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Dive into the research topics where Meriel Jenney is active.

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Featured researches published by Meriel Jenney.


JAMA | 2010

Long-term cause-specific mortality among survivors of childhood cancer.

Raoul C. Reulen; David L. Winter; Clare Frobisher; Emma R. Lancashire; Charles Stiller; Meriel Jenney; Roderick Skinner; Michael C. Stevens; Mike Hawkins

CONTEXT Survivors of childhood cancer are at increased risk of premature mortality compared with the general population, but little is known about the long-term risks of specific causes of death, particularly beyond 25 years from diagnosis at ages when background mortality in the general population starts to increase substantially. OBJECTIVE To investigate long-term cause-specific mortality among 5-year survivors of childhood cancer in a large-scale population-based cohort. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS British Childhood Cancer Survivor Study, a population-based cohort of 17,981 5-year survivors of childhood cancer diagnosed with cancer before age 15 years between 1940 and 1991 in Britain and followed up until the end of 2006. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Cause-specific standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) and absolute excess risks (AERs). RESULTS Overall, 3049 deaths were observed, which was 11 times the number expected (SMR, 10.7; 95% confidence interval [CI], 10.3-11.1). The SMR declined with follow-up but was still 3-fold higher than expected (95% CI, 2.5-3.9) 45 years from diagnosis. The AER for deaths from recurrence declined from 97 extra deaths (95% CI, 92-101) per 10,000 person-years at 5 to 14 years from diagnosis, to 8 extra deaths (95% CI, 3-22) beyond 45 years from diagnosis. In contrast, during the same periods of follow-up, the AER for deaths from second primary cancers and circulatory causes increased from 8 extra deaths (95% CI, 7-10) and 2 extra deaths (95% CI, 2-3) to 58 extra deaths (95% CI, 38-90) and 29 extra deaths (95% CI, 16-56), respectively. Beyond 45 years from diagnosis, recurrence accounted for 7% of the excess number of deaths observed while second primary cancers and circulatory deaths together accounted for 77%. CONCLUSION Among a cohort of British survivors of childhood cancer, excess mortality from second primary cancers and circulatory diseases continued to occur beyond 25 years from diagnosis.


BMJ | 2001

Developing strategies for long term follow up of survivors of childhood cancer

W. Hamish B. Wallace; Annie Blacklay; Christine Eiser; Helena Davies; Mike Hawkins; Gill Levitt; Meriel Jenney

The treatment of childhood cancer has been increasingly successful over the past 30 years. Most paediatric cancers are now curable with multiagent chemotherapy in combination with surgery and radiotherapy. The overall survival five years after diagnosis is now 70% for all paediatric malignancies. The incidence is low (1200-1300 children affected each year in Britain), but with the sustained improvement in survival the number of long term survivors is increasing—about 850 additional survivors of childhood cancer each year. With this improved survival, it is important to increase our knowledge of any long term costs in the form of physical and psychosocial adverse health outcomes. This review looks at the evidence relating to long term clinical follow up after childhood cancer and considers ways to develop such follow up for the future. An awareness of the possible long term complications is important not only for optimising health care for the current survivors but also for modifying future treatment protocols to avoid therapies that are associated with unacceptable morbidity or mortality. We have summarised the evidence on selected long term complications; this evidence is inevitably based on retrospective studies. In the final section we discuss the development of a strategy for the clinical follow up of long term survivors. #### Summary points Long term follow up strategies are needed because of increasing numbers of survivors of childhood cancers Models for follow up need to be developed and formally evaluated Increasing numbers of survivors may have medical problems that will require ongoing specialist follow up The role, training programmes, and career structure of the late effects nurse practitioner needs to be developed The primary care physician may have an important role in long term follow up There is a need for prospective evaluation of new treatments and randomised studies of clinical interventions to resolve substantial uncertainties for …


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2005

Measurement properties of the UK-English version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory 4.0 (PedsQL) generic core scales.

Penney Upton; Christine Eiser; Ivy Cheung; Hayley Hutchings; Meriel Jenney; Ian Russell; John G Williams

BackgroundHealth related quality of life (HRQL) has been recognised as an important paediatric outcome measurement. One of the more promising measures to emerge in recent years is the Pediatric Quality Of Life Inventory (PedsQL™), developed in the US. Advantages of the PedsQL™ include brevity, availability of age appropriate versions and parallel forms for child and parent. This study developed a UK-English version of PedsQL™ generic module and assessed its performance in a group of UK children and their parents.MethodsPedsQL™ was translated to UK-English. The psychometric properties of the UK version were then tested following administration to 1399 children and 970 of their parents. The sample included healthy children, children diagnosed with asthma, diabetes or inflammatory bowel disease and children in remission from cancer.ResultsPsychometric properties were similar to those reported for the original PedsQL™. Internal reliability exceeded 0.70 for all proxy and self-report sub-scales. Discriminant validity was established for proxy and self-report with higher HRQL being reported for healthy children than those with health problems. Sex differences were noted on the emotional functioning subscale, with females reporting lower HRQL than males. Proxy and self-report correlation was higher for children with health problems than for healthy children.ConclusionThe UK-English version of PedsQL™ performed as well as the original PedsQL™ and is recommended for assessment of paediatric HRQL in the UK.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2001

Issues in measuring quality of life in childhood cancer: measures, proxies, and parental mental health.

Yvonne H. Vance; Rachel Morse; Meriel Jenney; Christine Eiser

The relationship between child- and parent-reported quality of life (QOL) and the effects of parental mental health, illness stressors, and child vulnerability was explored using two measures of QOL: the Pediatric Cancer Quality Life-32 (Varni et al., 1998a) and the Disquol (Eiser, Cotter, Oades, Seamark, & Smith, 1999). Thirty-two children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (mean age = 8.92 years) and 36 parents completed measures of QOL when attending routine clinic. In addition, parents also completed the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28), perception of the childs vulnerability, and illness-related stressors. Significant correlations were found between the overall scores on the two child-completed QOL measures, with a range of poor, moderate to good correlations found between the individual subscales. Poor to moderate concordance was found between child and parent reports. Children who self-reported poorer QOL had mothers who were more depressed. Parents who reported poorer QOL for their child reported more illness stressors and perceived their child as being more vulnerable. Assumptions that concordance between child and parent ratings of QOL is a necessary requirement for new measures of QOL are challenged.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2008

The British Childhood Cancer Survivor Study: Objectives, methods, population structure, response rates and initial descriptive information.

Mike Hawkins; Emma R. Lancashire; David L. Winter; Clare Frobisher; Raoul C. Reulen; Aliki Taylor; Michael C. Stevens; Meriel Jenney

In Britain 75% of individuals diagnosed with childhood cancer survive at least 5 years. The British Childhood Cancer Survivor Study was established to determine the risks of adverse health and social outcomes among survivors. To be eligible individuals were diagnosed with childhood cancer in Britain between 1940 and 1991 and survived at least 5 years. The entire cohort of 17,981 form the basis of population‐based studies of late mortality and the risks/causes of second malignant neoplasms using national registration systems.


Pediatrics | 2005

Health-Related Quality of Life in Young Survivors of Childhood Cancer Using the Minneapolis-Manchester Quality of Life-Youth Form

Sadhna M. Shankar; Leslie L. Robison; Meriel Jenney; Todd H. Rockwood; Eric Wu; James H. Feusner; Debra L. Friedman; Robert L. Kane; Smita Bhatia

Objective. To assess the health-related quality of life (HRQL) of 8- to 12-year-old children undergoing therapy for cancer or childhood-cancer survivors by using the Minneapolis-Manchester Quality of Life-Youth Form (MMQL-YF), a comprehensive, multidimensional self-report instrument with demonstrable reliability and validity. Design, Setting, and Patients. The MMQL-YF consists of 32 items comprising 4 scales: physical functioning, psychologic functioning, physical symptoms, and outlook on life. Scoring on the MMQL ranges from 1 to 5; 5 indicates maximal HRQL. An overall quality-of-life (QOL) score is also computed. By using a cross-sectional study design, the MMQL-YF was administered to 90 off-therapy cancer survivors, 72 children with cancer undergoing active therapy, and 481 healthy children without a history of cancer or other chronic disease. Results. Compared with healthy controls, children actively undergoing cancer treatment report low overall QOL, physical functioning, and outlook-on-life scores. However, off-therapy survivors report a superior overall QOL, compared with age-matched healthy controls. Conclusions. Young survivors of childhood cancer report a favorable HRQL relative to healthy controls. These results are reassuring, suggesting that this group of survivors may have been too young to encounter some of the negative psychosocial impacts of cancer and its treatment.


International Journal of Cancer | 2007

Health-status of adult survivors of childhood cancer: a large-scale population-based study from the British Childhood Cancer Survivor Study.

Raoul C. Reulen; David L. Winter; Emma R. Lancashire; Maurice P. Zeegers; Meriel Jenney; Stephen J. Walters; Crispin Jenkinson; Mike Hawkins

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of childhood cancer and its treatment on self‐reported health‐status in 10,189 adult survivors of childhood cancer in Britain. Age‐ and sex‐adjusted scores on the SF‐36 Mental and Physical Component Summary scales (MCS, PCS, respectively) were compared between survivors and UK norms, and between subgroups of survivors, by multiple regression. Survivors had comparable scores to UK‐norms on the MCS scale (difference (D) = −0.1, 99% CI: −0.5, 0.3). The difference in scores between survivors and UK‐norms on the PCS scale varied by age (pheterogeneity < 0.001). Young survivors (16–19 years) scored similarly to UK‐norms (D = 0.5, (−1.1, 2.2), whereas the age groups of 25 and older scored statistically and clinically significantly below UK‐norms (all p‐values < 0.0001), with Ds ranging between −2.3 (−3.5, −1.2) and −3.7 (−5.0, −2.4). Survivors of central nervous system (CNS) and bone tumors scored significantly (p‐value at all ages <0.003) below UK‐norms on the PCS scale. Specifically, these survivors were substantially more limited in specific daily activities such as, for example, walking a mile (40, 63%, respectively) when compared to UK‐norms (16%). In conclusion, childhood cancer survivors rate their mental health broadly similarly to those in the general population. Survivors of CNS and bone tumors report their physical health‐status to be importantly below population norms. Although self‐reported physical health is at least as good as in the general population among young survivors, this study suggests that perceived physical health declines more rapidly over time than in the general population.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

The Minneapolis-Manchester Quality of Life Instrument: Reliability and Validity of the Adolescent Form

Smita Bhatia; Meriel Jenney; Monica K. Bogue; Todd H. Rockwood; James H. Feusner; Debra L. Friedman; Leslie L. Robison; Robert L. Kane

PURPOSE With improvement in survival after childhood cancer, increasing emphasis is being placed on the impact of treatment and its sequelae on the health-related quality of life (HRQL) of survivors. The Minneapolis-Manchester Quality of Life Instrument (MMQL) is a standardized patient self-report instrument designed to assess HRQL in survivors of childhood cancer. The MMQL is being developed for three age groups to address the changing developmental need of different ages: MMQL-Youth (8 to 12 years), MMQL-Adolescent (13 to 20 years), and MMQL-Young Adult (21 to 45 years). This report focuses on the development and testing of the MMQL-Adolescent Form. PATIENTS AND METHODS To validate the instrument, the MMQL-Adolescent Form was administered to 397 adolescents (129 healthy individuals, 110 patients with cancer undergoing therapy, and 158 subjects off therapy for cancer). Factor analysis was conducted to refine the instrument. Construct validity was conducted by comparing similar constructs in the MMQL-Adolescent Form and the Child Health Questionnaire (CHQ). Discriminate validity was determined by comparing healthy children with children with cancer either on or off therapy. Stability of the MMQL was tested by readministering the MMQL-Adolescent Form 2 weeks later. RESULTS Internal consistency reliability was in the acceptable range for this instrument. The MMQL was able to discriminate between the three study populations. There were high correlations between the MMQL scales and similar CHQ domains. Test-retest reliability of the MMQL-Adolescent Form demonstrated that the instrument was extremely stable in all scales tested. CONCLUSION Overall, the data provide evidence for the validity and reliability of the MMQL-Adolescent Form as a comprehensive, multidimensional self-report instrument for measuring HRQL among adolescent survivors of childhood cancer.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Randomized Comparison of Intensified Six-Drug Versus Standard Three-Drug Chemotherapy for High-Risk Nonmetastatic Rhabdomyosarcoma and Other Chemotherapy-Sensitive Childhood Soft Tissue Sarcomas: Long-Term Results From the International Society of Pediatric Oncology MMT95 Study

Odile Oberlin; Annie Rey; José Sanchez de Toledo; Hélène Martelli; Meriel Jenney; Marcelo Scopinaro; Christophe Bergeron; Johannes H. M. Merks; Nathalie Bouvet; Caroline Ellershaw; Anna Kelsey; David Spooner; Michael C. Stevens

PURPOSE MMT95 was the fourth of a series of International Society of Pediatric Oncology (SIOP) collaborations for children with high-risk nonmetastatic soft tissue sarcoma (STS). The principal objective was to explore survival advantage for an intensified chemotherapy strategy in a randomized trial. PATIENTS AND METHODS From July 1995 to June 2003, 457 previously untreated patients with incompletely resected embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), undifferentiated sarcoma, and soft tissue primitive neuroectodermal tumor at all sites except paratesticular, vagina, and uterus, or with alveolar RMS were randomly assigned to receive either ifosfamide, vincristine, and dactinomycin (IVA) or a six-drug combination (IVA plus carboplatin, epirubicin, and etoposide) both delivered over 27 weeks. Cumulative doses were as follows: ifosfamide 54 g/m(2) (both arms), epirubicin 450 mg/m(2), etoposide 1,350 mg/m(2) (six-drug regimen). Poor responders after three courses of IVA were to be switched to the other arm. Delivery of radiotherapy was determined according to site and/or response to chemotherapy with or without surgery. RESULTS Overall survival (OS) for all patients was 81% (95% CI, 77% to 84%) at 3 years. No significant difference in outcome in either OS or event-free survival was noted between the two arms (3-year OS: 82% [95% CI, 76% to 86%] for IVA and 80% [95% CI, 74% to 85%] for the six-drug arm). Toxicity was significantly greater (infection, myelosuppression, and mucositis) in the six-drug arm. Overall burden of local therapy was consistent with data from previous SIOP studies and showed no difference between the two chemotherapy regimens. CONCLUSION Intensification of chemotherapy for nonmetastatic RMS and other chemotherapy-sensitive STS provides no survival advantage or reduction in the intensity of local therapy and adds toxicity.


Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | 2006

The use of the SF-36 questionnaire in adult survivors of childhood cancer: evaluation of data quality, score reliability, and scaling assumptions

Raoul C. Reulen; Maurice P. Zeegers; Crispin Jenkinson; Emma R. Lancashire; David L. Winter; Meriel Jenney; Mike Hawkins

BackgroundThe SF-36 has been used in a number of previous studies that have investigated the health status of childhood cancer survivors, but it never has been evaluated regarding data quality, scaling assumptions, and reliability in this population. As health status among childhood cancer survivors is being increasingly investigated, it is important that the measurement instruments are reliable, validated and appropriate for use in this population. The aim of this paper was to determine whether the SF-36 questionnaire is a valid and reliable instrument in assessing self-perceived health status of adult survivors of childhood cancer.MethodsWe examined the SF-36 to see how it performed with respect to (1) data completeness, (2) distribution of the scale scores, (3) item-internal consistency, (4) item-discriminant validity, (5) internal consistency, and (6) scaling assumptions. For this investigation we used SF-36 data from a population-based study of 10,189 adult survivors of childhood cancer.ResultsOverall, missing values ranged per item from 0.5 to 2.9 percent. Ceiling effects were found to be highest in the role limitation-physical (76.7%) and role limitation-emotional (76.5%) scales. All correlations between items and their hypothesised scales exceeded the suggested standard of 0.40 for satisfactory item-consistency. Across all scales, the Cronbachs alpha coefficient of reliability was found to be higher than the suggested value of 0.70.Consistent across all cancer groups, the physical health related scale scores correlated strongly with the Physical Component Summary (PCS) scale scores and weakly with the Mental Component Summary (MCS) scale scores. Also, the mental health and role limitation-emotional scales correlated strongly with the MCS scale score and weakly with the PCS scale score. Moderate to strong correlations with both summary scores were found for the general health perception, energy/vitality, and social functioning scales.ConclusionThe findings presented in this paper provide support for the validity and reliability of the SF-36 when used in long-term survivors of childhood cancer. These findings should encourage other researchers and health care practitioners to use the SF-36 when assessing health status in this population, although it should be recognised that ceiling effects can occur.

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Anna Kelsey

Boston Children's Hospital

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Julia Chisholm

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Mike Hawkins

University of Birmingham

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