and the total dose of ifosfamide should be considered in the assessment of this rare but serious and apparently irreversible side effect.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Prognostic Factors for Children and Adolescents With Surgically Resected Nonrhabdomyosarcoma Soft Tissue Sarcoma: An Analysis of 121 Patients Treated at St Jude Children's Research Hospital

Sheri L. Spunt; Catherine A. Poquette; Yasmeen S. Hurt; Alvida M. Cain; Bhaskar N. Rao; Thomas E. Merchant; Jesse J. Jenkins; Victor M. Santana; Charles B. Pratt; Alberto S. Pappo

PURPOSE The rarity and heterogeneity of pediatric nonrhabdomyosarcoma soft tissue sarcoma (NRSTS) has precluded meaningful analysis of prognostic factors associated with surgically resected disease. To define a population of patients at high risk of treatment failure who might benefit from adjuvant therapies, we evaluated the relationship between various clinicopathologic factors and clinical outcome of children and adolescents with resected NRSTS over a 27-year period at our institution. PATIENTS AND METHODS We analyzed the records of 121 consecutive patients with NRSTS who underwent surgical resection between August 1969 and December 1996. Demographic data, tumor characteristics, treatment, and outcomes were recorded. Univariate and multivariate analyses of prognostic factors for survival, event-free survival (EFS), and local and distant recurrence were performed. RESULTS At a median follow-up of 9.2 years, 5-year survival and EFS rates for the entire cohort were 89% +/- 3% and 77% +/- 4%, respectively. In univariate models, positive surgical margins (P =.004), tumor size > or = 5 cm (P <.001), invasivene (P =.002), high grade (P =.028), and intra-abdominal primary tumor site (P =.055) adversely affected EFS. All of these factors except invasiveness remained prognostic of EFS and survival in multivariate models. Positive surgical margins (P =.003), intra-abdominal primary tumor site (P =.028), and the omission of radiation therapy (P =.043) predicted local recurrence, whereas tumor size > or = 5 cm (P <.001), invasiveness (P <.001), and high grade (P =.004) predicted distant recurrence. CONCLUSION In this largest single-institution analysis of pediatric patients with surgically resected NRSTS, we identified clinicopathologic features predictive of poor outcome. These variables should be prospectively evaluated as risk-adapted therapies are developed.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1990

Preirradiation cisplatin and etoposide in the treatment of high-risk medulloblastoma and other malignant embryonal tumors of the central nervous system: a phase II study.

Edward H. Kovnar; S J Kellie; Marc E. Horowitz; Robert A. Sanford; James W. Langston; Raymond K. Mulhern; Jesse J. Jenkins; Edwin C. Douglass; E E Etcubanas; Diane L. Fairclough

Medulloblastoma, pineoblastoma, and cerebral neuroblastoma are malignant embryonal tumors of the CNS that may demonstrate similar histologic features, a propensity for neuraxis dissemination and sensitivity to radiation therapy and, in certain cases, chemotherapy. To evaluate the activity of preirradiation chemotherapy in such tumors, 11 newly diagnosed children with measurable residual disease and characteristics indicative of poor prognosis were treated postoperatively with cisplatin (CDDP) and etoposide (VP-16). Responses graded on the basis of radiographic findings in areas of either macroscopic residual tumor or metastatic disease included two complete responses (CRs), eight partial responses (PRs), and one stable disease (SD). Acute and subacute toxicity consisted of high-frequency hearing loss in four patients, reversible signs and symptoms of increased intracranial pressure in two patients, and transient neutropenia. Seven of eight patients with high-risk medulloblastoma and two of two with pineoblastoma remain free of tumor progression following neuraxis irradiation at 8 to 48 months postdiagnosis (median, 18 months). CDDP and VP-16 is a highly active drug combination when given before irradiation in children with high-risk medulloblastoma and other malignant embryonal tumors of the CNS, producing objective responses in at least one site of measurable disease in 10 of 11 newly diagnosed patients, including all of five with gross neuraxis dissemination.


Cancer | 2003

Survival and functional outcome of children with hypothalamic/chiasmatic tumors

Maryam Fouladi; Dana Wallace; James W. Langston; Raymond K. Mulhern; Susan R. Rose; Amar Gajjar; Robert A. Sanford; Thomas E. Merchant; Jesse J. Jenkins; Larry E. Kun; Richard L. Heideman

The management of children with hypothalamic (H) and/or chiasmatic (C) tumors remains controversial. We evaluated the impact of clinical and neuroimaging parameters and primary therapy on overall (OS) and progression‐free (PFS) survival and on neuroendocrine and neurocognitive outcome in children with H and/or C tumors.


