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Dive into the research topics where Nicola C. Venn is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicola C. Venn.


Nature Genetics | 2015

The landscape of somatic mutations in infant MLL-rearranged acute lymphoblastic leukemias.

Anna Andersson; Jing Ma; Jianmin Wang; Xiang Chen; Amanda Larson Gedman; Jinjun Dang; Joy Nakitandwe; Linda Holmfeldt; Matthew A. Parker; John Easton; Robert Huether; Richard W. Kriwacki; Michael Rusch; Gang Wu; Yongjin Li; Heather L. Mulder; Susana C. Raimondi; Stanley Pounds; Guolian Kang; Lei Shi; Jared Becksfort; Pankaj Gupta; Debbie Payne-Turner; Bhavin Vadodaria; Kristy Boggs; Donald Yergeau; Jayanthi Manne; Guangchun Song; Michael Edmonson; Panduka Nagahawatte

Infant acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) with MLL rearrangements (MLL-R) represents a distinct leukemia with a poor prognosis. To define its mutational landscape, we performed whole-genome, exome, RNA and targeted DNA sequencing on 65 infants (47 MLL-R and 18 non–MLL-R cases) and 20 older children (MLL-R cases) with leukemia. Our data show that infant MLL-R ALL has one of the lowest frequencies of somatic mutations of any sequenced cancer, with the predominant leukemic clone carrying a mean of 1.3 non-silent mutations. Despite this paucity of mutations, we detected activating mutations in kinase-PI3K-RAS signaling pathway components in 47% of cases. Surprisingly, these mutations were often subclonal and were frequently lost at relapse. In contrast to infant cases, MLL-R leukemia in older children had more somatic mutations (mean of 6.5 mutations/case versus 1.3 mutations/case, P = 7.15 × 10−5) and had frequent mutations (45%) in epigenetic regulators, a category of genes that, with the exception of MLL, was rarely mutated in infant MLL-R ALL.


Cancer Research | 2008

ODC1 Is a Critical Determinant of MYCN Oncogenesis and a Therapeutic Target in Neuroblastoma

Michael D. Hogarty; Murray D. Norris; Kimberly Davis; Xueyuan Liu; Nicholas F. Evageliou; Candace S. Hayes; Bruce R. Pawel; Rong Guo; Huaqing Zhao; Eric Sekyere; Joanna Keating; Wayne Thomas; Ngan Ching Cheng; Jayne Murray; Janice Smith; Rosemary Sutton; Nicola C. Venn; Wendy B. London; Allen Buxton; Susan K. Gilmour; Glenn M. Marshall; Michelle Haber

Neuroblastoma is a frequently lethal childhood tumor in which MYC gene deregulation, commonly as MYCN amplification, portends poor outcome. Identifying the requisite biopathways downstream of MYC may provide therapeutic opportunities. We used transcriptome analyses to show that MYCN-amplified neuroblastomas have coordinately deregulated myriad polyamine enzymes (including ODC1, SRM, SMS, AMD1, OAZ2, and SMOX) to enhance polyamine biosynthesis. High-risk tumors without MYCN amplification also overexpress ODC1, the rate-limiting enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis, when compared with lower-risk tumors, suggesting that this pathway may be pivotal. Indeed, elevated ODC1 (independent of MYCN amplification) was associated with reduced survival in a large independent neuroblastoma cohort. As polyamines are essential for cell survival and linked to cancer progression, we studied polyamine antagonism to test for metabolic dependence on this pathway in neuroblastoma. The Odc inhibitor alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) inhibited neuroblast proliferation in vitro and suppressed oncogenesis in vivo. DFMO treatment of neuroblastoma-prone genetically engineered mice (TH-MYCN) extended tumor latency and survival in homozygous mice and prevented oncogenesis in hemizygous mice. In the latter, transient Odc ablation permanently prevented tumor onset consistent with a time-limited window for embryonal tumor initiation. Importantly, we show that DFMO augments antitumor efficacy of conventional cytotoxics in vivo. This work implicates polyamine biosynthesis as an arbiter of MYCN oncogenesis and shows initial efficacy for polyamine depletion strategies in neuroblastoma, a strategy that may have utility for this and other MYC-driven embryonal tumors.


British Journal of Haematology | 2009

Clinical significance of minimal residual disease at day 15 and at the end of therapy in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia

Rosemary Sutton; Nicola C. Venn; Jonathan Tolisano; Anita Y. Bahar; Jodie E. Giles; Lesley J. Ashton; Lochie Teague; Gemma Rigutto; Keith Waters; Glenn M. Marshall; Michelle Haber; Murray D. Norris

Detection of minimal residual disease (MRD) after induction and consolidation therapy is highly predictive of outcome for childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and is used to identify patients at high risk of relapse in several current clinical trials. To evaluate the prognostic significance of MRD at other treatment phases, MRD was measured by real‐time quantitative polymerase chain reaction on a selected group of 108 patients enrolled on the Australian and New Zealand Children’s Cancer Study Group Study VII including 36 patients with a bone marrow or central nervous system relapse and 72 matched patients in first remission. MRD was prognostic of outcome at all five treatment phases tested: at day 15 (MRD ≥ 5 × 10−2, log rank P < 0·0001), day 35 (≥1 × 10−2, P = 0·0001), 4 months (≥5 × 10−4, P < 0·0001), 12 months (MRD ≥ 1 × 10−4, P = 0·006) and 24 months (MRD ≥ 1 × 10−4, P < 0·0001). Day 15 was the best early MRD time‐point to differentiate between patients with high, intermediate and low risk of relapse. MRD testing at 12 and particularly at 24 months, detected molecular relapses in some patients up to 6 months before clinical relapse. This raised the question of whether a strategy of late monitoring and salvage therapy will improve outcome.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2009

Determining the Repertoire of IGH Gene Rearrangements to Develop Molecular Markers for Minimal Residual Disease in B-Lineage Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Michael J. Brisco; Sue Latham; Rosemary Sutton; Hughes E; Vicki Wilczek; Katrina van Zanten; Bradley Budgen; Anita Y. Bahar; Pamela J. Sykes; Bryone J. Kuss; Keith Waters; Nicola C. Venn; Jodie E. Giles; Michelle Haber; Murray D. Norris; Glenn M. Marshall; Alexander A. Morley

Molecular markers for minimal residual disease in B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia were identified by determining, at the time of diagnosis, the repertoire of rearrangements of the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IGH) gene using segment-specific variable (V), diversity (D), and junctional (J) primers in two different studies that involved a total study population of 75 children and 18 adults. This strategy, termed repertoire analysis, was compared with the conventional strategy of identifying markers using family-specific V, D, and J primers for a variety of antigen receptor genes. Repertoire analysis detected significantly more markers for the major leukemic clone than did the conventional strategy, and one or more IgH rearrangements that were suitable for monitoring the major clone were detected in 96% of children and 94% of adults. Repertoire analysis also detected significantly more IGH markers for minor clones. Some minor clones were quite large and a proportion of them would not be able to be detected by a minimal residual disease test directed to the marker for the major clone. IGH repertoire analysis at diagnosis has potential advantages for the identification of molecular markers for the quantification of minimal residual disease in acute lymphoblastic leukemia cases. An IGH marker enables very sensitive quantification of the major leukemic clone, and the detection of minor clones may enable early identification of additional patients who are prone to relapse.


Cell Cycle | 2008

Mechanism of relapse in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Michelle J. Henderson; Seoyeon Choi; Alex H. Beesley; Rosemary Sutton; Nicola C. Venn; Glenn M. Marshall; Ursula R. Kees; Michelle Haber; Murray D. Norris

Relapse following initial chemotherapy remains a barrier to survival in approximately 20% of children suffering from acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Recently, to investigate the mechanism of relapse, we analysed clonal populations in 27 pairs of matched diagnosis and relapse ALL samples using PCR-based detection of multiple antigen receptor gene rearrangements. These clonal markers revealed the emergence of apparently new populations at relapse in 13 patients. In those cases where the new ‘relapse clone’ could be detected in the diagnosis population, there was a close correlation between length of first remission and quantity of the relapse clone in the diagnosis sample. A shorter length of time to first relapse correlated with a higher quantity of the relapsing clone at diagnosis. This observation, together with demonstrated differential chemosensitivity between sub-clones at diagnosis, indicates that relapse in ALL patients may commonly involve selection of a minor intrinsically resistant sub-clone that is undetectable by routine PCR-based methods. From a clinical perspective, relapse prediction may be improved with strategies to detect minor potentially resistant sub-clones early during treatment, hence allowing intensification of therapy. Together with the availability of relevant in vivo experimental models and powerful technology for detailed analysis of patient specimens, this new information will help shape future experimentation towards targeted therapy for high-risk ALL.


Blood | 2016

Integration of genetic and clinical risk factors improves prognostication in relapsed childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Julie Irving; Amir Enshaei; Catriona Parker; Rosemary Sutton; Roland P. Kuiper; Amy Erhorn; Lynne Minto; Nicola C. Venn; Tamara Law; Jiangyan Yu; Claire Schwab; Rosanna Davies; Elizabeth Matheson; Alysia Davies; Edwin Sonneveld; Monique L. den Boer; Sharon Love; Christine J. Harrison; Peter M. Hoogerbrugge; Tamas Revesz; Vaskar Saha; Anthony V. Moorman

Somatic genetic abnormalities are initiators and drivers of disease and have proven clinical utility at initial diagnosis. However, the genetic landscape and its clinical utility at relapse are less well understood and have not been studied comprehensively. We analyzed cytogenetic data from 427 children with relapsed B-cell precursor ALL treated on the international trial, ALLR3. Also we screened 238 patients with a marrow relapse for selected copy number alterations (CNAs) and mutations. Cytogenetic risk groups were predictive of outcome postrelapse and survival rates at 5 years for patients with good, intermediate-, and high-risk cytogenetics were 68%, 47%, and 26%, respectively (P < .001). TP53 alterations and NR3C1/BTG1 deletions were associated with a higher risk of progression: hazard ratio 2.36 (95% confidence interval, 1.51-3.70, P < .001) and 2.15 (1.32-3.48, P = .002). NRAS mutations were associated with an increased risk of progression among standard-risk patients with high hyperdiploidy: 3.17 (1.15-8.71, P = .026). Patients classified clinically as standard and high risk had distinct genetic profiles. The outcome of clinical standard-risk patients with high-risk cytogenetics was equivalent to clinical high-risk patients. Screening patients at relapse for key genetic abnormalities will enable the integration of genetic and clinical risk factors to improve patient stratification and outcome. This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.org as #ISCRTN45724312.


Leukemia | 2012

Highly sensitive MRD tests for ALL based on the IKZF1 Δ3–6 microdeletion

Nicola C. Venn; V H J van der Velden; M de Bie; Esmee Waanders; Jodie E. Giles; Tamara Law; Roland P. Kuiper; V de Haas; Charles G. Mullighan; Michelle Haber; Glenn M. Marshall; Norris; J J M van Dongen; Rosemary Sutton

Current clinical trials for patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) depend upon the measurement of minimal residual disease (MRD) at early stages of therapy to determine the risk of relapse for each patient who is being used for treatment stratification.1 PCR-based MRD tests are usually designed to detect the specific rearrangements of immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor (Ig/TCR) genes found in the leukemic clone. We now present evidence supporting the hypothesis that the most common deletion in the IKZF1 gene in ALL also provides the basis for highly sensitive MRD tests that give MRD results in close agreement with Ig/TCR MRD markers.


Leukemia | 2016

Prognostic value of rare IKZF1 deletion in childhood B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia: An international collaborative study

Judith M. Boer; A van der Veer; Dimitris Rizopoulos; M. Fiocco; Edwin Sonneveld; H A de Groot-Kruseman; Roland P. Kuiper; P.M. Hoogerbrugge; Martin A. Horstmann; Marketa Zaliova; Chiara Palmi; J Trka; Eva Fronkova; Mariana Emerenciano; M do Socorro Pombo-de-Oliveira; Wojciech Mlynarski; Tomasz Szczepański; Karin Nebral; Andishe Attarbaschi; Nicola C. Venn; Rosemary Sutton; Claire Schwab; Amir Enshaei; Ajay Vora; Martin Stanulla; M Schrappe; Giovanni Cazzaniga; Valentino Conter; Martin Zimmermann; Anthony V. Moorman

Deletions in IKZF1 are found in ~15% of children with B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL). There is strong evidence for the poor prognosis of IKZF1 deletions affecting exons 4–7 and exons 1–8, but evidence for the remaining 33% of cases harboring other variants of IKZF1 deletions is lacking. In an international multicenter study we analyzed the prognostic value of these rare variants in a case–control design. Each IKZF1-deleted case was matched to three IKZF1 wild-type controls based on cytogenetic subtype, treatment protocol, risk stratification arm, white blood cell count and age. Hazard ratios for the prognostic impact of rare IKZF1 deletions on event-free survival were calculated by matched pair Cox regression. Matched pair analysis for all 134 cases with rare IKZF1 deletions together revealed a poor prognosis (P<0.001) that was evident in each risk stratification arm. Rare variant types with the most unfavorable event-free survival were DEL 2–7 (P=0.03), DEL 2–8 (P=0.002) and DEL-Other (P<0.001). The prognosis of each type of rare variant was equal or worse compared with the well-known major DEL 4–7 and DEL 1–8 IKZF1 deletion variants. We therefore conclude that all variants of rare IKZF1 deletions are associated with an unfavorable prognosis in pediatric BCP-ALL.


British Journal of Haematology | 2015

Persistent MRD before and after allogeneic BMT predicts relapse in children with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia

Rosemary Sutton; Peter J. Shaw; Nicola C. Venn; Tamara Law; Anuruddhika Dissanayake; Tatjana Kilo; Michelle Haber; Murray D. Norris; Chris Fraser; Frank Alvaro; Tamas Revesz; Toby Trahair; Luciano Dalla-Pozza; Glenn M. Marshall; Tracey O'Brien

Minimal residual disease (MRD) during early chemotherapy is a powerful predictor of relapse in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) and is used in children to determine eligibility for allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) in first (CR1) or later complete remission (CR2/CR3). Variables affecting HSCT outcome were analysed in 81 children from the ANZCHOG ALL8 trial. The major cause of treatment failure was relapse, with a cumulative incidence of relapse at 5 years (CIR) of 32% and treatment‐related mortality of 8%. Leukaemia‐free survival (LFS) and overall survival (OS) were similar for HSCT in CR1 (LFS 62%, OS 83%, n = 41) or CR2/CR3 (LFS 60%, OS 72%, n = 40). Patients achieving bone marrow MRD negativity pre‐HSCT had better outcomes (LFS 83%, OS 92%) than those with persistent MRD pre‐HSCT (LFS 41%, OS 64%, P < 0·0001) or post‐HSCT (LFS 35%, OS 55%, P < 0·0001). Patients with B‐other ALL had more relapses (CIR 50%, LFS 41%) than T‐ALL and the main precursor‐B subtypes including BCR‐ABL1, KMT2A (MLL), ETV6‐RUNX1 (TEL‐AML1) and hyperdiploidy >50. A Cox multivariate regression model for LFS retained both B‐other ALL subtype (hazard ratio 4·1, P = 0·0062) and MRD persistence post‐HSCT (hazard ratio 3·9, P = 0·0070) as independent adverse prognostic variables. Persistent MRD could be used to direct post‐HSCT therapy.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2009

Sensitive and specific measurement of minimal residual disease in acute lymphoblastic leukemia

Alexander A. Morley; Sue Latham; Michael J. Brisco; Pamela J. Sykes; Rosemary Sutton; Hughes E; Vicki Wilczek; Bradley Budgen; Katrina van Zanten; Bryone J. Kuss; Nicola C. Venn; Murray D. Norris; Catherine Crock; Colin Storey; Tamas Revesz; Keith Waters

A sensitive and specific quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction method, involving three rounds of amplification with two allele-specific oligonucleotide primers directed against an rearrangement, was developed to quantify minimal residual disease (MRD) in B-lineage acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). For a single sample containing 10 microg of good quality DNA, MRD was quantifiable down to approximately 10(-6), which is at least 1 log more sensitive than current methods. Nonspecific amplification was rarely observed. The standard deviation of laboratory estimations was 0.32 log units at moderate or high levels of MRD, but increased markedly as the level of MRD and the number of intact marker gene rearrangements in the sample fell. In 23 children with ALL studied after induction therapy, the mean MRD level was 1.6 x 10(-5) and levels ranged from 1.5 x 10(-2) to less than 10(-7). Comparisons with the conventional one-round quantitative polymerase chain reaction method on 29 samples from another 24 children who received treatment resulted in concordant results for 22 samples and discordant results for seven samples. The sensitivity and specificity of the method are due to the use of nested polymerase chain reaction, one segment-specific and two allele-specific oligonucleotide primers, and the use of a large amount of good quality DNA. This method may improve MRD-based decisions on treatment for ALL patients, and the principles should be applicable to DNA-based MRD measurements in other disorders.

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Rosemary Sutton

University of New South Wales

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Murray D. Norris

University of New South Wales

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Tamara Law

University of New South Wales

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Jodie E. Giles

University of New South Wales

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Tamas Revesz

Boston Children's Hospital

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Luciano Dalla Pozza

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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Toby Trahair

Boston Children's Hospital

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Anita Y. Bahar

University of New South Wales

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