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Dive into the research topics where Margaret C. Cummings is active.

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Featured researches published by Margaret C. Cummings.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 1999

Characterisation of a subtype of colorectal cancer combining features of the suppressor and mild mutator pathways

Jeremy R. Jass; Kelli G. Biden; Margaret C. Cummings; Lisa A. Simms; Michael D. Walsh; Estelle Schoch; Stephen J. Meltzer; Caroline Wright; Jeffrey Searle; Joanne Young; Barbara A. Leggett

BACKGROUND: 10% of sporadic colorectal cancers are characterised by a low level of microsatellite instability (MSI-L). These are not thought to differ substantially from microsatelite-stable (MSS) cancers, but MSI-L and MSS cancers are distinguished clinicopathologically and in their spectrum of genetic alterations from cancers showing high level microsatellite instability (MSI-H). AIMS: To study the distribution of molecular alterations in a series of colorectal cancers stratified by DNA microsatellite instability. METHODS: A subset of an unselected series of colorectal cancers was grouped by the finding of DNA MSI at 0 loci (MSS) (n = 51), 1-2 loci (MSI-L) (n = 38) and 3-6 loci (MSI-H) (n = 25). The frequency of K-ras mutation, loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at 5q, 17p and 18q, and patterns of p53 and beta catenin immunohistochemistry was determined in the three groups. RESULTS: MSI-H cancers had a low frequency of K-ras mutation (7%), LOH on chromosomes 5q (0%), 17p (0%) and 18q (12.5%), and a normal pattern of immunostaining for p53 and beta catenin. MSI-L cancers differed from MSS cancers in terms of a higher frequency of K-ras mutation (54% v 27%) (p = 0.01) and lower frequency of 5q LOH (23% v 48%) (p = 0.047). Whereas aberrant beta catenin expression and 5q LOH were concordant (both present or both absent) in 57% of MSS cancers, concordance was observed in only 20% of MSI-L cancers (p = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: MSI-L colorectal cancers are distinct from both MSI-H and MSS cancers. This subset combines features of the suppressor and mutator pathways, may be more dependent on K-ras than on the APC gene in the early stages of neoplastic evolution, and a proportion may be related histogenetically to the serrated (hyperplastic) polyp.


British Journal of Cancer | 1996

Occult axillary node metastases in breast cancer: their detection and prognostic significance.

Michael A. McGuckin; Margaret C. Cummings; Michael D. Walsh; B. G. Hohn; I. C. Bennett; R. G. Wright

Although the presence of axillary node metastases in breast cancer is a key prognostic indicator and may influence treatment decisions, a significant proportion of patients diagnosed as axillary node negative (ANN) using standard histopathological techniques may have occult nodal metastases (OMs). A combination of limited step-sectioning (4 x 100 microns intervals) and immunohistochemical staining (with cytokeratin (MNF.116) and MUC1 (BC2) antibodies) was used to detect OM in a retrospective series of 208 ANN patients. OMs were found in 53 patients (25%), and both step-sectioning and immunohistochemical detection significantly improved detection (P < 0.05). Detection using BC2 (25%) was superior to MNF.116 (18%) and haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) (8%). OMs were found in 51 patients using only the first and deepest sectioning levels and BC2 staining. OMs were more frequently found in lobular (38%) than ductal carcinoma (25%), and more frequently in women less than 50 years (41%) than in older women (19%). Univariate overall and disease-free survival analyses showed that the presence, size and number of OM had prognostic significance as did tumour size (disease-free only) and histological and nuclear grade (P > 0.05). Cox multivariate proportional hazard regression analyses showed that the presence and increasing size of OMs were significantly associated with poorer disease-free survival, independently of other prognostic factors (P < 0.05). However there was not a significant independent association of the presence of occult metastases with overall survival (P = 0.11). These findings have important implications with regard to selection of ANN patients for adjuvant therapy.


International Journal of Cancer | 2002

Nuclear PTEN expression and clinicopathologic features in a population-based series of primary cutaneous melanoma

David C. Whiteman; Xiao Ping Zhou; Margaret C. Cummings; Sandra Pavey; Nicholas K. Hayward; Charis Eng

Germline mutations of the PTEN tumor‐suppressor gene, on 10q23, cause Cowden syndrome, an inherited hamartoma syndrome with a high risk of breast, thyroid and endometrial carcinomas and, some suggest, melanoma. To date, most studies which strongly implicate PTEN in the etiology of sporadic melanomas have depended on cell lines, short‐term tumor cultures and noncultured metastatic melanomas. The only study which reports PTEN protein expression in melanoma focuses on cytoplasmic expression, mainly in metastatic samples. To determine how PTEN contributes to the etiology or the progression of primary cutaneous melanoma, we examined cytoplasmic and nuclear PTEN expression against clinical and pathologic features in a population‐based sample of 150 individuals with incident primary cutaneous melanoma. Among 92 evaluable samples, 30 had no or decreased cytoplasmic PTEN protein expression and the remaining 62 had normal PTEN expression. In contrast, 84 tumors had no or decreased nuclear expression and 8 had normal nuclear PTEN expression. None of the clinical features studied, such as Clarks level and Breslow thickness or sun exposure, were associated with cytoplasmic PTEN expressional levels. An association with loss of nuclear PTEN expression was indicated for anatomical site (p = 0.06) and mitotic index (p = 0.02). There was also an association for melanomas to either not express nuclear PTEN or to express p53 alone, rather than both simultaneously (p = 0.02). In contrast with metastatic melanoma, where we have shown previously that almost two‐thirds of tumors have some PTEN inactivation, only one‐third of primary melanomas had PTEN silencing. This suggests that PTEN inactivation is a late event likely related to melanoma progression rather than initiation. Taken together with our previous observations in thyroid and islet cell tumors, our data suggest that nuclear–cytoplasmic partitioning of PTEN might also play a role in melanoma progression.


Cancer Research | 2006

Genetic and Histopathologic Evaluation of BRCA1 and BRCA2 DNA Sequence Variants of Unknown Clinical Significance

Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Sue Healey; Sunil R. Lakhani; Paul Waring; Margaret C. Cummings; Ross I. Brinkworth; Amie M. Deffenbaugh; Lynn Anne Burbidge; Dmitry Pruss; Thad Judkins; Tom Scholl; Anna Bekessy; Anna Marsh; Paul K. Lovelock; Ming Wong; Andrea Tesoriero; Helene Renard; Melissa C. Southey; John L. Hopper; Koulis Yannoukakos; Melissa A. Brown; Douglas F. Easton; Sean V. Tavtigian; David E. Goldgar; Amanda B. Spurdle

Classification of rare missense variants as neutral or disease causing is a challenge and has important implications for genetic counseling. A multifactorial likelihood model for classification of unclassified variants in BRCA1 and BRCA2 has previously been developed, which uses data on co-occurrence of the unclassified variant with pathogenic mutations in the same gene, cosegregation of the unclassified variant with affected status, and Grantham analysis of the fit between the missense substitution and the evolutionary range of variation observed at its position in the protein. We have further developed this model to take into account relevant features of BRCA1- and BRCA2-associated tumors, such as the characteristic histopathology and immunochemical profiles associated with pathogenic mutations in BRCA1, and the fact that approximately 80% of tumors from BRCA1 and BRCA2 carriers undergo inactivation of the wild-type allele by loss of heterozygosity. We examined 10 BRCA1 and 15 BRCA2 unclassified variants identified in Australian, multiple-case breast cancer families. By a combination of genetic, in silico, and histopathologic analyses, we were able to classify one BRCA1 variant as pathogenic and six BRCA1 and seven BRCA2 variants as neutral. Five of these neutral variants were also found in at least 1 of 180 healthy controls, suggesting that screening a large number of appropriate controls might be a useful adjunct to other methods for evaluation of unclassified variants.


International Journal of Cancer | 1999

β-Catenin mutation and expression analysis in ovarian cancer: Exon 3 mutations and nuclear translocation in 16% of endometrioid tumours

Kim Wright; Peter Wilson; Sarah J. Morland; Ian G. Campbell; Michael D. Walsh; Terry Hurst; Bruce G. Ward; Margaret C. Cummings; Georgia Chenevix-Trench

The molecular mechanisms involved in the generation of epithelial ovarian cancers are poorly understood, but evidence suggests that the different histological subtypes may arise from independent tumorigenic events. β‐Catenin is emerging as an important oncogene in the transformation of a number of epithelial cancers, and mutations have been reported in a small study of endometrioid ovarian adenocarcinomas. Mutations in the NH2‐regulatory domain of β‐catenin stabilise the cytoplasmic levels of this protein, which promotes up‐regulation of the β‐catenin–T‐cell factor–lymphoid enhancer factor transcriptional complex. We report here β‐catenin (CTNNB1) exon 3 mutation analysis in 149 epithelial ovarian carcinomas. This revealed 10/63 (16%) endometrioid ovarian tumours with activating mutations of the β‐catenin gene. All mutations were missense changes within the GSK3β consensus site, affecting serine residues at codons 33 and 37 and glycine at codon 34. Immuno‐histochemical analysis identified cytoplasmic stabilisation and nuclear translocation in those endometrioid tumours with mutations. This phenotypic change was also identified in 3 other endometrioid tumours that did not have somatic mutations within exon 3 of CTNNB1. Stabilisation of the free, monomeric pool of β‐catenin and the probable resulting constitutive activation of its Tcf‐associated transcriptional complex appears to be a specific oncogenic event in endometrioid ovarian adenocarcinoma. Int. J. Cancer 82:625–629, 1999.


Breast Cancer Research | 2010

HER3 and downstream pathways are involved in colonization of brain metastases from breast cancer

Leonard Da Silva; Peter T. Simpson; Chanel E. Smart; Sibylle Cocciardi; Nic Waddell; Annette Lane; Brian J. Morrison; Ana Cristina Vargas; Sue Healey; Jonathan Beesley; Pria Pakkiri; Suzanne Parry; Nyoman D. Kurniawan; Lynne Reid; Patricia Keith; Paulo Faria; Emílio Marcelo Pereira; Alena Skálová; Michael Bilous; Rosemary L. Balleine; Hongdo Do; Alexander Dobrovic; Stephen B. Fox; Marcello Franco; Brent A. Reynolds; Kum Kum Khanna; Margaret C. Cummings; Georgia Chenevix-Trench; Sunil R. Lakhani

IntroductionMetastases to the brain from breast cancer have a high mortality, and basal-like breast cancers have a propensity for brain metastases. However, the mechanisms that allow cells to colonize the brain are unclear.MethodsWe used morphology, immunohistochemistry, gene expression and somatic mutation profiling to analyze 39 matched pairs of primary breast cancers and brain metastases, 22 unmatched brain metastases of breast cancer, 11 non-breast brain metastases and 6 autopsy cases of patients with breast cancer metastases to multiple sites, including the brain.ResultsMost brain metastases were triple negative and basal-like. The brain metastases over-expressed one or more members of the HER family and in particular HER3 was significantly over-expressed relative to matched primary tumors. Brain metastases from breast and other primary sites, and metastases to multiple organs in the autopsied cases, also contained somatic mutations in EGFR, HRAS, KRAS, NRAS or PIK3CA. This paralleled the frequent activation of AKT and MAPK pathways. In particular, activation of the MAPK pathway was increased in the brain metastases compared to the primary tumors.ConclusionsDeregulated HER family receptors, particularly HER3, and their downstream pathways are implicated in colonization of brain metastasis. The need for HER family receptors to dimerize for activation suggests that tumors may be susceptible to combinations of anti-HER family inhibitors, and may even be effective in the absence of HER2 amplification (that is, in triple negative/basal cancers). However, the presence of activating mutations in PIK3CA, HRAS, KRAS and NRAS suggests the necessity for also specifically targeting downstream molecules.


International Journal of Cancer | 1997

Increased expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2 (CDKN2A) gene product p16INK4A in ovarian cancer is associated with progression and unfavourable prognosis

Ying Dong; Michael D. Walsh; Michael A. McGuckin; Brian B. Gabrielli; Margaret C. Cummings; R. Gordon Wright; Terry Hurst; Soo Keat Khoo; Peter G. Parsons

Paraffin sections from 190 epithelial ovarian tumours, including 159 malignant and 31 benign epithelial tumours, were analysed immunohistochemically for expression of cyclin‐dependent kinase inhibitor 2 (CDKN2A) gene product p16INK4A (p16). Most benign tumours showed no p16 expression in the tumour cells, whereas only 11% of malignant cancers were p16 negative. A high proportion of p16‐positive tumour cells was associated with advanced stage and grade, and with poor prognosis in cancer patients. For FIGO stage 1 tumours, a high proportion of p16‐positive tumour cells was associated with poorer survival, suggesting that accumulation of p16 is an early event of ovarian tumorigenesis. In contrast to tumour cells, high expression of p16 in the surrounding stromal cells was not associated with the stage and grade, but was associated with longer survival. When all parameters were combined in multivariate analysis, high p16 expression in stromal cells was not an independent predictor for survival, indicating that low p16 expression in stromal cells is associated with other markers of tumour progression. High expression of p16 survival in the stromal cells of tumours from long‐term survivors suggests that tumour growth is limited to some extent by factors associated with p16 expression in the matrix. Int. J. Cancer 74:57–63.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Tumor Mismatch Repair Immunohistochemistry and DNA MLH1 Methylation Testing of Patients With Endometrial Cancer Diagnosed at Age Younger Than 60 Years Optimizes Triage for Population-Level Germline Mismatch Repair Gene Mutation Testing

Daniel D. Buchanan; Yen Y. Tan; Michael D. Walsh; Mark Clendenning; Alexander M. Metcalf; Kaltin Ferguson; Sven Arnold; Bryony A. Thompson; Felicity Lose; Michael T. Parsons; Rhiannon J. Walters; Sally-Ann Pearson; Margaret C. Cummings; Martin K. Oehler; Penelope Blomfield; Michael A. Quinn; Judy Kirk; Colin J.R. Stewart; Andreas Obermair; Joanne Young; Penelope M. Webb; Amanda B. Spurdle

PURPOSE Clinicopathologic data from a population-based endometrial cancer cohort, unselected for age or family history, were analyzed to determine the optimal scheme for identification of patients with germline mismatch repair (MMR) gene mutations. PATIENTS AND METHODS Endometrial cancers from 702 patients recruited into the Australian National Endometrial Cancer Study (ANECS) were tested for MMR protein expression using immunohistochemistry (IHC) and for MLH1 gene promoter methylation in MLH1-deficient cases. MMR mutation testing was performed on germline DNA of patients with MMR-protein deficient tumors. Prediction of germline mutation status was compared for combinations of tumor characteristics, age at diagnosis, and various clinical criteria (Amsterdam, Bethesda, Society of Gynecologic Oncology, ANECS). RESULTS Tumor MMR-protein deficiency was detected in 170 (24%) of 702 cases. Germline testing of 158 MMR-deficient cases identified 22 truncating mutations (3% of all cases) and four unclassified variants. Tumor MLH1 methylation was detected in 99 (89%) of 111 cases demonstrating MLH1/PMS2 IHC loss; all were germline MLH1 mutation negative. A combination of MMR IHC plus MLH1 methylation testing in women younger than 60 years of age at diagnosis provided the highest positive predictive value for the identification of mutation carriers at 46% versus ≤ 41% for any other criteria considered. CONCLUSION Population-level identification of patients with MMR mutation-positive endometrial cancer is optimized by stepwise testing for tumor MMR IHC loss in patients younger than 60 years, tumor MLH1 methylation in individuals with MLH1 IHC loss, and germline mutations in patients exhibiting loss of MSH6, MSH2, or PMS2 or loss of MLH1/PMS2 with absence of MLH1 methylation.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Molecular, Pathologic, and Clinical Features of Early-Onset Endometrial Cancer: Identifying Presumptive Lynch Syndrome Patients

Michael D. Walsh; Margaret C. Cummings; Daniel D. Buchanan; Wendy M. Dambacher; Sven Arnold; Diane McKeone; Rebecca Byrnes; Melissa A. Barker; Barbara A. Leggett; Michael Gattas; Jeremy R. Jass; Amanda B. Spurdle; Joanne Young; Andreas Obermair

Purpose: A woman with early-onset endometrial cancer (EC) may represent the “sentinel” cancer event in a Lynch syndrome kindred. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of Lynch syndrome in a series of young-onset EC, and to identify molecular, clinical, and pathologic features that may alert clinicians to the presence of this disorder. Experimental Design: Patients with EC, ages ≤50 years, were identified from the Queensland Centre for Gynaecological Cancer. Tumor sections underwent histopathology review and were immunostained for mismatch repair proteins. Tumor DNA was tested for microsatellite instability and methylation of MLH1. Patients were conservatively classified as presumptive Lynch syndrome if their tumors showed loss of at least one mismatch repair protein and were negative for methylation of MLH1. Personal and family history of cancer was reviewed where available. Results: Presumptive Lynch syndrome was seen in 26 of 146 (18%) tumors. These tumors were more likely to be poorly differentiated, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage II and above, have tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes, have higher mitotic rate, and have deeper myometrial invasion (P < 0.05). Lynch syndrome cases were more likely to be associated with a positive family history when analyzed for Amsterdam criteria II, diagnosis of a Lynch syndrome spectrum cancer in at least one first-degree relative, and family history of any cancer (P < 0.05). Conclusion: Presumptive Lynch syndrome was identified in 18% of early-onset EC. A risk of this magnitude would argue for routine immunohistochemical testing of tumors in patients diagnosed with EC at or before the age of 50 years.


Diagnostic Molecular Pathology | 2000

Accumulation of chromosomal imbalances from intraductal proliferative lesions to adjacent in situ and invasive ductal breast cancer

Michaela Aubele; Margaret C. Cummings; Anita Mattis; Horst Zitzelsberger; Axel Walch; Markus Kremer; Heinz Höfler; Martin Werner

Carcinoma of the breast is thought to evolve through a sequential progression from normal to proliferative epithelium and eventually into carcinoma. Here lumpectomy specimens from five patients were studied, selected for the presence of ductal hyperplasia without atypia, atypical ductal hyperplasia, ductal carcinoma in situ, and invasive ductal carcinoma. Laser microdissection of tissue allowed precise sampling and direct correlation of phenotypic and genotypic changes. Analyses of the samples revealed an increasing mean number of chromosomal changes occurring with increasing histologic severity, and for the first time chromosomal abnormalities were demonstrated in ductal hyperplasia without atypia. Chromosomal changes found in each of the four histologic entities included gains on 10q, 12q, 16p, and 20q and loss on 13q. In ductal hyperplasia without atypia, gain on 20q as well as loss on 13q was detected with high frequency (four of five samples). Alterations identified in more than 50% of atypical ductal hyperplasia samples included gains on 3p, 8q, 15q, and 22q and loss on 16q. In ductal carcinoma in situ, gain of DNA on 1q and 17q and loss on 4q were additionally found, and in invasive ductal carcinoma, further gains on 6p, 10q, 11q13, and 17p were identified. The chromosomal alterations occurring in the different histopathologic lesions strongly suggest that these regions harbor tumor suppressor genes or oncogenes significant for the development of ductal carcinoma of the breast.

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Michael D. Walsh

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Joanne Young

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Georgia Chenevix-Trench

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Amanda B. Spurdle

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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