International Journal of Cancer | 1997

SV40 DNA IN HUMAN OSTEOSARCOMAS SHOWS SEQUENCE VARIATION AMONG T-ANTIGEN GENES

John A. Lednicky; A. Renee Stewart; Jesse J. Jenkins; Milton J. Finegold; Janet S. Butel

Authentic simian virus 40 (SV40) has been detected in association with human choroid plexus and ependymoma tumors, and SV40‐like DNA sequences have been found in some human osteosarcomas. We report here an analysis of human osteosarcoma samples for the presence of SV40 DNA using PCR and primers directed at 4 distinct sites of the SV40 genome, coupled with sequence analysis. Authentic SV40 DNA sequences were detected in 5 of 10 osteosarcoma tumor samples. The SV40 regulatory region in each case was identical and of archetypal length (non‐duplicated enhancer), as is usually found in natural isolates of SV40 from monkeys and in human brain tumors. A section of the gene that encodes a viral late gene product (VP1) was detected in 5 of 10 tumors and had an exact match with the known sequence of SV40. Two separated segments of the large T‐antigen (T‐ag) gene were found in the same 5 tumors. Analysis of the DNA sequences encoding the T‐ag carboxy terminus revealed sequence variation among the tumors, as observed previously in viral DNA associated with human brain tumors. There does not appear to be a preferential association of a T‐ag variable domain sequence with a given tumor type. No sequences from the regulatory region of human polyomaviruses JCV and BKV were detected in the bone tumors. We also noted less efficient recovery of SV40 DNA from tumor samples fixed in paraffin as compared to frozen tumors. Our results confirm the presence of SV40 DNA in human bone tumors and, based on the sequence variation observed for the carboxy terminus of the T‐ag gene, suggest that there is not a specific SV40 strain associated with human osteosarcomas. Int. J. Cancer 72:791–800, 1997.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 2002

Influence of tumor grade on time to progression after irradiation for localized ependymoma in children

Thomas E. Merchant; Jesse J. Jenkins; Peter C. Burger; Robert A. Sanford; Scot H Sherwood; Dana Jones-Wallace; Richard L. Heideman; Stephen J. Thompson; Kathleen J. Helton; Larry E. Kun

PURPOSE To investigate the influence of histologic grade on progression-free survival (PFS) after irradiation (RT) for pediatric patients with localized ependymoma. METHODS AND MATERIALS Fifty patients with localized ependymoma (median age 3.6 years, range 1-18 years at the time of RT) were treated with RT between December 1982 and June 1999. Anaplastic features were identified in 14 of 50 patients. The extent of resection was characterized as gross-total in 36 patients, near-total in 5, and subtotal in 9. The median dose to the primary site was 54 Gy. Of the 50 patients, 23 received pre-RT chemotherapy. RESULTS Thirty-nine patients were alive at a median follow-up of 46 months (range 21-214) from diagnosis. Thirty-four patients remained progression free at a median follow-up of 35 months (range 13-183) after the initiation of RT. Progression occurred in 16 patients (12 local and 4 local and distant), with a median time to failure of 21.2 months (range 4.6-65.0). The tumor grade significantly influenced the PFS after RT (p < 0.0005). The estimated 3-year PFS rate was 28% +/- 14% for patients with anaplastic ependymoma compared with 84% +/- 8% for patients with differentiated ependymoma. These results remained significant when corrected for age at diagnosis (<3 years), pre-RT chemotherapy, and extent of resection. Patients who received pre-RT chemotherapy had an inferior 3-year PFS estimate after RT (49 +/- 12%) compared with those who did not (84% +/- 10%; p = 0.056). Anaplastic ependymoma was found more frequently in the supratentorial brain (p = 0.002). Six of 12 patients with supratentorial tumor developed recurrence; recurrence was restricted to patients with anaplastic ependymoma. CONCLUSION Tumor grade influences outcome for patients with ependymoma independent of other factors and should be considered in the design and analysis of prospective trials involving pediatric patients treated with RT. Chemotherapy before RT influences the PFS and overall survival after RT. The effect is more pronounced when progression occurs during chemotherapy.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jesse J. Jenkins's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Larry E. Kun

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bhaskar N. Rao

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alberto S. Pappo

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Charles B. Pratt

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert A. Sanford

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas E. Merchant

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amar Gajjar

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sue C. Kaste

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raul C. Ribeiro

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge