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Dive into the research topics where Maurice B. Loughrey is active.

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Featured researches published by Maurice B. Loughrey.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

AXL Is a Key Regulator of Inherent and Chemotherapy-Induced Invasion and Predicts a Poor Clinical Outcome in Early-Stage Colon Cancer

Philip D. Dunne; Darragh G. McArt; Jaine K. Blayney; Murugan Kalimutho; Samanda Greer; Tingting Wang; Supriya Srivastava; Chee Wee Ong; Kenneth Arthur; Maurice B. Loughrey; Keara Redmond; Daniel B. Longley; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Patrick G. Johnston; Sandra Van Schaeybroeck

Purpose: Despite the use of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU)–based adjuvant treatments, a large proportion of patients with high-risk stage II/III colorectal cancer will relapse. Thus, novel therapeutic strategies are needed for early-stage colorectal cancer. Residual micrometastatic disease from the primary tumor is a major cause of patient relapse. Experimental Design: To model colorectal cancer tumor cell invasion/metastasis, we have generated invasive (KRASMT/KRASWT/+chr3/p53-null) colorectal cancer cell subpopulations. Receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) screens were used to identify novel proteins that underpin the migratory/invasive phenotype. Migration/invasion was assessed using the XCELLigence system. Tumors from patients with early-stage colorectal cancer (N = 336) were examined for AXL expression. Results: Invasive colorectal cancer cell subpopulations showed a transition from an epithelial-to-mesenchymal like phenotype with significant increases in migration, invasion, colony-forming ability, and an attenuation of EGF receptor (EGFR)/HER2 autocrine signaling. RTK arrays showed significant increases in AXL levels in all invasive sublines. Importantly, 5-FU treatment resulted in significantly increased migration and invasion, and targeting AXL using pharmacologic inhibition or RNA interference (RNAi) approaches suppressed basal and 5-FU–induced migration and invasion. Significantly, high AXL mRNA and protein expression were found to be associated with poor overall survival in early-stage colorectal cancer tissues. Conclusions: We have identified AXL as a poor prognostic marker and important mediator of cell migration/invasiveness in colorectal cancer. These findings provide support for the further investigation of AXL as a novel prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target in colorectal cancer, in particular in the adjuvant disease in which EGFR/VEGF–targeted therapies have failed. Clin Cancer Res; 20(1); 164–75. ©2013 AACR.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2016

Challenging the cancer molecular stratification dogma: Intratumoral heterogeneity undermines consensus molecular subtypes and potential diagnostic value in colorectal cancer

Philip D. Dunne; Darragh G. McArt; Conor Bradley; Paul O'Reilly; Barrett Hl; Robert Cummins; O'Grady T; Kenneth Arthur; Maurice B. Loughrey; Wendy L. Allen; Simon S. McDade; David Waugh; Peter Hamilton; Daniel B. Longley; Elaine Kay; Patrick G. Johnston; Mark Lawler; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Van Schaeybroeck S

Purpose: A number of independent gene expression profiling studies have identified transcriptional subtypes in colorectal cancer with potential diagnostic utility, culminating in publication of a colorectal cancer Consensus Molecular Subtype classification. The worst prognostic subtype has been defined by genes associated with stem-like biology. Recently, it has been shown that the majority of genes associated with this poor prognostic group are stromal derived. We investigated the potential for tumor misclassification into multiple diagnostic subgroups based on tumoral region sampled. Experimental Design: We performed multiregion tissue RNA extraction/transcriptomic analysis using colorectal-specific arrays on invasive front, central tumor, and lymph node regions selected from tissue samples from 25 colorectal cancer patients. Results: We identified a consensus 30-gene list, which represents the intratumoral heterogeneity within a cohort of primary colorectal cancer tumors. Using a series of online datasets, we showed that this gene list displays prognostic potential HR = 2.914 (confidence interval 0.9286–9.162) in stage II/III colorectal cancer patients, but in addition, we demonstrated that these genes are stromal derived, challenging the assumption that poor prognosis tumors with stem-like biology have undergone a widespread epithelial–mesenchymal transition. Most importantly, we showed that patients can be simultaneously classified into multiple diagnostically relevant subgroups based purely on the tumoral region analyzed. Conclusions: Gene expression profiles derived from the nonmalignant stromal region can influence assignment of colorectal cancer transcriptional subtypes, questioning the current molecular classification dogma and highlighting the need to consider pathology sampling region and degree of stromal infiltration when employing transcription-based classifiers to underpin clinical decision making in colorectal cancer. Clin Cancer Res; 22(16); 4095–104. ©2016 AACR. See related commentary by Morris and Kopetz, p. 3989


Scientific Reports | 2017

QuPath: Open source software for digital pathology image analysis

Peter Bankhead; Maurice B. Loughrey; José Antonio Fiz Fernández; Yvonne Dombrowski; Darragh G. McArt; Philip D. Dunne; Stephen McQuaid; Ronan T. Gray; Liam Murray; Helen G. Coleman; Jacqueline James; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Peter Hamilton

QuPath is new bioimage analysis software designed to meet the growing need for a user-friendly, extensible, open-source solution for digital pathology and whole slide image analysis. In addition to offering a comprehensive panel of tumor identification and high-throughput biomarker evaluation tools, QuPath provides researchers with powerful batch-processing and scripting functionality, and an extensible platform with which to develop and share new algorithms to analyze complex tissue images. Furthermore, QuPath’s flexible design makes it suitable for a wide range of additional image analysis applications across biomedical research.


Histopathology | 2012

Primary hepatocellular carcinoma of the pancreas: a case report and review of the heterogeneous group of pancreatic hepatoid carcinomas

Paul J. Kelly; Robert Spence; Bobby V.M. Dasari; Alastair D. Burt; Mark Taylor; Maurice B. Loughrey

Paul J Kelly, Robert Spence, Bobby V Dasari, Alastair D Burt, Mark Taylor, Maurice B Loughrey


Oncotarget | 2015

Automated tumor analysis for molecular profiling in lung cancer

Peter Hamilton; Yinhai Wang; Clinton Boyd; Jacqueline James; Maurice B. Loughrey; Joseph P. Hougton; David P. Boyle; Paul J. Kelly; Perry Maxwell; David McCleary; James Diamond; Darragh G. McArt; Jonathon Tunstall; Peter Bankhead; Manuel Salto-Tellez

The discovery and clinical application of molecular biomarkers in solid tumors, increasingly relies on nucleic acid extraction from FFPE tissue sections and subsequent molecular profiling. This in turn requires the pathological review of haematoxylin & eosin (H&E) stained slides, to ensure sample quality, tumor DNA sufficiency by visually estimating the percentage tumor nuclei and tumor annotation for manual macrodissection. In this study on NSCLC, we demonstrate considerable variation in tumor nuclei percentage between pathologists, potentially undermining the precision of NSCLC molecular evaluation and emphasising the need for quantitative tumor evaluation. We subsequently describe the development and validation of a system called TissueMark for automated tumor annotation and percentage tumor nuclei measurement in NSCLC using computerized image analysis. Evaluation of 245 NSCLC slides showed precise automated tumor annotation of cases using Tissuemark, strong concordance with manually drawn boundaries and identical EGFR mutational status, following manual macrodissection from the image analysis generated tumor boundaries. Automated analysis of cell counts for % tumor measurements by Tissuemark showed reduced variability and significant correlation (p < 0.001) with benchmark tumor cell counts. This study demonstrates a robust image analysis technology that can facilitate the automated quantitative analysis of tissue samples for molecular profiling in discovery and diagnostics.


Histopathology | 2017

Back to the future: routine morphological assessment of the tumour microenvironment is prognostic in stage II/III colon cancer in a large population-based study

Seán O Hynes; Helen G. Coleman; Paul J. Kelly; Steven Irwin; Roisin F O'Neill; Ronan T. Gray; Claire McGready; Philip D. Dunne; Stephen McQuaid; Jacqueline James; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Maurice B. Loughrey

Both morphological and molecular approaches have highlighted the biological and prognostic importance of the tumour microenvironment in colorectal cancer (CRC). Despite this, microscopic assessment of the tumour microenvironment has not been adopted into routine practice. The study aim was to identify those tumour microenvironmental features that are most likely to provide prognostic information and be feasible to use in routine pathology reporting practice.


Cancer immunology research | 2016

Immune-derived PD-L1 gene expression defines a subgroup of stage II/III colorectal cancer patients with favorable prognosis that may be harmed by adjuvant chemotherapy

Philip D. Dunne; Darragh G. McArt; Paul O'Reilly; Helen G. Coleman; Wendy L. Allen; Maurice B. Loughrey; Sandra Van Schaeybroeck; Simon S. McDade; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Daniel B. Longley; Mark Lawler; Patrick G. Johnston

A subgroup of patients with colorectal cancer was defined by high PD-L1 gene expression on their tumor-infiltrating immune cells. These patients may be harmed by standard chemotherapy and may benefit from immunotherapy that targets the PD-1 immune checkpoint. A recent phase II study of patients with metastatic colorectal carcinoma showed that mismatch repair gene status was predictive of clinical response to PD-1–targeting immune checkpoint blockade. Further examination revealed strong correlation between PD-L1 protein expression and microsatellite instability (MSI) in stage IV colorectal carcinoma, suggesting that the amount of PD-L1 protein expression could identify late-stage patients who might benefit from immunotherapy. To assess whether the clinical associations between PD-L1 gene expression and MSI identified in metastatic colorectal carcinoma are also present in stage II/III colorectal carcinoma, we used in silico analysis to elucidate the cell types expressing the PD-L1 gene. We found a statistically significant association of PD-L1 gene expression with MSI in early-stage colorectal carcinoma (P < 0.001) and show that, unlike in non–colorectal carcinoma tumors, PD-L1 is derived predominantly from the immune infiltrate. We demonstrate that PD-L1 gene expression has positive prognostic value in the adjuvant disease setting (PD-L1low vs. PD-L1high HR = 9.09; CI, 2.11–39.10). PD-L1 gene expression had predictive value, as patients with high PD-L1 expression appear to be harmed by standard-of-care treatment (HR = 4.95; CI, 1.10–22.35). Building on the promising results from the metastatic colorectal carcinoma PD-1–targeting trial, we provide compelling evidence that patients with PD-L1high/MSI/immunehigh stage II/III colorectal carcinoma should not receive standard chemotherapy. This conclusion supports the rationale to clinically evaluate this patient subgroup for PD-1 blockade treatment. Cancer Immunol Res; 4(7); 582–91. ©2016 AACR.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2014

Integrating molecular diagnostics into histopathology training: the Belfast model

C Flynn; Jacqueline James; Pamela Maxwell; Stephen McQuaid; Aaron Ervine; Mark A. Catherwood; Maurice B. Loughrey; D McGibben; J Somerville; Damian McManus; M Gray; B Herron; Manuel Salto-Tellez

Molecular medicine is transforming modern clinical practice, from diagnostics to therapeutics. Discoveries in research are being incorporated into the clinical setting with increasing rapidity. This transformation is also deeply changing the way we practise pathology. The great advances in cell and molecular biology which have accelerated our understanding of the pathogenesis of solid tumours have been embraced with variable degrees of enthusiasm by diverse medical professional specialties. While histopathologists have not been prompt to adopt molecular diagnostics to date, the need to incorporate molecular pathology into the training of future histopathologists is imperative. Our goal is to create, within an existing 5-year histopathology training curriculum, the structure for formal substantial teaching of molecular diagnostics. This specialist training has two main goals: (1) to equip future practising histopathologists with basic knowledge of molecular diagnostics and (2) to create the option for those interested in a subspecialty experience in tissue molecular diagnostics to pursue this training. It is our belief that this training will help to maintain in future the role of the pathologist at the centre of patient care as the integrator of clinical, morphological and molecular information.


