Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kenneth A. Fleming is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kenneth A. Fleming.


The Lancet | 1989

PRENATAL SEX DETERMINATION BY DNA AMPLIFICATION FROM MATERNAL PERIPHERAL BLOOD

Y. M D Lo; James S. Wainscoat; MichaelD.G. Gillmer; P. Patel; Maurizio Sampietro; Kenneth A. Fleming

The polymerase chain reaction was used to amplify a Y-specific repeat sequence in peripheral blood DNA samples from 19 pregnant women who had a gestational age of 9 to 41 weeks. Y-specific sequences were amplified from all 12 women who bore a male fetus but in none of 7 women who bore a female fetus. With stringent precautions against contamination, this technique may assist prenatal diagnosis of sex-linked genetic disorders.


British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 1992

Clinical and histopathological features of parvovirus B19 infection in the human fetus

A. L. Morey; J. W. Keeling; H. J. Porter; Kenneth A. Fleming

Objective To provide a comprehensive description of the clinical and histopathological features associated with parvovirus B19 infection of the human fetus.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2001

Evaluation of serologic disease markers in a population-based cohort of patients with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease.

William J. Sandborn; Edward V. Loftus; Jean-Frederic Colombel; Kenneth A. Fleming; Frank Seibold; Henry A. Homburger; Boualem Sendid; Roger W. Chapman; William J. Tremaine; Debra K. Kaul; Jeannie S. Wallace; William S. Harmsen; Alan R. Zinsmeister; Stephan R. Targan

BackgroundThe sensitivity of assays for antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA), anti-Saccharomyces cerevisiae antibody (ASCA), and antipancreatic antibody (PAB) in different laboratories is unknown. Likewise, the sensitivity and diagnostic usefulness of these assays in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in the community is unknown. MethodsAn incidence cohort of 290 patients with IBD were offered participation in the study. Blood was obtained from 162 patients (56%) (83 with ulcerative colitis, 79 with Crohns disease) who agreed to participate. ANCA was determined in five laboratories, ASCA in two laboratories, and PAB in one laboratory. ResultsIn ulcerative colitis, the sensitivity of ANCA determined in five laboratories varied widely, ranging from 0–63%. In Crohns disease, the sensitivity of ASCA determined in two laboratories did not vary significantly, ranging from 39–44%; and the sensitivity of PAB determined in one laboratory was 15%. The optimal diagnostic usefulness was obtained from one laboratory where the positive predictive values of a positive ANCA assay combined with a negative ASCA assay for ulcerative colitis, and a negative ANCA combined with a positive ASCA for Crohns disease, were 75% and 86%, respectively. ConclusionsIn patients with IBD, the sensitivity of ANCA varied widely in different laboratories, whereas the prevalence of ASCA was similar. The positive predictive values of the ANCA assay combined with the ASCA assay for ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease are high enough to be clinically useful.


Gut | 2002

Patients with small duct primary sclerosing cholangitis have a favourable long term prognosis

Einar Björnsson; Kirsten Muri Boberg; S Cullen; Kenneth A. Fleming; O. P. F. Clausen; O. Fausa; Erik Schrumpf; Roger W. Chapman

Background: Patients with cholestatic liver function tests and histological features of primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) but a normal cholangiogram are considered to have small duct PSC. The natural history of this condition is unknown. Methods: Thirty three patients with small duct PSC were identified among patients admitted for diagnostic workup of cholestatic liver function tests in one centre in the UK (Oxford) and one centre in Norway (Oslo). A total of 260 patients with large duct PSC were compared, and prognosis in terms of death, cholangiocarcinoma, biochemical features, histological features, and symptoms analysed. Results: Mean age at diagnosis was 38 years and 39 years in small duct and large duct PSC, respectively. Mean follow up was 106 months in small duct and 105 months in large duct patients. Four patients originally considered to have small duct developed large duct PSC. Two of these underwent liver transplantation during follow up. Of the remainder who did not develop large duct PSC, two patients died during follow up: one of liver failure and the other of cardiac death unrelated to her liver disease. A total of 122 (47%) large duct patients either required liver transplantation (34 patients) or died (88 patients). Small duct patients had a significantly better survival compared with large duct patients. Among small duct patients, none developed cholangiocarcinoma compared with 28 of 260 (11%) large duct patients. Conclusions: Patients with small duct PSC seem to have a good prognosis in terms of survival and development of cholangiocarcinoma. Small duct PSC progresses to large duct PSC in a small proportion of patients.


Lancet Oncology | 2015

Global cancer surgery: delivering safe, affordable, and timely cancer surgery

Richard Sullivan; Olusegun I. Alatise; Benjamin O. Anderson; Riccardo A. Audisio; Philippe Autier; Ajay Aggarwal; Charles M. Balch; Murray F. Brennan; Anna J. Dare; Anil D'Cruz; Alexander M.M. Eggermont; Kenneth A. Fleming; Serigne Magueye Gueye; Lars Hagander; Cristian A Herrera; Hampus Holmer; André M. Ilbawi; Anton Jarnheimer; Jiafu Ji; T. Peter Kingham; Jonathan Liberman; Andrew J M Leather; John G. Meara; Swagoto Mukhopadhyay; Ss Murthy; Sherif Omar; Groesbeck P. Parham; Cs Pramesh; Robert Riviello; Danielle Rodin

Surgery is essential for global cancer care in all resource settings. Of the 15.2 million new cases of cancer in 2015, over 80% of cases will need surgery, some several times. By 2030, we estimate that annually 45 million surgical procedures will be needed worldwide. Yet, less than 25% of patients with cancer worldwide actually get safe, affordable, or timely surgery. This Commission on global cancer surgery, building on Global Surgery 2030, has examined the state of global cancer surgery through an analysis of the burden of surgical disease and breadth of cancer surgery, economics and financing, factors for strengthening surgical systems for cancer with multiple-country studies, the research agenda, and the political factors that frame policy making in this area. We found wide equity and economic gaps in global cancer surgery. Many patients throughout the world do not have access to cancer surgery, and the failure to train more cancer surgeons and strengthen systems could result in as much as US


Journal of Hepatology | 2006

High dose ursodeoxycholic acid for the treatment of primary sclerosing cholangitis is safe and effective

S Cullen; Christian Rust; Kenneth A. Fleming; Cathryn Edwards; Ulrich Beuers; Roger W. Chapman

6.2 trillion in lost cumulative gross domestic product by 2030. Many of the key adjunct treatment modalities for cancer surgery--e.g., pathology and imaging--are also inadequate. Our analysis identified substantial issues, but also highlights solutions and innovations. Issues of access, a paucity of investment in public surgical systems, low investment in research, and training and education gaps are remarkably widespread. Solutions include better regulated public systems, international partnerships, super-centralisation of surgical services, novel surgical clinical trials, and new approaches to improve quality and scale up cancer surgical systems through education and training. Our key messages are directed at many global stakeholders, but the central message is that to deliver safe, affordable, and timely cancer surgery to all, surgery must be at the heart of global and national cancer control planning.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 1987

Detection of low copy human papilloma virus DNA and mRNA in routine paraffin sections of cervix by non-isotopic in situ hybridisation.

J Burns; A K Graham; C Frank; Kenneth A. Fleming; M F Evans; J O McGee

BACKGROUND/AIMS Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) has been shown to improve serum liver tests in primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), but controlled trials have shown inconsistent effects on liver histology, and did not reveal a survival benefit. This pilot, randomised dose-ranging trial attempted to determine whether further enrichment of the bile acid pool with UDCA would lead to an improvement in outcome for PSC patients. METHODS Thirty-one patients with PSC were randomised to treatment with either 10 mg/kg (low dose), 20 mg/kg (standard dose) or 30 mg/kg (high dose) daily of UDCA for 2 years. Patients were assessed every 12 weeks and underwent liver biopsy at the beginning and end of the trial. RESULTS Serum liver tests improved in all groups taking UDCA. Survival probability at 1-4 years as evaluated by the Mayo risk score tended to improve for all patients and significantly improved for the high dose group (p<0.02). Only 3 (10%) of all patients had a Ludwig score showing histological deterioration over the trial period. CONCLUSIONS High dose UDCA is well-tolerated and is associated with an improvement in survival probability. A trend towards stability/improvement in histological stage was also observed. This treatment appears to be effective for PSC and deserves further evaluation.


Gut | 1995

Liver histology in hepatitis C infection: a comparison between patients with persistently normal or abnormal transaminases.

C. J. Healey; Roger W. Chapman; Kenneth A. Fleming

In analysing human papilloma virus (HPV) infection of the cervix in formalin fixed paraffin sections by non-isotopic in situ hybridisation two main problems were found: detachment of sections from the glass during hybridisation and probe detection; inadequate sensitivity and inability to assess sensitivity of the in situ procedure. The first problem was investigated by assessing the efficiency of various tissue adhesives individually and in combination. The second problem was addressed by optimising conditions for DNA unmasking, hybridisation, and biotinylated probe detection. Sensitivity of the final in situ procedure developed was assessed by using the detection of pHY2.1 repeats as a built-in control. Extrapolation of data showed that less than 10 copies of HPV DNA can be visualised by these procedures. HPV nucleic acid, mainly in the form of DNA, was detected not only in koilocytic nuclei but also in suprabasal cells in condylomas and CIN lesions. HPV mRNA was also visualised in the cytoplasm (and probably also nuclei) of the same cell types. These non-isotopic in situ procedures give results comparable to those obtained with radiolabelled probes, but they are less time consuming and provide better morphological resolution.


Gastroenterology | 1994

HLA DR4 is a marker for rapid disease progression in primary sclerosing cholangitis.

W. Z. Mehal; Y.-M. Dennis Lo; B. Paul Wordsworth; James Neuberger; Stefan Hubscher; Kenneth A. Fleming; Roger W. Chapman

Forty two cases of confirmed hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection with available liver histology were studied. Most patients, 23 of 42 (55%) had abnormal liver function tests but 19 of 42 (45%) had persistently normal liver transaminases (mean aspartate transaminase (AST) 24.1 IU/l, mean follow up 10 months). Histological examinations in the group with normal AST activities were normal in two of 19 (11%), showed non-specific reactive hepatitis in eight of 19 (42%), chronic persistent hepatitis in six of 19 (31%), and chronic active hepatitis in three of 19 (16%). Twenty three of 42 (55%) had either persistently or temporary raised liver transaminases (mean AST 96.2 IU/l, mean follow up 16 months). Histological examinations in this second group with abnormal liver biochemistry showed reactive hepatitis in five of 23 (22%), chronic persistent hepatitis in six of 23 (26%), chronic active hepatitis in 10 of 23 (43%), and cirrhosis in two (9%). Average alcohol intake was significantly higher in the group within abnormal liver function (17.8 v 6.4 units, p = 0.01). Although serious pathology was more frequent in the abnormal transaminase group, significant liver pathology (chronic persistent hepatitis or chronic active hepatitis) was found in nine of 19 (47%) of cases with repeatedly normal transaminases. Liver biopsy is advised in all cases of chronic hepatitis C infection to accurately assess both the degree of fibrosis and the current activity of the disease.


Gut | 2002

Cigarette smoking, appendectomy, and tonsillectomy as risk factors for the development of primary sclerosing cholangitis: a case control study

S. Mitchell; M. Thyssen; Timothy R. Orchard; Derek P. Jewell; Kenneth A. Fleming; Roger W. Chapman

BACKGROUND/AIMS Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) is an inflammatory disease of the biliary tree associated with an increase in the HLA alleles DR3, DR52a, DR2, Dw2, and a decrease in DR4. However, it is not certain which of these alleles provides the primary associations. Our aim was to establish the primary HLA associations with PSC and to assess the ability of HLA alleles to mark for disease progression. METHODS By applying molecular techniques to archival tissue, we have genotyped 83 PSC patients from two populations and 131 controls for the alleles HLA DR2, DR3, DR4, DRw12, DR52a, and Dw2. RESULTS HLA DR3, DR52a, DR2, and Dw2 were all significantly increased in PSC, with the relative risk for DR52a and Dw2 being greater than for DR3 and DR2, respectively. HLA DR4 was significantly decreased, but this may be artifactual to the DR3, DR2 increase. HLA DR4 and not DR52a marks for rapid disease progression in both our PSC populations. CONCLUSIONS HLA DR52a and Dw2 are the best candidate alleles for providing the known HLA association with PSC. HLA DR4 and not DR52a marks for rapid disease progression in our two PSC populations.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kenneth A. Fleming's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

P. Patel

University of Oxford

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael L. Wilson

University of Colorado Denver

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. J. Healey

John Radcliffe Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J Christie

John Radcliffe Hospital

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge