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Dive into the research topics where John P. Sloane is active.

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Featured researches published by John P. Sloane.


American Journal of Pathology | 1999

Estrogen Receptor-Positive Proliferating Cells in the Normal and Precancerous Breast

Balvinder S. Shoker; Christine Jarvis; Robert B. Clarke; Elizabeth Anderson; Joanne Hewlett; Michael P.A. Davies; D. Ross Sibson; John P. Sloane

Recently it has been shown that epithelial cell expression of the estrogen receptor (ER) and that of the proliferation-associated marker Ki-67 are almost mutually exclusive in the normal premenopausal human breast but that coexpression frequently occurs in estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancers. This coexpression may indicate disordered expression of ER in the cell cycle or failure to suppress division of ER+ cells and could be important in neoplastic transformation. The purpose of this study was to determine whether in situ proliferations known to be associated with different levels of risk for developing breast cancer contain these coexpressing cells and, if so, the stage at which they occur. We found that ER+ proliferating cells were rare in premenopausal lobules but increased with age in the normal breast. There was no difference in nonlesional tissue between cancerous and noncancerous breasts. The percentage of dual-expressing cells was significantly increased, however, in all of the in situ proliferations and correlated positively with the level of risk of developing breast cancer. We suggest that development of at least some human breast cancers is associated with increasing failure to down-regulate ER as cells enter the cycle or to suppress division of ER+ cells. The mechanism may involve the loss of a tumor suppressor gene.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2005

Columnar cell lesions of the breast: The missing link in breast cancer progression? A morphological and molecular analysis.

Peter T. Simpson; Theo Gale; Jorge S. Reis-Filho; Chris Jones; Suzanne Parry; John P. Sloane; Andrew M. Hanby; Sarah Pinder; Andrew H S Lee; S Humphreys; Ian O. Ellis; Sunil R. Lakhani

Columnar cell lesions (CCLs) of the breast are a spectrum of lesions that have posed difficulties to pathologists for many years, prompting discussion concerning their biologic and clinical significance. We present a study of CCL in context with hyperplasia of usual type (HUT) and the more advanced lesions ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and invasive ductal carcinoma. A total of 81 lesions from 18 patients were subjected to a comprehensive morphologic review based upon a modified version of Schnitts classification system for CCL, immunophenotypic analysis (estrogen receptor [ER], progesterone receptor [PgR], Her2/neu, cytokeratin 5/6 [CK5/6], cytokeratin 14 [CK14], E-cadherin, p53) and for the first time, a whole genome molecular analysis by comparative genomic hybridization. Multiple CCLs from 3 patients were studied in particular detail, with topographic information and/or showing a morphologic spectrum of CCL within individual terminal duct lobular units. CCLs were ER and PgR positive, CK5/6 and CK14 negative, exhibit low numbers of genetic alterations and recurrent 16q loss, features that are similar to those of low grade in situ and invasive carcinoma. The molecular genetic profiles closely reflect the degree of proliferation and atypia in CCL, indicating some of these lesions represent both a morphologic and molecular continuum. In addition, overlapping chromosomal alterations between CCL and more advanced lesions within individual terminal duct lobular units suggest a commonality in molecular evolution. These data further support the hypothesis that CCLs are a nonobligate, intermediary step in the development of some forms of low grade in situ and invasive carcinoma.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 1995

Atypical ductal hyperplasia of the breast: clonal proliferation with loss of heterozygosity on chromosomes 16q and 17p.

Sunil R. Lakhani; Nadine Collins; Michael R. Stratton; John P. Sloane

AIMS--To determine if allelic loss on chromosomes 16q and 17p, commonly encountered in in situ and invasive ductal carcinomas, is present in atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH); to determine whether ADH is a neoplastic (clonal) or hyperplastic (polyclonal) proliferation. METHODS--Fourteen cases of ADH were examined for allele loss at loci on chromosome 16q and 17p using a microdissection technique, polymorphic DNA markers and the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). RESULTS--Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) was detected in five of nine informative cases on chromosome 16q at the microsatellite D16S413 and two of eight informative cases on chromosome 17p at D17S796. CONCLUSIONS--The incidence of LOH at these loci is similar to that previously observed in ductal carcinoma in situ and in invasive ductal carcinoma. Because of the nature of the technique used, our findings also demonstrate that ADH is a monoclonal, and hence, neoplastic proliferation rather than a hyperplastic (polyclonal) condition as its name suggests. There is thus a case for including ADH, as presently defined, within the spectrum of ductal carcinoma in situ.


Histopathology | 1993

Carcinoma and atypical hyperplasia in radial scars and complex sclerosing lesions : importance of lesion size and patient age

John P. Sloane; M.M. Mayers

One hundred and twenty‐six radial scars and complex sclerosing lesions from 91 women were examined to determine the incidence of and the clinical and pathological factors associated with the development of carcinoma and atypical hyperplasia within them. There was a clear relationship between the presence of carcinoma and atypical hyperplasia and the size of the lesion. This was not, however, a progressive relationship, there being a cut‐off point about 6‐7 mm. below which carcinoma was very uncommon and above which it was relatively frequent. A similar relationship was seen with patient age. Carcinoma was not seen in lesions removed from women under 40, was rare in the decade 41‐50 and was relatively common above this age but with no further increase in the over 60s. A significantly higher incidence of carcinoma and atypical hyperplasia was encountered in scars detected by mammographic screening and could be explained by lesion size and the ages of the patients from which they were removed. No relationship was found between the presence of carcinoma within radial scars and complex sclerosing lesions and the existence of carcinoma in the residual breast tissue when direct extension was excluded. The carcinomas identified in the scars were of variable type and included small and large cell ductal carcinoma in situ, lobular carcinoma in situ and invasive carcinoma of tubular and ductal types. In situ carcinoma and atypical hyperplasia involved a very variable percentage of the epithelium of the lesions with mean values for ductal carcinoma in situ of 32%, lobular carcinoma in situ 25% and atypical hyperplasia 25%. It is concluded that all screen‐detected radial scars and complex sclerosing lesions should be excised and subjected to thorough histological examination. Further studies on larger numbers of screened women are indicated to determine more precisely the incidence of carcinoma in these lesions and the risk of developing cancer in women in whom uncomplicated scars are detected.


The Journal of Pathology | 1999

Oestrogen receptor expression in the normal and pre-cancerous breast

Balvinder S. Shoker; Christine Jarvis; D. Ross Sibson; Carol Walker; John P. Sloane

As oestrogen is associated with most of the epidemiological risk factors for breast cancer, the number and distribution of oestrogen receptor positive (ER+) cells could have a bearing on the development of the disease. ER+ cells were thus studied in the normal breast and in the spectrum of in situ proliferations which range from non‐atypical hyperplasia to in situ carcinoma and are associated with different levels of risk for developing breast cancer. In the normal pre‐menopausal breast, ER+ cells comprised the minority and were distributed singly, being surrounded by oestrogen receptor negative (ER−) cells. ER+ cells showed a statistically significant increase with age, reaching a plateau after the menopause, and the increase was associated with a tendency for positive cells to become contiguous in patches of variable size. A small proportion of lobules showing involutional change comprised over 90 per cent ER+ cells. The significance of this feature is not clear but no evidence was found that it was pre‐cancerous. The percentage of ER+ cells was slightly increased in hyperplasia of usual type (non‐atypical hyperplasia, HUT) and the relationship to age was maintained. The staining pattern was variable; in some lesions ER+ cells were surrounded by ER− cells whereas in others there were contiguous groups of positive cells sometimes accounting for more than 90 per cent of cells in the lesion. In contrast, all cases of atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH), lobular in situ neoplasia (LIN) and ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) exhibited positivity of contiguous cells accounting for the majority in the lesions. Furthermore, the relationship between ER+ cell numbers and age was lost in these lesions, indicating autonomy of ER expression or of proliferation of cells expressing the receptor. It is hypothesized that this dysregulation of receptor expression or of ER+ cell numbers at the ADH stage may be the precursor of abnormal expression of cyclins and other cell cycle control proteins which have been shown first to appear in DCIS. Copyright


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2002

Histopathologic types of benign breast lesions and the risk of breast cancer - Case-control study

Abeer M. Shaaban; John P. Sloane; Christopher R. West; F. R. Moore; Christine Jarvis; E. M. I. Williams; Christopher S. Foster

The hypothetical multistep model of carcinogenesis indicates that breast cancer develops via a series of intermediate hyperplastic lesions through in situ to invasive carcinoma. To identify the risk inherent within the different morphologic lesions, we have analyzed the data from 674 benign biopsy specimens comprising 120 cases who subsequently developed breast cancer and 382 controls (matched for age and date of biopsy) spanning a period up to 20 years of follow-up (mean 66.95 months). In this series we have confirmed an increased risk associated with certain types of benign breast lesions. Atypical lobular hyperplasia was the most significant risk factor for breast cancer with more unfavorable outcome in patients <50 years of age (p = 0.003) and a relative risk (RR) of 4.55 (confidence interval [CI] 1.77–11.69). Hyperplasia of usual type showed an RR of 1.53 (CL 1.10–2.13) with a statistically worse probability of survival (cancer-free time) for patients >50 years. For atypical ductal hyperplasia the RR was 2.03 (CI 0.80–1.39). Blunt duct adenosis was significantly more common in cases progressing to breast cancer compared with controls, showing an RR of 2.08 (CI 1.12–2.85). We describe in detail the criteria of morphologic changes observed in blunt duct adenosis and define, for the first time, the level of risk associated with each of its six subtypes. Improved knowledge of breast carcinogenesis will provide insight for defining high-risk groups thus resulting in improved screening and management regimens.


Virchows Archiv | 1999

Consistency achieved by 23 European pathologists from 12 countries in diagnosing breast disease and reporting prognostic features of carcinomas

John P. Sloane; Isabel Amendoeira; N. Apostolikas; Jean Pierre Bellocq; Simonetta Bianchi; Werner Boecker; G. Bussolati; D.C. Coleman; C.E. Connolly; Vincenzo Eusebi; C. De Miguel; P. Dervan; R. Drijkoningen; C.W. Elston; Daniel Faverly; A. Gad; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Manuela Lacerda; J. Martinez-Penuela; C. Munt; Johannes L. Peterse; F. Rank; M. Sylvan; V. Tsakraklides; Brigitte Zafrani

Abstract A detailed analysis of the consistency with which pathologists from 12 different European countries diagnose and classify breast disease was undertaken as part of the quality assurance programme of the European Breast Screening Pilot Network funded by the Europe against Cancer Programme. Altogether 107 cases were examined by 23 pathologists in 4 rounds. Kappa (κ) statistics for major diagnostic categories were: benign (not otherwise specified) 0.74, atypical ductal hyperplasia (ADH) 0.27, ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) 0.87 and invasive carcinoma 0.94. ADH was the majority diagnosis in only 2 cases but was diagnosed by at least 2 participants in another 14, in 9 of which the majority diagnosis was benign (explaining the relatively low κ for this category), DCIS in 4 (all low nuclear grade) and invasive carcinoma (a solitary 1-mm focus) in 1. The histological features of these cases were extremely variable; although one feature that nearly all shared was the presence of cells with small, uniform, hyperchromatic nuclei and a high nucleo-cytoplasmic ratio. The majority diagnosis was DCIS in 33 cases; κ for classifying by nuclear grade was 0.38 using three categories and 0.46 when only two (high and other) were used. When ADH was included with low nuclear grade DCIS there was only a slight improvement in κ. Size measurement of DCIS was less consistent than that of invasive carcinoma.The majority diagnosis was invasive carcinoma in 57 cases, the size of the majority being 100% in 49. The remainder were either special subtypes (adenoid cystic, tubular, colloid, secretory, ductal/medullary) or possible microinvasive carcinomas. Subtyping was most consistent for mucinous (κ, 0.92) and least consistent for medullary carcinomas (κ, 0.56). Consistency of grading using the Nottingham method was moderate (κ=0.53) and consistency of diagnosing vascular invasion, fair (κ=0.38). There was no tendency for consistency to improve from one round to the next, suggesting that further improvements are unlikely without changes in guidelines or methodology.


American Journal of Pathology | 2002

Breast Cancer Risk in Usual Ductal Hyperplasia Is Defined by Estrogen Receptor-α and Ki-67 Expression

Abeer M. Shaaban; John P. Sloane; Christopher R. West; Christopher S. Foster

The hypothetical multistep model for breast carcinogenesis indicates that invasive carcinoma arises via a series of intermediate hyperplastic lesions through various grades of atypia to in situ and invasive carcinoma. Non-atypical hyperplasia [hyperplasia of usual type (HUT)] is a nonobligate precursor of breast cancer. Although its further morphological subclassification is unlikely, refining is more likely to depend on defining biological markers of risk. Having assembled a cohort of benign proliferative breast lesions of known outcome, we studied the expression of estrogen receptor-alpha (ER-alpha) and Ki-67 using morphometric image analysis as well as dual-labeled immunofluorescence in HUT foci and in surrounding normal lobules of 25 patients that progressed to breast cancer and 19 controls. Those patients that progressed to breast cancer (cases) showed significantly higher ER-alpha [median, 57.00% of cells within individual HUT foci; interquartile range (IQ), 33.48 to 67.78] and Ki-67 (median, 3.82%; IQ, 0.85 to 11.28) expression in their HUT foci compared with controls (ER-alpha median, 30.27%; IQ, 19.75 to 52.50 and Ki-67 median, 0.77%; IQ, 0.0458 to 1.72, P = 0.008 and <0.001). No significant difference in expression of dual-stained cells was found between cases and controls. Although normal lobules from cases showed higher ER-alpha expression compared with controls, this was not statistically significant. Our data point to a previously undescribed hormone-dependent pathway in this particular group of breast neoplasms and suggest the possibility of selective hormonal therapy to suppress the proliferative potential of these benign but high-risk breast lesions. The findings of this study might have important implications for improving breast cancer screening and management strategies.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1981

Nature of the toxicity of cyclosporin A in the rat

Michael J.G. Farthing; M. L. Clark; Ann Pendry; John P. Sloane; Peter Alexander

Abstract The potent immunosuppressive agent Cyclosporin A (CyA) causes a spectrum of toxicological effects in rats, of which the most striking is weight loss. Pair-feeding experiments have shown that this is caused, in part, by a short period of anorexia. However, even when the food intake has become normal the rats receiving CyA fail to gain weight. That CyA at the doses used causes increased protein catabolism is also indicated by a fall in serum albumin and a marked rise in blood urea unaccompanied by a corresponding rise in creatinine. CyA is mildly and reversibly hepatotoxic and there is slight nephrotoxicity in the rat on the basis of histology and small elevations in creatinine.


European Journal of Cancer | 2000

Causes of inconsistency in diagnosing and classifying intraductal proliferations of the breast

C.W. Elston; John P. Sloane; Isabel Amendoeira; N. Apostolikas; Jean Pierre Bellocq; Simonetta Bianchi; Werner Boecker; G. Bussolati; D.C. Coleman; C.E. Connolly; P. Dervan; Maria Drijkoningen; Vincenzo Eusebi; Daniel Faverly; R. Holland; Jocelyne Jacquemier; Manuela Lacerda; J. Martinez-Penuela; C. De Miguel; S Moss; C. Munt; Johannes L. Peterse; F. Rank; A. Reiner; M. Sylvan; C.A. Wells; Brigitte Zafrani

It is now widely recognised that classifying ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) of the breast and diagnosing atypical ductal hyperplasia are associated with significant interobserver variation. Two possible reasons for this inconsistency are differences in the interpretation of specified histological features and field selection where morphology is heterogeneous. In order to investigate the relative contribution of these two factors to inconsistent interpretation of intraductal proliferations, histological sections of 32 lesions were sent to 23 European pathologists followed 3 years later by images of small parts of these sections. Kappa statistics for diagnosing hyperplasia of usual type, atypical ductal hyperplasia and ductal carcinoma in situ were 0.54, 0.35 and 0.78 for sections and 0.47, 0.29 and 0.78 for images, respectively, showing that most of the inconsistency is due to differences in morphological interpretation. Improvements can thus be expected only if diagnostic criteria or methodology are changed. In contrast, kappa for classifying DCIS by growth pattern was very low at 0.23 for sections and better at 0.47 for images, reflecting the widely recognised variation in the growth pattern of DCIS. Higher kappa statistics were obtained when any mention of an individual growth pattern was included in that category, thus allowing multiple categories per case; but kappa was still higher for images than sections. Classifying DCIS by nuclear grade gave kappa values of 0.36 for sections and 0.49 for images, indicating that intralesional heterogeneity has hitherto been underestimated as a cause of inconsistency in classifying DCIS by this method. More rigorous assessment of the proportions of the different nuclear grades present could lead to an improvement in consistency.

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Ian O. Ellis

University of Nottingham

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C.W. Elston

Nottingham City Hospital

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Johannes L. Peterse

Netherlands Cancer Institute

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