Clinical and translational gastroenterology | 2017

Evaluation of PTGS2 Expression, PIK3CA Mutation, Aspirin Use and Colon Cancer Survival in a Population-Based Cohort Study

Ronan T. Gray; Marie Cantwell; Helen G. Coleman; Maurice B. Loughrey; Peter Bankhead; Stephen McQuaid; Roisin F O'Neill; Kenneth Arthur; Victoria Bingham; Claire McGready; Anna Gavin; Christopher Cardwell; Brian T. Johnston; Jacqueline James; Peter Hamilton; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Liam Murray

Objectives:The association between aspirin use and improved survival after colorectal cancer diagnosis may be more pronounced in tumors that have PIK3CA mutations or high PTGS2 expression. However, the evidence of a difference in association by biomarker status lacks consistency. In this population-based colon cancer cohort study the interaction between these biomarkers, aspirin use, and survival was assessed.Methods:The cohort consisted of 740 stage II and III colon cancer patients diagnosed between 2004 and 2008. Aspirin use was determined through clinical note review. Tissue blocks were retrieved to determine immunohistochemical assessment of PTGS2 expression and the presence of PIK3CA mutations. Cox proportional hazards models were used to calculate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for colorectal cancer-specific and overall survival.Results:In this cohort aspirin use was associated with a 31% improvement in cancer-specific survival compared to non-use (adjusted HR=0.69, 95% CI 0.47–0.98). This effect was more pronounced in tumors with high PTGS2 expression (PTGS2-high adjusted HR=0.55, 95% CI 0.32–0.96) compared to those with low PTGS2 expression (PTGS2-low adjusted HR=1.19, 95% CI 0.68–2.07, P for interaction=0.09). The aspirin by PTGS2 interaction was significant for overall survival (PTGS2-high adjusted HR=0.64, 95% CI 0.42–0.98 vs. PTGS2-low adjusted HR=1.28, 95% CI 0.80–2.03, P for interaction=0.04). However, no interaction was observed between aspirin use and PIK3CA mutation status for colorectal cancer-specific or overall survival.Conclusions:Aspirin use was associated with improved survival outcomes in this population-based cohort of colon cancer patients. This association differed according to PTGS2 expression but not PIK3CA mutation status. Limiting adjuvant aspirin trials to PIK3CA-mutant colorectal cancer may be too restrictive.


Histopathology | 2015

The pathology of bowel cancer screening

Maurice B. Loughrey; Neil A. Shepherd

Colorectal cancer screening is widely promulgated in many parts of the world and population screening is occurring in many countries, especially in western Europe. Although, intuitively, it might be thought that the pathology resulting from screening should be straightforward, being mainly that of polyp diagnosis and the biopsy diagnosis and staging of established adenocarcinoma, in fact experience has shown that there are several areas of considerable difficulty and controversy. In the UK somewhat different programmes, all based on faecal occult blood (FOB) screening, have been developed and each has generated similar pathological conundra. These include the biopsy diagnosis of adenocarcinoma, colorectal serrated pathology, the diagnosis and management of polyp cancers and last, but certainly not least, the phenomenon of the large sigmoid colonic adenomatous polyp with epithelial misplacement/pseudo‐invasion. Polyp cancers provide especially difficult management conundra and discussion of that management within a multidisciplinary team‐based management meeting is regarded as essential in the UK. Large adenomatous polyps of the sigmoid colon with epithelial misplacement are selected into FOB‐based screening programmes and have provided extraordinary diagnostic challenges. Finally, the quality assurance procedures introduced for screening can ensure a considerable overall improvement in the quality of lower gastrointestinal tract pathological reporting.

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Helen G. Coleman

Queen's University Belfast

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Jacqueline James

Queen's University Belfast

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Philip D. Dunne

Queen's University Belfast

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Stephen McQuaid

Queen's University Belfast

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Darragh G. McArt

Queen's University Belfast

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Peter Hamilton

Queen's University Belfast

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Paul J. Kelly

Cork University Hospital

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Peter Bankhead

Queen's University Belfast

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Ronan T. Gray

Queen's University Belfast

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