Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Judith Hugh is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Judith Hugh.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2011

Assessment of Ki67 in Breast Cancer: Recommendations from the International Ki67 in Breast Cancer Working Group

Mitch Dowsett; Torsten O. Nielsen; Roger A’Hern; John M.S. Bartlett; R. Charles Coombes; Jack Cuzick; Matthew J. Ellis; N. Lynn Henry; Judith Hugh; Tracy G. Lively; Lisa M. McShane; Soon Paik; Frédérique Penault-Llorca; Ljudmila Prudkin; Meredith M. Regan; Janine Salter; Christos Sotiriou; Ian E. Smith; Giuseppe Viale; Jo Anne Zujewski; Daniel F. Hayes

Uncontrolled proliferation is a hallmark of cancer. In breast cancer, immunohistochemical assessment of the proportion of cells staining for the nuclear antigen Ki67 has become the most widely used method for comparing proliferation between tumor samples. Potential uses include prognosis, prediction of relative responsiveness or resistance to chemotherapy or endocrine therapy, estimation of residual risk in patients on standard therapy and as a dynamic biomarker of treatment efficacy in samples taken before, during, and after neoadjuvant therapy, particularly neoadjuvant endocrine therapy. Increasingly, Ki67 is measured in these scenarios for clinical research, including as a primary efficacy endpoint for clinical trials, and sometimes for clinical management. At present, the enormous variation in analytical practice markedly limits the value of Ki67 in each of these contexts. On March 12, 2010, an international panel of investigators with substantial expertise in the assessment of Ki67 and in the development of biomarker guidelines was convened in London by the co-chairs of the Breast International Group and North American Breast Cancer Group Biomarker Working Party to consider evidence for potential applications. Comprehensive recommendations on preanalytical and analytical assessment, and interpretation and scoring of Ki67 were formulated based on current evidence. These recommendations are geared toward achieving a harmonized methodology, create greater between-laboratory and between-study comparability, and allow earlier valid applications of this marker in clinical practice.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2009

Breast Cancer Subtypes and Response to Docetaxel in Node-Positive Breast Cancer: Use of an Immunohistochemical Definition in the BCIRG 001 Trial

Judith Hugh; John Hanson; Maggie Cheang; Torsten O. Nielsen; Charles M. Perou; Charles Dumontet; John C. Reed; Maryla Krajewska; Isabelle Treilleux; Matthieu Rupin; Emmanuelle Magherini; John R. Mackey; Miguel Martin; Charles L. Vogel

PURPOSE To investigate the prognostic and predictive significance of subtyping node-positive early breast cancer by immunohistochemistry in a clinical trial of a docetaxel-containing regimen. METHODS Pathologic data from a central laboratory were available for 1,350 patients (91%) from the BCIRG 001 trial of docetaxel, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (TAC) versus fluorouracil, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (FAC) for operable node-positive breast cancer. Patients were classified by tumor characteristics as (1) triple negative (estrogen receptor [ER]-negative, progesterone receptor [PR]-negative, HER2/neu [HER2]-negative), (2) HER2 (HER2-positive, ER-negative, PR-negative), (3) luminal B (ER-positive and/or PR-positive and either HER2-positive and/or Ki67(high)), and (4) luminal A (ER-positive and/or PR-positive and not HER2-positive or Ki67(high)), and assessed for prognostic significance and response to adjuvant chemotherapy. RESULTS Patients were subdivided into triple negative (14.5%), HER2 (8.5%), luminal B (61.1%), and luminal A (15.9%). Three-year disease-free survival (DFS) rates (P values with luminal B as referent) were 67% (P < .0001), 68% (P = .0008), 82% (referent luminal B), and 91% (P = .0027), respectively, with hazard ratios of 2.22, 2.12, and 0.46. Improved 3-year DFS with TAC was found in the luminal B group (P = .025) and a combined ER-positive/HER2-negative group treated with tamoxifen (P = .041), with a marginal trend in the triple negatives (P = .051) and HER2 (P = .068) subtypes. No DFS advantage was seen in the luminal A population. CONCLUSION A simple immunopanel can divide breast cancers into biologic subtypes with strong prognostic effects. TAC significantly complements endocrine therapy in patients with luminal B subtype and, in the absence of targeted therapy, is effective in the triple-negative population.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2013

An International Ki67 Reproducibility Study

Mei Yin C. Polley; Samuel C. Y. Leung; Lisa M. McShane; Dongxia Gao; Judith Hugh; Mauro G. Mastropasqua; Giuseppe Viale; Lila Zabaglo; Frédérique Penault-Llorca; John M. S. Bartlett; Allen M. Gown; W. Fraser Symmans; Tammy Piper; Erika Mehl; Rebecca A. Enos; Daniel F. Hayes; Mitch Dowsett; Torsten O. Nielsen

BACKGROUND In breast cancer, immunohistochemical assessment of proliferation using the marker Ki67 has potential use in both research and clinical management. However, lack of consistency across laboratories has limited Ki67s value. A working group was assembled to devise a strategy to harmonize Ki67 analysis and increase scoring concordance. Toward that goal, we conducted a Ki67 reproducibility study. METHODS Eight laboratories received 100 breast cancer cases arranged into 1-mm core tissue microarrays-one set stained by the participating laboratory and one set stained by the central laboratory, both using antibody MIB-1. Each laboratory scored Ki67 as percentage of positively stained invasive tumor cells using its own method. Six laboratories repeated scoring of 50 locally stained cases on 3 different days. Sources of variation were analyzed using random effects models with log2-transformed measurements. Reproducibility was quantified by intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and the approximate two-sided 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for the true intraclass correlation coefficients in these experiments were provided. RESULTS Intralaboratory reproducibility was high (ICC = 0.94; 95% CI = 0.93 to 0.97). Interlaboratory reproducibility was only moderate (central staining: ICC = 0.71, 95% CI = 0.47 to 0.78; local staining: ICC = 0.59, 95% CI = 0.37 to 0.68). Geometric mean of Ki67 values for each laboratory across the 100 cases ranged 7.1% to 23.9% with central staining and 6.1% to 30.1% with local staining. Factors contributing to interlaboratory discordance included tumor region selection, counting method, and subjective assessment of staining positivity. Formal counting methods gave more consistent results than visual estimation. CONCLUSIONS Substantial variability in Ki67 scoring was observed among some of the worlds most experienced laboratories. Ki67 values and cutoffs for clinical decision-making cannot be transferred between laboratories without standardizing scoring methodology because analytical validity is limited.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Prognostic Significance of Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Positivity for the Development of Brain Metastasis After Newly Diagnosed Breast Cancer

Zsolt Gabos; Richie Sinha; John Hanson; Nitin Chauhan; Judith Hugh; John R. Mackey; Bassam Abdulkarim

PURPOSE As survival in breast cancer patients is improving, brain metastases are becoming increasingly prevalent. The risk of brain metastases in newly diagnosed human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER-2) -overexpressing breast cancer patients is not yet fully defined. We aimed to analyze the risk of brain metastasis in newly diagnosed HER-2-positive breast cancer patients in comparison with HER-2-negative patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS To determine the incidence of brain metastases in HER-2-overexpressing patients, we analyzed a cohort of newly diagnosed 301 HER-2-positive and 363 HER-2-negative patients identified between January 1998 and December 2003. The association between histologic features and the occurrence of brain metastases was evaluated with univariate and multivariate Cox regression analysis. RESULTS Median follow-up was 3.9 years. Brain metastases were identified in 9% (27 patients) with HER-2-overexpressing breast cancer compared with only 1.9% (7 patients) in the HER-2 negative patients (hazard ratio 4.23 [1.84-9.74], P = .0007). HER-2 overexpression, tumor size larger than 2 cm, at least one positive node, and grade 2/3 disease were predictors of brain metastases in univariate analysis. In multivariate analysis, HER-2 overexpression, tumor size larger than 2 cm, and hormone-receptor negativity were independent prognostic factors for the development of brain metastases, whereas hormone-receptor expression was protective. CONCLUSION Our study shows that newly diagnosed HER-2-overexpressing breast cancer patients are at increased risk for brain metastases. Because most brain metastases occur after the development of systemic disease, these findings prompt consideration of brain prophylaxis strategies with HER-2-inhibiting small molecules able to cross the blood-brain barrier and/or radiologic screening to detect asymptomatic brain metastases.


The Journal of Urology | 1998

GENITOURINARY SMALL CELL CARCINOMA: DETERMINATION OF CLINICAL AND THERAPEUTIC FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH SURVIVAL

John R. Mackey; Heather-Jane Au; Judith Hugh; Peter Venner

PURPOSE We assessed the prognostic impact of genitourinary small cell carcinoma tumor and patient characteristics, and therapy. MATERIALS AND METHODS We retrospectively reviewed the records of 180 patients with genitourinary small cell carcinoma in which patient and tumor characteristics, therapy, followup duration and survival status had been documented. Patient age, sex, primary site, histological features, tumor size, stage, locoregional therapy, systemic chemotherapy and hormonal manipulations were analyzed for association with survival. RESULTS There were 106 cases of bladder, 60 prostatic, 8 renal and 6 ureteral small cell carcinoma. Median survival was 10.5 months overall, and 7 and 13 months for prostatic and bladder small cell carcinoma, respectively (p <0.0001 log rank analysis). In all cases metastatic disease at presentation (p <0.008, risk ratio 1.9) predicted poor survival on multivariate analysis. Radical surgery (p <0.0001, risk ratio 0.34) and cisplatin chemotherapy (p <0.0001, risk ratio 0.20) were the only factors that predicted improved survival on multivariate analysis. For prostatic small cell carcinoma primary surgical therapy (p <0.012, risk ratio 0.46) was the only parameter that predicted survival on univariate analysis. For bladder small cell carcinoma only cisplatin chemotherapy (p <0.0001, risk ratio 0.15) predicted survival on multivariate analysis. CONCLUSIONS Genitourinary small cell carcinoma has a poor prognosis, which is worse in prostatic than bladder disease. Patient and tumor characteristics were not determinants of survival when prostatic and bladder small cell carcinoma were analyzed individually. For prostatic disease only primary surgical therapy was associated with prolonged survival, while for bladder disease cisplatin chemotherapy was associated with a favorable prognosis. We recommend considering primary surgical therapy for prostatic and cisplatin based chemotherapy for bladder small cell carcinoma.


Cancer | 1990

PRIMARY BREAST LYMPHOMA - AN IMMUNOHISTOLOGIC STUDY OF 20 NEW CASES

Judith Hugh; Frank I. Jackson; John Hanson; Sibrand Poppema

Primary malignant lymphomas of the breast (PBL) are uncommon. the authors report the clinical, histologic, and immunoperoxidase findings on 20 cases recorded at the Alberta Cancer Registry over the last 23 years. These cases were then added to material on 257 cases abstracted from the literature and analyzed. It was found that there are two clinicopathologic types of PBL. the first affects pregnant or lactating women with bilateral, diffuse disease, is rapidly fatal, and corresponds histologically to a Burkitts‐type lymphoma. the second is unilateral at presentation and afflicts a broad age range, but primarily older women. This has a variable course only part of which is predicted by histologic grade and stage. Tumor size, treatment, and side of presentation were not found to be significant prognostic factors. Histologically, these tumors can be grouped into large cell B‐cell lymphomas, monocytoid B‐cell lymphomas (MBCL), and undifferentiated, some of which may be T‐cell. Evidence suggesting that the MBCL of breast are the equivalent of the malignant lymphomas of the mucosa‐associated lymphoid tissues (MALT) is reviewed. the breast is a hormone‐dependent member of the MALT and therefore it is interesting that two of these tumors were strongly positive for estrogen receptors.


Lancet Oncology | 2013

Adjuvant docetaxel, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide in node-positive breast cancer: 10-year follow-up of the phase 3 randomised BCIRG 001 trial

John R. Mackey; Miguel Martin; Tadeusz Pienkowski; Janusz Rolski; Jean Paul Guastalla; Amer Sami; John A. Glaspy; Eva Juhos; Andrew M Wardley; Tommy Fornander; John D. Hainsworth; Robert E. Coleman; Manuel R. Modiano; Jeferson Vinholes; Tamás Pintér; Álvaro Rodríguez-Lescure; Bruce Colwell; Pierre Whitlock; Louise Provencher; Kara Laing; David Walde; Chris Price; Judith Hugh; Barrett H. Childs; Kimberly Bassi; Mary Ann Lindsay; Véronique Wilson; Matthieu Rupin; Vincent Houe; Charles Vogel

BACKGROUND We compared standard adjuvant anthracycline chemotherapy with anthracycline-taxane combination chemotherapy in women with operable node-positive breast cancer. Here we report the final, 10-year follow-up analysis of disease-free survival, overall survival, and long-term safety. METHODS BCIRG 001 was an open label, phase 3, multicentre trial in which 1491 patients aged 18-70 years with node-positive, early breast cancer and a Karnofsky score of 80% or more were randomly assigned to adjuvant treatment with docetaxel, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (TAC) or fluorouracil, doxorubicin, and cyclophosphamide (FAC) every 3 weeks for six cycles. Randomisation was stratified according to institution and number of involved axillary lymph nodes per patient (one to three vs four or more). Disease-free survival was the primary endpoint and was defined as the interval between randomisation and breast cancer relapse, second primary cancer, or death, whichever occurred first. Efficacy analyses were based on the intention-to-treat principle. BCIRG 001 is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00688740. FINDINGS Enrolement took place between June 11, 1997 and June 3, 1999; 745 patients were assigned to receive TAC and 746 patients were assigned to receive FAC. After a median follow-up of 124 months (IQR 90-126), disease-free survival was 62% (95% CI 58-65) for patients in the TAC group and 55% (51-59) for patients in the FAC group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·80, 95% CI 0·68-0·93; log-rank p=0·0043). 10-year overall survival was 76% (95% CI 72-79) for patients in the TAC group and 69% (65-72) for patients in the FAC group (HR 0·74, 0·61-0·90; log-rank p=0·0020). TAC improved disease-free survival relative to FAC irrespective of nodal, hormone receptor, and HER2 status, although not all differences were significant in these subgroup analyses. Grade 3-4 heart failure occurred in 26 (3%) patients in the TAC group and 17 (2%) patients in the FAC group, and caused death in two patients in the TAC group and four patients in the FAC group. A substantial decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction (defined as a relative decrease from baseline of 20% or more) was seen in 58 (17%) patients who received TAC and 41 (15%) patients who received FAC. Six patients who received TAC developed leukaemia or myelodysplasia, as did three patients who received FAC. INTERPRETATION Our results provide evidence that the initial therapeutic outcomes seen at the 5-year follow-up with a docetaxel-containing adjuvant regimen are maintained at 10 years. However, a substantial percentage of patients had a decrease in left ventricular ejection fraction, probably caused by anthracycline therapy, which warrants further investigation. FUNDING Sanofi.


Modern Pathology | 2015

An international study to increase concordance in Ki67 scoring

Mei Yin C. Polley; Samuel C. Y. Leung; Dongxia Gao; Mauro G. Mastropasqua; Lila Zabaglo; John M. S. Bartlett; Lisa M. McShane; Rebecca A. Enos; Sunil Badve; Anita Bane; Signe Borgquist; Susan Fineberg; Ming Gang Lin; Allen M. Gown; Dorthe Grabau; Carolina Gutierrez; Judith Hugh; Takuya Moriya; Yasuyo Ohi; C. Kent Osborne; Frédérique Penault-Llorca; Tammy Piper; Peggy L. Porter; Takashi Sakatani; Roberto Salgado; Jane Starczynski; Anne Vibeke Lænkholm; Giuseppe Viale; Mitch Dowsett; Daniel F. Hayes

Although an important biomarker in breast cancer, Ki67 lacks scoring standardization, which has limited its clinical use. Our previous study found variability when laboratories used their own scoring methods on centrally stained tissue microarray slides. In this current study, 16 laboratories from eight countries calibrated to a specific Ki67 scoring method and then scored 50 centrally MIB-1 stained tissue microarray cases. Simple instructions prescribed scoring pattern and staining thresholds for determination of the percentage of stained tumor cells. To calibrate, laboratories scored 18 ‘training’ and ‘test’ web-based images. Software tracked object selection and scoring. Success for the calibration was prespecified as Root Mean Square Error of scores compared with reference <0.6 and Maximum Absolute Deviation from reference <1.0 (log2-transformed data). Prespecified success criteria for tissue microarray scoring required intraclass correlation significantly >0.70 but aiming for observed intraclass correlation ≥0.90. Laboratory performance showed non-significant but promising trends of improvement through the calibration exercise (mean Root Mean Square Error decreased from 0.6 to 0.4, Maximum Absolute Deviation from 1.6 to 0.9; paired t-test: P=0.07 for Root Mean Square Error, 0.06 for Maximum Absolute Deviation). For tissue microarray scoring, the intraclass correlation estimate was 0.94 (95% credible interval: 0.90–0.97), markedly and significantly >0.70, the prespecified minimum target for success. Some discrepancies persisted, including around clinically relevant cutoffs. After calibrating to a common scoring method via a web-based tool, laboratories can achieve high inter-laboratory reproducibility in Ki67 scoring on centrally stained tissue microarray slides. Although these data are potentially encouraging, suggesting that it may be possible to standardize scoring of Ki67 among pathology laboratories, clinically important discrepancies persist. Before this biomarker could be recommended for clinical use, future research will need to extend this approach to biopsies and whole sections, account for staining variability, and link to outcomes.


Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 2005

MUC1 mediates transendothelial migration in vitro by ligating endothelial cell ICAM-1.

Jennifer J. Rahn; Jeffrey W. Chow; Garnet J. Horne; Brian K. Mah; Joanne T. Emerman; Pat Hoffman; Judith Hugh

MUC1 is a transmembrane glycoprotein expressed by normal breast epithelium and virtually all breast cancers. MUC1 is normally restricted to the apical surface of epithelia and loss of this polarized distribution in breast carcinomas is associated with lymph node metatases. Our previous work found that MUC1 can bind intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1), mediating adhesion of breast cancer cells to a simulated blood vessel wall, and also triggering a calcium-based signal in the MUC1-bearing cells. It is possible that the depolarized membrane distribution of MUC1 in breast carcinomas may facilitate interactions with stromal/endothelial ICAM-1 leading to adhesion and subsequent migration through the vessel wall. In the current study, we provide evidence that ICAM-1 can influence the migration of cells that express endogenous or transfected MUC1. Migration across a gelatin-coated Transwell membrane could be increased in a step-wise manner by the sequential addition of ICAM-1-expressing cells (endothelial cells and fibroblasts), and ICAM-1-inducing inflammatory cytokines (tumour necrosis factor-α and interleukin-1β). Antibodies against MUC1 or ICAM-1, but not a control antibody, could abrogate migratory increases. Cells that did not express MUC1 were unresponsive to ICAM-1. Our current findings build on our earlier work, by suggesting that the end result of the MUC1/ICAM-1-mediated cell–cell adhesion and calcium-based signal is migration. This has implications for the exit of circulating tumour cells from the vasculature, as well as tumour cell migration through fibroblast-containing stroma underlying the endothelial wall.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2008

MUC1 Initiates Src-CrkL-Rac1/Cdc42-Mediated Actin Cytoskeletal Protrusive Motility after Ligating Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1

Qiang Shen; Jennifer J. Rahn; Jing Zhang; Nirosha Gunasekera; Xuejun Sun; Andrew R. E. Shaw; Michael J. Hendzel; Pat Hoffman; Ashlyn Bernier; Judith Hugh

MUC1, a transmembrane glycoprotein of the mucin family, when aberrantly expressed on breast cancer cells is correlated with increased lymph node metastases. We have previously shown that MUC1 binds intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) on surrounding accessory cells and facilitates transendothelial migration of MUC1-bearing cells. Nevertheless, the underlying molecular mechanism is still obscure. In the present study, we used a novel assay of actin cytoskeletal reorganization to show that by ligating ICAM-1, MUC1 triggers Rac1- and Cdc42-dependent actin cytoskeletal protrusive activity preferentially at the heterotypic cell-cell contact sites. Further, we show that these MUC1/ICAM-1 interaction–initiated lamellipodial and filopodial protrusions require Src family kinase and CT10 regulator of kinase like (CrkL) accompanied by the rapid formation of a Src-CrkL signaling complex at the MUC1 cytoplasmic domain. Through inhibition of Src kinase activity, we further revealed that Src is required for recruiting CrkL to the MUC1 cytoplasmic domain as well as mediating the observed actin cytoskeleton dynamics. These findings suggest a novel MUC1-Src-CrkL-Rac1/Cdc42 signaling cascade following ICAM-1 ligation, through which MUC1 regulates cytoskeletal reorganization and directed cell motility during cell migration. (Mol Cancer Res 2008;6(4):555–67)

Collaboration


Dive into the Judith Hugh's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Torsten O. Nielsen

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sibrand Poppema

University Medical Center Groningen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Hanson

Cross Cancer Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Miguel Martin

Complutense University of Madrid

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tammy Piper

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Allen M. Gown

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dongxia Gao

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge