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Dive into the research topics where Keith D. Hunter is active.

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Featured researches published by Keith D. Hunter.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2005

Profiling early head and neck cancer

Keith D. Hunter; E. Ken Parkinson; Paul R. Harrison

Head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is the sixth most common cancer worldwide and, disappointingly, survival rates are not improving. Moreover, HNSCC has a severe impact on the quality of life of patients and survivors, and the significant morbidity subsequent to treatment often mandates long-term multidisciplinary care, which places significant financial pressures on the treating institution. Therefore, prevention and early diagnosis of high-risk pre-malignant lesions are high priorities for reducing deaths due to head and neck cancer. Recent advances have begun to elucidate the different aetiologies of HNSCCs in relation to previous pre-malignancies and to identify which pre-malignant lesions are likely to progress to malignancy.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2009

Joint Practice Guidelines for Radionuclide Lymphoscintigraphy for Sentinel Node Localization in Oral/Oropharyngeal Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Lee W. T. Alkureishi; Zeynep Burak; Julio Alvarez; James R. Ballinger; Anders Bilde; Alan J. Britten; Luca Calabrese; Carlo Chiesa; Arturo Chiti; R. de Bree; H. W. Gray; Keith D. Hunter; Adorján F. Kovács; Michael Lassmann; Charles R. Leemans; G. Mamelle; Mark McGurk; Jakob Mortensen; Tito Poli; Taimur Shoaib; Philip Sloan; Jens Ahm Sørensen; Sandro J. Stoeckli; Jørn Bo Thomsen; Giuseppe Trifirò; Jochen A. Werner; Gary L. Ross

Involvement of the cervical lymph nodes is the most important prognostic factor for patients with oral/oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), and the decision of whether to electively treat patients with clinically negative necks remains a controversial topic. Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) provides a minimally invasive method for determining the disease status of the cervical node basin, without the need for a formal neck dissection. This technique potentially improves the accuracy of histologic nodal staging and avoids overtreating three-quarters of this patient population, minimizing associated morbidity. The technique has been validated for patients with OSCC, and larger-scale studies are in progress to determine its exact role in the management of this patient population. This document is designed to outline the current best practice guidelines for the provision of SNB in patients with early-stage OSCC, and to provide a framework for the currently evolving recommendations for its use. Preparation of this guideline was carried out by a multidisciplinary surgical/nuclear medicine/pathology expert panel under the joint auspices of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) Oncology Committee and the Sentinel European Node Trial (SENT) Committee.


Cancer Research | 2006

Divergent routes to oral cancer.

Keith D. Hunter; Johanna K. Thurlow; Janis Fleming; Paul J.H. Drake; J. Keith Vass; Gabriela Kalna; Des J. Higham; Pawel Herzyk; D. Gordon MacDonald; E. Ken Parkinson; Paul Harrison

Most head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) patients present with late-stage cancers, which are difficult to treat. Therefore, early diagnosis of high-risk premalignant lesions and incipient cancers is important. HNSCC is currently perceived as a single progression mechanism, resulting in immortal invasive cancers. However, we have found that approximately 40% of primary oral SCCs are mortal in culture, and these have a better prognosis. About 60% of oral premalignancies (dysplasias) are also mortal. The mortal and immortal tumors are generated in vivo as judged by p53 mutations and loss of p16(INK4A) expression being found only in the original tumors from which the immortal cultures were derived. To investigate the relationships of dysplasias to SCCs, we did microarray analysis of primary cultures of 4 normal oral mucosa biopsies, 19 dysplasias, and 16 SCCs. Spectral clustering using the singular value decomposition and other bioinformatic techniques showed that development of mortal and immortal SCCs involves distinct transcriptional changes. Both SCC classes share most of the transcriptional changes found in their respective dysplasias but have additional changes. Moreover, high-risk dysplasias that subsequently progress to SCCs more closely resemble SCCs than nonprogressing dysplasias. This indicates for the first time that there are divergent mortal and immortal pathways for oral SCC development via intermediate dysplasias. We believe that this new information may lead to new ways of classifying HNSCC in relation to prognosis.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2010

Spectral Clustering of Microarray Data Elucidates the Roles of Microenvironment Remodeling and Immune Responses in Survival of Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma

Johanna K. Thurlow; Claudia Pena Murillo; Keith D. Hunter; Francesca M. Buffa; Shalini Patiar; Guy N J Betts; Catharine M L West; Adrian L. Harris; Eric Kenneth Parkinson; Paul Harrison; Bradford W Ozanne; Max Partridge; Gabriela Kalna

PURPOSE To identify functionally related prognostic gene sets for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) by unsupervised statistical analysis of microarray data. PATIENTS AND METHODS Microarray analysis was performed on 14 normal oral epithelium and 71 HNSCCs from patients with outcome data. Spectral clustering (SC) analysis of the data set identified multiple vectors representing distinct aspects of gene expression heterogeneity between samples. Gene ontology (GO) analysis of vector gene lists identified gene sets significantly enriched within defined biologic pathways. The prognostic significance of these was established by Cox survival analysis. RESULTS The most influential SC vectors were V2 and V3. V2 separated normal from tumor samples. GO analysis of V2 gene lists identified pathways with heterogeneous expression between HNSCCs, notably focal adhesion (FA)/extracellular matrix remodeling and cytokine-cytokine receptor (CR) interactions. Similar analysis of V3 gene lists identified further heterogeneity in CR pathways. V2CR genes represent an innate immune response, whereas high expression of V3CR genes represented an adaptive immune response that was not dependent on human papillomavirus status. Survival analysis demonstrated that the FA gene set was prognostic of poor outcome, whereas classification for adaptive immune response by the CR gene set was prognostic of good outcome. A combined FA&CR model dramatically exceeded the performance of current clinical classifiers (P < .001 in our cohort and, importantly, P = .007 in an independent cohort of 60 HNSCCs). CONCLUSION The application of SC and GO algorithms to HNSCC microarray data identified gene sets highly significant for predicting patient outcome. Further large-scale studies will establish the usefulness of these gene sets in the clinical management of HNSCC.


European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2009

Joint practice guidelines for radionuclide lymphoscintigraphy for sentinel node localization in oral/oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma

Lee W. T. Alkureishi; Zeynep Burak; Julio Alvarez; James R. Ballinger; Anders Bilde; Alan J. Britten; Luca Calabrese; Carlo Chiesa; Arturo Chiti; Remco de Bree; H. W. Gray; Keith D. Hunter; Adorján F. Kovács; Michael Lassmann; C. René Leemans; G. Mamelle; Mark McGurk; Jann Mortensen; Tito Poli; Taimur Shoaib; Philip Sloan; Jens Ahm Sørensen; Sandro J. Stoeckli; Jørn Bo Thomsen; Giusepe Trifiro; Jochen A. Werner; Gary L. Ross

Involvement of the cervical lymph nodes is the most important prognostic factor for patients with oral/oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC), and the decision whether to electively treat patients with clinically negative necks remains a controversial topic. Sentinel node biopsy (SNB) provides a minimally invasive method of determining the disease status of the cervical node basin, without the need for a formal neck dissection. This technique potentially improves the accuracy of histological nodal staging and avoids over-treating three-quarters of this patient population, minimizing associated morbidity. The technique has been validated for patients with OSCC, and larger-scale studies are in progress to determine its exact role in the management of this patient population. This article was designed to outline the current best practice guidelines for the provision of SNB in patients with early-stage OSCC, and to provide a framework for the currently evolving recommendations for its use. These guidelines were prepared by a multidisciplinary surgical/nuclear medicine/pathology expert panel under the joint auspices of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) Oncology Committee and the Sentinel European Node Trial Committee.


International Journal of Cancer | 2012

Endothelin-1 stimulates motility of head and neck squamous carcinoma cells by promoting stromal-epithelial interactions.

Emma E. Hinsley; Stuart Hunt; Keith D. Hunter; Simon A. Whawell; Daniel W. Lambert

The invasion and migration of cancer cells is increasingly recognised to be influenced by factors derived from adjacent tumour‐associated stroma. The contextual signals regulating stromal–tumour interactions, however, remain poorly understood. Here, we identify a role for endothelin‐1 (ET‐1), a mitogenic peptide elevated in a number of malignancies, in promoting pro‐metastatic cross‐talk between head and neck cancer cells and adjacent fibroblasts. We demonstrate that treatment of oral fibroblasts with ET‐1 activates ADAM17‐mediated release of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) ligands, triggering EGFR signalling and increased motility in neighbouring head and neck cancer cells. ET‐1–mediated paracrine transactivation of EGFR also increased cyclo‐oxygenase‐2 levels in the cancer cells, providing a molecular insight into the mechanisms by which the elevated levels of ET‐1 observed in head and neck cancers may contribute to disease progression.


Cancer Research | 2011

c-Myc Regulates RNA Splicing of the A-Raf Kinase and Its Activation of the ERK Pathway

Jens Rauch; Kim Moran-Jones; Valerie Albrecht; Thomas Schwarzl; Keith D. Hunter; Olivier Gires; Walter Kolch

A-Raf kinase can inhibit apoptosis by binding to the proapoptotic mammalian sterile 20-like kinase (MST2). This function relies on expression of hnRNP H, which ensures the correct splicing of a-raf mRNA needed to produce full-length A-Raf protein. Here, we showed that expression of hnRNP H and production of full-length A-Raf is positively controlled by c-Myc. Low c-Myc reduces hnRNP H expression and switches a-raf splicing to produce A-Raf(short), a truncated protein. Importantly, A-Raf(short) fails to regulate MST2 but retains the Ras-binding domain such that it functions as a dominant negative mutant suppressing Ras activation and transformation. Human colon and head and neck cancers exhibit high hnRNP H and high c-Myc levels resulting in enhanced A-Raf expression and reduced expression of A-Raf(short). Conversely, in normal cells and tissues in which c-Myc and hnRNP H are low, A-Raf(short) suppresses extracellular signal regulated kinase activation such that it may act as a safeguard against oncogenic transformation. Our findings offered a new paradigm to understand how c-Myc coordinates diverse cell functions by directly affecting alternate splicing of key signaling components.


Histopathology | 2011

High incidences of DNA ploidy abnormalities in tongue squamous cell carcinoma of young patients: an international collaborative study

Alan Roger Santos-Silva; Ana Carolina Prado Ribeiro; Ana Maria Pires Soubhia; Glauco Issamu Miyahara; Roman Carlos; Paul M. Speight; Keith D. Hunter; Alica Torres-Rendon; Pablo Agustin Vargas; Márcio Ajudarte Lopes

Santos‐Silva A R, Ribeiro A C P, Soubhia A M P, Miyahara G I, Carlos R, Speight P M, Hunter K D, Torres‐Rendon A, Vargas P A & Lopes M A (2011) Histopathology 58, 1127–1135
High incidences of DNA ploidy abnormalities in tongue squamous cell carcinoma of young patients: an international collaborative study


Oncogene | 2003

Senescing oral dysplasias are not immortalized by ectopic expression of hTERT alone without other molecular changes, such as loss of INK4A and/or retinoic acid receptor- β : but p53 mutations are not necessarily required

Alessandra Muntoni; Janis Fleming; Katrina E. Gordon; Keith D. Hunter; Fiona McGregor; E. Kenneth Parkinson; Paul Harrison

Our previous work showed that acquisition of immortality at the dysplasia stage of oral cancer progression was consistently associated with four changes: loss of retinoic acid receptor (RAR)-β and p16INK4A expression, p53 mutations and activation of telomerase. One atypical dysplasia (D17) that underwent delayed senescence after an extended lifespan showed loss of RAR-β and p16INK4A/p14ARF expression, but retained functional wild-type p53 and telomerase was not activated. We now demonstrate that retroviral delivery of hTERT results in telomere lengthening and immortalization of D17 without loss of functional wild-type p53 activity. In contrast, the expression of hTERT in two other typical mortal dyplasia cultures (that retain RAR-β and p16INK4A expression) does not extend their lifespan, even though telomeres are lengthened.


Bone | 2014

Modifying the osteoblastic niche with zoledronic acid in vivo—Potential implications for breast cancer bone metastasis

Marie-Therese Haider; Ingunn Holen; T. Neil Dear; Keith D. Hunter; Hannah K. Brown

Introduction Bone metastasis is the most common complication of advanced breast cancer. The associated cancer-induced bone disease is treated with bone-sparing agents like zoledronic acid. Clinical trials have shown that zoledronic acid also reduces breast cancer recurrence in bone; potentially by modifying the bone microenvironment surrounding disseminated tumour cells. We have characterised the early effects of zoledronic acid on key cell types of the metastatic niche in vivo, and investigated how these modify the location of breast tumour cells homing to bone. Methods Female mice were treated with a single, clinically achievable dose of zoledronic acid (100 μg/kg) or PBS. Bone integrity, osteoclast and osteoblast activity and number/mm trabecular bone on 1, 3, 5 and 10 days after treatment were assessed using μCT, ELISA (TRAP, PINP) and bone histomorphometry, respectively. The effect of zoledronic acid on osteoblasts was validated in genetically engineered mice with GFP-positive osteoblastic cells. The effects on growth plate cartilage were visualised by toluidine blue staining. For tumour studies, mice were injected i.c. with DID-labelled MDA-MB-231-NW1-luc2 breast cancer cells 5 days after zoledronic acid treatment, followed by assessment of tumour cell homing to bone and soft tissues by multiphoton microscopy, flow cytometry and ex vivo cultures. Results As early as 3 days after treatment, animals receiving zoledronic acid had significantly increased trabecular bone volume vs. control. This rapid bone effect was reflected in a significant reduction in osteoclast and osteoblast number/mm trabecular bone and reduced bone marker serum levels (day 3–5). These results were confirmed in mice expressing GFP in osteoblastic linage cells. Pre-treatment with zoledronic acid caused accumulation of an extra-cellular matrix in the growth plate associated with a trend towards preferential [1] homing of tumour cells to osteoblast-rich areas of bone, but without affecting the total number of tumour cells. The number of circulating tumour cells was reduced in ZOL treated animals. Conclusion A single dose of zoledronic acid caused significant changes in the bone area suggested to contain the metastatic niche. Tumour cells arriving in this modified bone microenvironment appeared to preferentially locate to osteoblast-rich areas, supporting that osteoblasts may be key components of the bone metastasis niche and therefore a potential therapeutic target in breast cancer.

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Pablo Agustin Vargas

State University of Campinas

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Roman Carlos

Rio de Janeiro State University

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