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Featured researches published by Laurence Becker.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1990

Posterior fossa medulloblastoma in childhood: Treatment results and a proposal for a new staging system

Derek Jenkin; Karen Goddard; Derek Armstrong; Laurence Becker; Martin Berry; Helen S. L. Chan; Mary Doherty; Mark T. Greenberg; Bruce Hendrick; Harold J. Hoffman; Robin P. Humphreys; Marilyn Sonley; Sheila Weitzman; Al Zipursky

Seventy-two children with posterior fossa medulloblastoma were diagnosed at the Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, from 1977 to 1987 and treated by standard methods. The 5- and 10-year survival and disease-free survival rates were 71% and 63%, and 64% and 63%, respectively. Total tumor resection, as determined by the surgeon was the most significant favorable prognostic factor. Post-operative meningitis, a residual enhancing mass lesion on the post-operative, pre irradiation CT scan and dissemination to the brain or cord at diagnosis were unfavorable factors. These four easily definable factors were used to define a staging system with prognostic significance. Five-year disease-free survival rates were for Stage I (total resection, no adverse factor) 100%, Stage II (total resection with one or more adverse factor or less than total resection with no other adverse factor) 78%, and Stage III (less than total resection with one or more adverse factor) 18%. Evaluation of treatment results in medulloblastoma requires that these prognostic factors be known.


International Journal of Radiation Oncology Biology Physics | 1993

Optic glioma in children : surveillance, resection, or irradiation ?

Derek Jenkin; Steven Angyalfi; Laurence Becker; Martin P. Berry; Raymond Buncic; Helen S. L. Chan; Mary Doherty; James M. Drake; Mark T. Greenberg; Bruce Hendrick; Harold J. Hoffman; Robin P. Humphreys; Sheila Weitzman

Eighty-seven consecutive children with newly diagnosed optic glioma were managed at University of Toronto hospitals 1958-1990. Overall the 10-year survival, relapse-free survival and freedom from second relapse rates were 84%, 68% and 85%. Twenty-seven patients relapsed or progressed, of whom 40% were free of a second relapse 10 years after the first relapse. Fourteen patients had a second relapse. Thirteen are dead. None survived 5 years after second relapse. Patients with anteriorly located tumors (N = 35), which involved the optic nerve, or chiasm and optic nerves, fared better than those with posteriorly located tumors (N = 52) with spread beyond the chiasm, 10-year survival 95% versus 76%, (p = .02), 10-year relapse-free survival 80% versus 59% (p = .02), respectively. For posterior tumors primary irradiation was more effective than primary subtotal resection for prevention of subsequent relapse, 10-year relapse-free survival 75% versus 41% (p = .02), but salvage therapy was, in part, successful and multivariate analysis of prognostic factors influencing survival for posterior tumors indicated that neither primary resection nor primary irradiation were significant factors. For first relapse, primary irradiation and the presence of neurofibromatosis were the significant favorable factors. Since 1977 and for posterior optic glioma subtotal resection or surveillance were used in 21/29 (72%) patients compared with 4/23 (17%) previously. Ten-year survival rates before and after 1977 were 78% and 67% and 10-year relapse-free survival 64% and 56%, respectively.


American Journal of Pathology | 2000

Endoglin Expression Is Reduced in Normal Vessels but Still Detectable in Arteriovenous Malformations of Patients with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia Type 1

Annie Bourdeau; Urszula Cymerman; Marie-Eve Paquet; Wendy S. Meschino; Wendy McKinnon; Alan E. Guttmacher; Laurence Becker; Michelle Letarte

Endoglin is predominantly expressed on endothelium and is mutated in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) type 1 (HHT1). We report the analysis of endoglin in tissues of a newborn (family 2), who died of a cerebral arteriovenous malformation (CAVM), and in a lung specimen surgically resected from a 78-year-old patient (family 5), with a pulmonary AVM (PAVM). The clinically affected father of the newborn revealed a novel mutation that was absent in his parents and was identified as a duplication of exons 3 to 8, by quantitative multiplex polymerase chain reaction. The corresponding mutant protein (116-kd monomer) and the missense mutant protein (80-kd monomer) present in family 5 were detected only as transient intracellular species and were unreactive by Western blot analysis and immunostaining. Normal endoglin (90-kd monomer) was reduced by 50% on peripheral blood-activated monocytes of the HHT1 patients. When analyzed by immunostaining and densitometry, presumed normal blood vessels of the newborn lung and brain and vessels adjacent to the adult PAVM showed a 50% reduction in the endoglin/PECAM-1 ratio. A similar ratio was observed in the CAVM and PAVM, suggesting that all blood vessels of HHT1 patients express reduced endoglin in situ and that AVMs are not attributed to a focal loss of endoglin.


Neurosurgery | 1993

Primary leptomeningeal melanoma ; An unusually aggressive tumor in childhood

David Allcutt; Shalom Michowiz; Sheila Weitzman; Laurence Becker; Susan Blaser; Harold J. Hoffman; Robin P. Humphreys; James M. Drake; James T. Rutka

Primary malignant melanoma of the leptomeninges of the central nervous system is a rare and aggressive tumor in children. We report our experience from 1964 to 1990 with this tumor in eight children. The mean age at diagnosis was 4.9 years (range, 1.3 to 13 yr). Five children presented with signs and symptoms of raised intracranial pressure from hydrocephalus secondary to tumoral obliteration of the basal cisterns, but the time from the initial symptomatology to diagnosis was frequently delayed. Three patients in this series had hairy nevi in association with their leptomeningeal melanoma. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis typically showed raised opening pressures, decreased glucose, and increased protein concentrations. Malignant melanoma cells were found in the CSF in three patients. Confirmatory radiographic examinations included air encephalography, myelography, and computed tomographic and magnetic resonance scanning. Four patients were treated with lumboperitoneal shunts, and one patient was treated with a ventriculoperitoneal shunt for hydrocephalus. Two patients underwent craniotomies and subtotal excisions of their tumors. In seven patients, a definitive diagnosis of leptomeningeal melanoma was made by pathological examination of tissues sent at surgery or at post mortem. In one case, the diagnosis was established by a detailed cytological analysis of the CSF. Four children died of fulminant disease and tumor spread before treatment could be instituted. The four children who received treatment had a combination of radiation therapy and chemotherapy. One child received intrathecal methotrexate. The two children with the longest survivals (2 and 3 yr, respectively) received cisplatinum and dimethyltriazenoimidazole carboxamide in addition to craniospinal irradiation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Pediatric Neurosurgery | 1978

Gangliogliomas in Children

Eddy Garrido; Laurence Becker; Harold J. Hoffman; Bruce Hendrick; Robin P. Humphreys

14 children with central nervous system gangliogliomas are reviewed. The tumors were most frequently located in the cerebral hemisphere and often were cystic and calcified. Total removal was performed


Neurosurgery | 1993

Primary Leptomeningeal Melanoma

David Allcutt; Shalom Michowiz; Sheila Weitzman; Laurence Becker; Susan Blaser; Harold J. Hoffman; Robin P. Humphreys; James M. Drake; James T. Rutka

Primary malignant melanoma of the leptomeninges of the central nervous system is a rare and aggressive tumor in children. We report our experience from 1964 to 1990 with this tumor in eight children. The mean age at diagnosis was 4.9 years (range, 1.3 to 13 yr). Five children presented with signs and symptoms of raised intracranial pressure from hydrocephalus secondary to tumoral obliteration of the basal cisterns, but the time from the initial symptomatology to diagnosis was frequently delayed. Three patients in this series had hairy nevi in association with their leptomeningeal melanoma. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis typically showed raised opening pressures, decreased glucose, and increased protein concentrations. Malignant melanoma cells were found in the CSF in three patients. Confirmatory radiographic examinations included air encephalography, myelography, and computed tomographic and magnetic resonance scanning. Four patients were treated with lumboperitoneal shunts, and one patient was treated with a ventriculoperitoneal shunt for hydrocephalus. Two patients underwent craniotomies and subtotal excisions of their tumors. In seven patients, a definitive diagnosis of leptomeningeal melanoma was made by pathological examination of tissues sent at surgery or at post mortem. In one case, the diagnosis was established by a detailed cytological analysis of the CSF. Four children died of fulminant disease and tumor spread before treatment could be instituted. The four children who received treatment had a combination of radiation therapy and chemotherapy. One child received intrathecal methotrexate. The two children with the longest survivals (2 and 3 yr, respectively) received cisplatinum and dimethyltriazenoimidazole carboxamide in addition to craniospinal irradiation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences | 2002

New insights into the neuropathogenesis of molybdenum cofactor deficiency

Michael S. Salman; Cameron Ackerley; Christof Senger; Laurence Becker

BACKGROUND Molybdenum cofactor deficiency (MOCOD) is a rare, progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by sulphite oxidase enzyme deficiency. The neuropathological findings are consistent with a toxic insult to the brain that causes severe neuronal loss, reactive astrogliosis and spongiosis. The mechanisms responsible for these changes are unknown. METHODS The case is a male infant with MOCOD who died at nine months of age from pneumonia. At autopsy, a complete neuropathological examination was performed including conventional immunohistochemical staining. In addition, brain sections were stained cytochemically with shikata and orcein which stain for disulphide bonds. The elemental composition of cortical cells was then analyzed in the scanning electron microscope using backscatter electron imaging and energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry. RESULTS Neurons demonstrated cytoplasmic staining with shikata and orcein cytochemically when compared to control sections. Energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry analysis of these neurons confirmed the presence of excess sulphur and unexpectedly revealed excess magnesium accumulation. None of these findings was found in an age-matched control. CONCLUSIONS In MOCOD we found abnormal accumulation of sulphur and magnesium in neurons. It is postulated that sulphur-containing compound(s) that are formed as a result of MOCOD cause excitotoxic neuronal injury in the presence of excess magnesium.


Fetal and Pediatric Pathology | 1994

Cell kinetic analysis in pediatric brain and spinal tumors: a study of 117 cases with Ki-67 quantitation and flow cytometry.

Venita Jay; Diane Parkinson; Laurence Becker; Fu-Wah Chan

We present cell kinetic data including Ki-67 quantitation and flow cytometry on 117 pediatric brain/spinal cord tumors and review the literature. Although, in general, these proliferation indices are in agreement with the histologic grade, they are useful in prognostication in some instances when the histological features of malignancy are equivocal. Specific examples in which flow cytometry may prove particularly useful in this context are childhood ependymomas, which do not show frank anaplasia but have cellular foci with focal increase in mitoses, and choroid plexus neoplasms, where elevated S phase fractions have been associated with an adverse outcome. Thus Ki-67 quantitation and flow cytometry not only serve as useful adjuncts to conventional histologic grading but also in specific instances may provide new information on tumor prognosis.


Fetal and Pediatric Pathology | 1993

Sudden death in infants under one year of age.

Elinor N. Czegledy-Nagy; Ernest Cutz; Laurence Becker

Clinical and postmortem findings on 126 consecutive cases of sudden infant deaths occurring in Metropolitan Toronto over a 42-month period were reviewed and classified. Of these cases, 101 were diagnosed as sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), the other 25 as due to other causes. The SIDS cases were classified into three groups: A-1 (39%), infants born at term who died between 2 weeks and 6 months of age and in whom clinical and autopsy findings were negative; A-2 (4%), same as A-1, except that the infants were born prematurely (< 36 weeks of gestation); and B (57%), infants with miscellaneous minor clinical and pathological findings not directly related to or responsible for death. The most common findings in group B were clinical and/or pathological signs of minor respiratory infection. These findings were prevalent in older SIDS infants (> 10 weeks at death), with up to 80% concordance between clinical and pathological indices of respiratory infection. Group B also included cases with minor congenital abnormalities, drug use by mother, and other miscellaneous findings. This report defines the clinicopathological features of SIDS infants and describes the spectrum of findings associated with the syndrome. It is suggested that by applying uniform criteria for definition and classification of SIDS a more reliable data base can be obtained, facilitating research into the causes and pathogenesis of SIDS.


Childs Nervous System | 1987

Calcium Deposits on CSF Shunts: Clinical observations and ultrastructural analysis

Robert Griebel; Harold J. Hoffman; Laurence Becker

CSF shunts removed from seven patients 5-12 years after placement were studied. Examination in each case revealed gritty mineral deposits adherent to the external surface. The deposits were further analyzed by routine histology, spectroscopy and scanning electron microscopy. These results and the clinical consequences of this calcification are discussed. Microdefects in the tubing may contribute to delayed calcification of Silastic shunt tubing.

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