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Featured researches published by P. Blake.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2004

Mucinous Epithelial Ovarian Cancer: A Separate Entity Requiring Specific Treatment

Viviane Hess; Roger A'Hern; Nazar Nasiri; D. Michael King; P. Blake; Desmond P.J. Barton; John H. Shepherd; Thomas Ind; J.E. Bridges; Kevin J. Harrington; Stanley B. Kaye; Martin Gore

PURPOSE Invasive mucinous carcinoma of the ovary (mucinous epithelial ovarian cancer [mEOC]) is a histologic subgroup of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). Chemotherapy for mEOC is chosen according to guidelines established for EOC. The purpose of this study is to determine whether this is appropriate. PATIENTS AND METHODS Women with advanced mEOC (International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage III or IV) who underwent first-line platinum-based chemotherapy were compared with women with other histologic subtypes of EOC in a case-controlled study. RESULTS Eighty-one patients (27 cases, 54 controls) treated with platinum-based regimens were analyzed. The response rates for cases and controls were 26.3% (95% CI, 9.2% to 51.2%) and 64.9% (95% CI, 47.5% to 79.8%), respectively (P=.01). The odds ratio for complete or partial response to chemotherapy for mEOC was 0.19 (95% CI, 0.06 to 0.66; P=.009) compared with other histologic subtypes of EOC. Median progression-free survival was 5.7 months (95% CI, 1.9 to 9.6 months) versus 14.1 months (95% CI, 12.0 to 16.2 months; P<.001) and overall survival was 12.0 months (95% CI, 8.0 to 15.6 months) versus 36.7 months (95% CI, 25.2 to 48.2 months; P<.001) for cases and controls, respectively. The hazard ratio for progression and death was 2.94 (95% CI, 1.71 to 5.07; P<.001) and 3.08 (95% CI, 1.69 to 5.6; P<.001), respectively, for mEOC patients as compared with controls. CONCLUSION Patients with advanced mEOC have a poorer response to platinum-based first-line chemotherapy compared with patients with other histologic subtypes of EOC, and their survival is worse. Specific alternative therapeutic approaches should be sought for this group of patients, perhaps involving fluorouracil-based chemotherapy.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1997

Contribution of BRCA1 mutations to ovarian cancer.

John F. Stratton; Simon A. Gayther; Paul S. Russell; Jo Dearden; Martin Gore; P. Blake; Doug Easton; Bruce A.J. Ponder

BACKGROUND Inherited mutations in the BRCA1 gene confer a high risk of breast and ovarian cancer in some families. To determine the contribution of BRCA1 mutations to ovarian cancer in the general population, we analyzed DNA samples from a consecutive series of women with ovarian cancer seen at one center. METHODS We studied 374 women who received a diagnosis of epithelial ovarian cancer before the age of 70 years and were treated at the Royal Marsden Hospital between July 1993 and September 1995. Genomic DNA was analyzed by multiplex heteroduplex analysis. Variants were further identified by sequencing. RESULTS Probable germ-line BRCA1 mutations were identified in 13 of the 374 women (3 percent; 95 percent confidence interval, 2 to 6 percent). Six of the variants have not been described previously. Of the 13 mutations, 12 are predicted to result in a truncated protein product. An additional variant results in an in-frame deletion just outside the putative zinc-finger domain. Nine of the 12 women with truncating mutations had family histories of breast or ovarian cancer or both. CONCLUSIONS Assuming that our method has a sensitivity of 70 percent, mutations in BRCA1 occur in approximately 5 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 3 to 8 percent) of women in whom ovarian cancer is diagnosed before the age of 70 years.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1996

Natural history and prognosis of untreated stage I epithelial ovarian carcinoma

F Y Ahmed; E. Wiltshaw; Roger A'Hern; B Nicol; John H. Shepherd; P. Blake; Cyril Fisher; Martin Gore

PURPOSE The aim of this study was to investigate the independent significance of prognostic factors in stage I invasive epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). PATIENTS AND METHODS Between 1980 and 1994, all patients with stage I EOC (borderline tumors excluded) following surgical resection were entered onto this study. No patient received adjuvant therapy and patients were monitored as follows: years 1 to 2-physical examination and serum CA125 every 3 months and computed tomographic (CT) scan every 6 months; years 3 to 5-physical examination and serum CA125 every 6 months and CT scan yearly; years 5 to 10-annual physical examination and serum CA125, with CT scan if clinically indicated. RESULTS A total of 194 patients entered the study. The median patient age was 54 years (range, 15 to 83), and the median follow-up duration 54 months (range, 7 to 157). Five-year survival rates were as follows: stage IA, 93.7%; stage IB, 92%; and stage IC, 84%. Multivariate analysis using Coxs regression identified grade (P < .001), presence of ascites (P = .05), and surface tumor (P < .01) as independent poor prognostic factors. International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) substage did not appear to have independent prognostic significance. Intraoperative capsule rupture was not found to be prognostically significant. The impact of pre-operative rupture remains unclear. CONCLUSION This is an important series, as no patient received adjuvant therapy, and represents the natural history of surgically resected stage I EOC.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1998

Randomized trial of dose-intensity with single-agent carboplatin in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer. London Gynaecological Oncology Group

M. Gore; P Mainwaring; Roger A'Hern; V. Macfarlane; M. L. Slevin; Peter Harper; R Osborne; Janine Mansi; P. Blake; E. Wiltshaw; John H. Shepherd

PURPOSE We have examined the role of an increase in cisplatin dose-intensity in patients with advanced epithelial ovarian cancer by means of single-agent carboplatin therapy. PATIENTS AND METHODS Two hundred twenty-seven patients were randomized to treatment and eligible for analysis. The dose of carboplatin was calculated according to the Calvert formula. One hundred seventeen patients received carboplatin at an area under the concentration time curve (AUC) of 6 for six courses, administered every 28 days, and 110 patients received carboplatin at an AUC of 12 for four courses, administered every 28 days. Patients were eligible provided they had not received prior chemotherapy or radiotherapy and had International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stages II to IV or relapsed stage I epithelial ovarian cancer. RESULTS The planned total-dose increase was 33% for the patients treated with carboplatin AUC 12, but the received percentage total-dose increase was 20%. There were no differences in progression-free or overall survival between the two treatment arms; the overall survival rate at 5 years was 31% and 34% of patients treated at AUCs 6 and 12, respectively. There was significantly more toxicity associated with carboplatin AUC 12, which resulted in more treatment delays and/or dose reductions (52% v 18%; P < .001). CONCLUSION We have shown that carboplatin can be delivered at an AUC of 12 for four courses without granulocyte colony-stimulating factor support, although significant hematologic toxicity occurs. Nonhematologic toxicities were not clinically significant. Carboplatin offers an opportunity to intensify cisplatin therapy, but a greater than two-fold increase in dose-intensity probably needs to be achieved before significant effects on survival will be produced and hematologic support will be required.


Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2003

How patients manage gastrointestinal symptoms after pelvic radiotherapy.

B. Gami; Kevin J. Harrington; P. Blake; David P. Dearnaley; D. Tait; J. Davies; A. Norman; H. J. N. Andreyev

Background : Approximately 13 000 patients undergo pelvic radiotherapy annually in the UK. It is not clear how frequently patients develop a permanent change in bowel habit after pelvic radiotherapy that affects their quality of life because the measures of gastrointestinal toxicity used in trials in the past have generally been inadequate. It has been suggested that patients who are symptomatic are only rarely referred to a gastroenterologist and it is not known how patients manage their symptoms.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1999

Natural History of Stage IV Epithelial Ovarian Cancer

H. Bonnefoi; Roger A'Hern; Cyril Fisher; V. Macfarlane; Desmond P.J. Barton; P. Blake; John H. Shepherd; M. Gore

PURPOSE In this report we present the natural history, prognostic factors, and therapeutic implications of stage IV epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). PATIENTS AND METHODS We reviewed 192 patients with stage IV EOC as defined in 1985 by the International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics. RESULTS The site of stage IV-defining disease was cytologically positive pleural effusion in 63 patients, liver in 50 patients, lymph nodes in 26 patients, lung in six patients, other sites in 15 patients, and disease at multiple stage IV-defining metastatic sites in 32 patients. Surgery was performed before chemotherapy in 169 patients; 25 patients (14.8%) were left with only microscopic residual disease or less than 2 cm of macroscopic residual disease. The overall response rate to chemotherapy was 56%; the complete response rate was 18%. The median progression-free survival was 7.1 months, and the median overall survival was 13.4 months. The median overall survival of patients with positive pleural effusions only was 13.4 months as compared with 10.5 months for patients with visceral disease only, but this difference was not statistically significant. The 5-year survival rate was 7.6%, with only six patients surviving more than 5 years. Univariate and multivariate analysis showed that two parameters were associated with a shorter survival time: visceral involvement (lung or liver) and diagnosis before 1984. CONCLUSION Patients with stage IV EOC initially respond to chemotherapy as often as those with less advanced disease, but the long-term prognosis is very poor. The size of residual disease is not a prognostic factor in this group of patients, and, therefore, the role of debulking surgery in these patients needs to be reconsidered.


British Journal of Cancer | 2005

A modified Inflammatory Bowel Disease questionnaire and the Vaizey Incontinence questionnaire are simple ways to identify patients with significant gastrointestinal symptoms after pelvic radiotherapy

F A Olopade; A. Norman; P. Blake; David P. Dearnaley; Kevin J. Harrington; Vincent Khoo; D. Tait; C. Hackett; H. J. N. Andreyev

After radiotherapy for pelvic cancer, chronic gastrointestinal problems may affect quality of life (QOL) in 6–78% of patients. This variation may be due to true differences in outcome in different diseases, and may also represent the inadequacy of the scales used to measure radiotherapy-induced gastrointestinal side effects. The aim of this study was to assess whether outcome measures used for nonmalignant gastrointestinal disease are useful to detect gastrointestinal morbidity after radiotherapy. Results obtained from a Vaizey Incontinence questionnaire and a modified Inflammatory Bowel Disease questionnaire (IBDQ) – both patient completed – were compared to those from a staff administered Late Effects on Normal Tissue (LENT) – Subjective, Objective, Management and Analytic (SOMA) questionnaire in patients who had completed radiotherapy for a pelvic tumour at least 3 months previously. In all, 142 consecutive patients were recruited, 72 male and 70 female, median age 66 years (range 26–90 years), a median of 27 (range 3–258) months after radiotherapy. In total, 62 had been treated for a gynaecological, 58, a urological and 22, a gastrointestinal tract tumour. Of these, 21 had undergone previous gastrointestinal surgery and seven suffered chronic gastrointestinal disorders preceding their diagnosis of cancer. The Vaizey questionnaire suggested that 27% patients were incontinent for solid stools, 35% for liquid stools and 37% could not defer defaecation for 15 min. The IBDQ suggested that 89% had developed a chronic change in bowel habit and this change significantly affected 49% patients: 44% had more frequent or looser bowel movements, 30% were troubled by abdominal pain, 30% were troubled by bloating, 28% complained of tenesmus, 27% were troubled by their accidental soiling and 20% had rectal bleeding. At least 34% suffered emotional distress and 22% impairment of social function because of their bowels. The small intestine/colon SOMA median score was 0.1538 (range 0–1) and the rectal SOMA median score was 0.1428 (range 0–1). Pearsons correlations for the IBDQ score and small intestine/colon SOMA score was −0.630 (P<0.001), IBDQ and rectum SOMA −0.616 (P<0.001), IBDQ and Vaizey scores −0.599 (P<0.001), Vaizey and small intestine/colon SOMA 0.452 (P<0.001) and Vaizey and rectum SOMA 0.760 (P<0.001). After radiotherapy for a tumour in the pelvis, half of all patients develop gastrointestinal morbidity, which affects their QOL. A modified IBDQ and Vaizey questionnaire are reliable in assessing new gastrointestinal symptoms as well as overall QOL and are much easier to use than LENT SOMA.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2002

Epithelial Ovarian Cancer Metastasizing to the Brain: A Late Manifestation of the Disease With an Increasing Incidence

Desiree F. Kolomainen; James Larkin; Mohammad Badran; Roger A'Hern; D. Michael King; Cyril Fisher; Jane Bridges; P. Blake; Desmond P.J. Barton; John H. Shepherd; Stanley B. Kaye; Martin Gore

PURPOSE We present the Royal Marsden Hospital experience of cerebral metastases from primary epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) over the last 20 years and examine the evidence for an increasing incidence of EOC metastasizing to this site. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 3,690 women with EOC were seen at the Royal Marsden Hospital from 1980 to 2000. Eighteen of these patients developed cerebral metastases. RESULTS Median age at diagnosis of EOC was 52 years (range, 39 to 67). All patients received at least one line of platinum-based chemotherapy; 56% (10 of 18) received more than one line of treatment; 17% (three of 18), two lines; 11% (two of 18), three lines; and 28% (five of 18), four lines. The median treatment interval between each line of chemotherapy was 12, 18, and 4 months. The median interval between diagnosis and CNS relapse was 46 months (range, 12 to 113), in comparison with 5 and 7.5 months for hematogenous relapse in lung or liver, respectively (P <.001). The incidence of CNS metastases in our population from 1980 to 1984 was 0.2%; from 1985 to 1989, 0%; from 1990 to 1994, 0.3%; and from 1995 to 1999, 1.3% (P <.001). An analysis of data from the literature also suggests that the incidence of cerebral metastases from EOC has increased over time. CONCLUSION CNS metastases in EOC are a rare and late manifestation of the disease, occurring in patients with a prolonged survival caused by repeated chemosensitive relapses. An analysis of our data and the data from the literature suggests that the incidence of metastasis at this site in patients with EOC is increasing.


Clinical Oncology | 1998

Granulosa cell tumours of the ovary: Demographics, survival and the management of advanced disease

P. Savage; D. Constenla; Cyril Fisher; John H. Shepherd; Desmond P.J. Barton; P. Blake; Martin Gore

Ovarian granulosa cell tumours (OGCT) are rare, accounting for only 3%-5% of primary ovarian tumours. As a result of oestrogen production OGCTs tend to present with early stage disease, which has a good prognosis. For patients with advanced disease, surgery and radiotherapy have been the major modalities of treatment. More recently, platinum-based chemotherapy has been shown to have important activity in advanced disease. In this retrospective study, we have reviewed the results of 62 patients who were treated for adult OGCT at the Royal Marsden Hospital between 1969 and 1995, with particular emphasis on the management of advanced disease. The median age at primary diagnosis was 53 years (range 13-77). Sixty-one per cent of these patients had Stage I disease, 21% Stage II disease, 16% Stage III and 2% Stage IV. Stage I patients had a good prognosis with 5- and 10-year overall survival rates of 95% and 90%. Eleven Stage I patients received adjuvant pelvic radiotherapy, with no apparent benefit to recurrent rate or overall survival. Disease progression occurred in 40% of Stage I patients at a median interval of 76 months (range 12-240), and in 62% of the Stage II patients, at a median interval of 31 months (range 2-57). The median interval from progression of Stage I/II disease to death was 22 months (range 3-144). For patients with inoperable disease, radiotherapy produced a number of long-term remissions with an overall response rate of 50%. Platinum-based chemotherapy also appears active, with responses documented in four out of five patients treated with the PVB regimen (cisplatin, vinblastine, bleomycin) as first line therapy. There were no responses documented to non-platinum chemotherapy or to hormonal manipulation. The results from this study confirm the activity of platinum-containing chemotherapy regimens in OGCT and support the need for further trials to optimize the management of this rare tumour.


Palliative Medicine | 1998

Pitfalls in placebo-controlled trials in palliative care: dexamethasone for the palliation of malignant bowel obstruction

Janet Hardy; Julie Ling; Janine Mansi; Richard Isaacs; Judith Bliss; Roger A'Hern; P. Blake; Martin Gore; John H. Shepherd; Geoff Hanks

To determine the effect of dexamethasone when treating malignant bowel obstruction, 35 patients were randomized to receive intravenous dexamethasone or a placebo, crossing over to the alternate treatment arm if there had been no resolution of obstruction by day 5. This was done in two consecutive studies. Patients were stratified according to whether or not they had received specific anticancer therapy within 28 days of study. In trial 1, 15 out of 22 patients ‘responded’ (resolution of obstruction by day 5; 10 on dexamethasone, five on placebo). Eleven out of 15 patients were ‘on treatment’. In trial 2, six out of 13 responded (three on dexamethasone, three on placebo); three out of six were ‘on treatment’. When both studies are combined, 60% (21/35) patients responded (13 on dexamethasone, eight on placebo). Poor patient accrual terminated both studies. Numbers are too small to allow a combination of studies or formal statistical analysis. We are unable to make any conclusion as to the effectiveness of dexamethasone in the palliation of malignant bowel disease.

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D. Tait

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Martin Gore

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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John H. Shepherd

Institute of Cancer Research

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Kevin J. Harrington

Institute of Cancer Research

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E. Wiltshaw

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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Linda Wedlake

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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C. Hackett

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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C. McGough

The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust

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