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Dive into the research topics where Ross Pinkerton is active.

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Featured researches published by Ross Pinkerton.


British Journal of Haematology | 2008

Excellent survival following two courses of COPAD chemotherapy in children and adolescents with resected localized B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma: results of the FAB/LMB 96 international study

Mary Gerrard; Mitchell S. Cairo; Claire Weston; Anne Auperin; Ross Pinkerton; Anne Lambilliote; Richard Sposto; Keith McCarthy; Marie José T Lacombe; Sherrie L. Perkins; Catherine Patte

High cure rates are possible in children with localized mature B‐cell lymphoma (B NHL) using a variety of chemotherapeutic strategies. To reduce late sequelae, the duration and intensity of chemotherapy has been progressively reduced. The Lymphome Malins de Burkitt (LMB) 89 study reported long‐term survival in almost all children with localized resected disease treated with two courses of COPAD (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, prednisolone and doxorubicin). This study was designed to confirm the effectiveness of this approach in a larger number of patients in a multinational co‐operative study. The patient cohort was part of an international study (French‐American‐British LMB 96), which included all disease stages and involved three national groups. Patients in this part of the study had resected stage I or completely resected abdominal stage II disease. Following surgery, two courses of COPAD were given, without intrathecal (IT) chemotherapy. One hundred and thirty‐two children were evaluable. Two of 264 (0·9%) courses were associated with grade IV toxicity (one stomatitis and one infection). With a median follow up of 50·5 months, the 4 year event‐free survival is 98·3% and overall survival is 99·2%. Children with resected localized B‐NHL can be cured with minimal toxicity following two courses of low intensity treatment without IT chemotherapy.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Circulating Neuroblastoma Cells Detected by Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction for Tyrosine Hydroxylase mRNA Are an Independent Poor Prognostic Indicator in Stage 4 Neuroblastoma in Children Over 1 Year

Susan A. Burchill; Ian J. Lewis; Keith R. Abrams; Richard D Riley; John Imeson; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Ross Pinkerton; Peter Selby

PURPOSE In this prospective, multicenter study, the independent prognostic power of neuroblastoma cells detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) mRNA was evaluated. PATIENTS AND METHODS The clinical significance of disease detected by RT-PCR in peripheral blood from children at diagnosis was compared with established prognostic markers [ie, age, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), neuron-specific enolase, ferritin, and MYCN gene amplification] by multivariate analysis. The value of disease detection by RT-PCR during treatment and follow-up was also examined. RESULTS TH mRNA was detected in peripheral blood from 33 of 49 (67%) children with stage 4 neuroblastoma > 1 year old at diagnosis and was a significant predictive factor for overall survival [hazard ratio (HR) = 2.40, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.19 to 4.84, P =.014) and event-free survival (HR = 2.09, 95% CI 1.06 to 4.17, P =.034) in a multivariate analysis. Detection of disease in blood from clinically disease-free children was related to increased risk of death (HR 2.54, 95% CI 1.42 to 4.55, P =.0014). CONCLUSION TH mRNA in peripheral blood of children with neuroblastoma is a poor prognostic indicator, reflecting the propensity for dissemination via the bloodstream. When combined with a serum LDH > 1500 IU/L, this is the most powerful poor prognostic model at diagnosis for children > 1 year old with stage 4 disease. The detection of TH mRNA in peripheral blood from clinically disease-free children is related to increased risk of relapse and death.


British Journal of Cancer | 2001

Detection of the PAX3-FKHR fusion gene in paediatric rhabdomyosarcoma: a reproducible predictor of outcome?

John Anderson; Tony Gordon; Aidan McManus; T Mapp; S Gould; Anna Kelsey; H McDowell; Ross Pinkerton; Janet Shipley; Kathy Pritchard-Jones

Rhabdomyosarcoma has 2 major histological subtypes, embryonal and alveolar. Alveolar histology is associated with the fusion genes PAX3-FKHR and PAX7-FKHR. Definition of alveolar has been complicated by changes in terminology and subjectivity. It is currently unclear whether adverse clinical behaviour is better predicted by the presence of these fusion genes or by alveolar histology. We have determined the presence of the PAX3/7-FKHR fusion genes in 91 primary rhabdomyosarcoma tumours using a combination of classical cytogenetics, FISH and RT-PCR, with a view to determining the clinical characteristics of tumours with and without the characteristic translocations. There were 37 patients with t(2;13)/PAX3-FKHR, 8 with t(1;13) PAX7-FKHR and 46 with neither translocation. One or other of the characteristic translocations was found in 31/38 (82%) of alveolar cases. Univariate survival analysis revealed the presence of the translocation t(2;13)/PAX3-FKHR to be an adverse prognostic factor. With the difficulties in morphological diagnosis of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma on increasingly used small needle biopsy specimens, these data suggest that molecular analysis for PAX3-FKHR will be a clinically useful tool in treatment stratification in the future. This hypothesis requires testing in a prospective study. Variant t(1;13)/PAX7-FKHR appears biologically different, occurring in younger patients with more localised disease.


European Journal of Cancer | 1997

1070 myeloablative megatherapy procedures followed by stem cell rescue for neuroblastoma: 17 years of European experience and conclusions

Thierry Philip; Ruth Ladenstein; C Lasset; Olivier Hartmann; Jean-Michel Zucker; Ross Pinkerton; Andrew D.J. Pearson; T Klingebiel; Alberto Garaventa; B Kremens; Jean-Louis Bernard; G Rosti; F Chauvin

1070 myeloablative procedures followed by stem cell rescue for neuroblastoma are reviewed. These 1070 procedures are part of the European Group for Blood and Marrow Transplant (EBMTG) registry from the last 17 years (in 4536 patients). In 1070 neuroblastoma patients, survival at 2 years was 49%, at 5 years, 33% and relapses were observed as late as 7 years post-BMT (bone marrow transplant). However, 5-year survivors after megatherapy with BMT for stage 4 disease do have an 80% chance of becoming a long-term survivor. When BMT had been used in first complete response (CR1) no salvage was possible, whereas 15% survivors may be seen if BMT is used for the first time at relapse. Infants with stage 4 neuroblastoma had a 17% toxic death rate and indication in this group is exceptional and not recommended. In a matched cohort (17 allogeneic and 34 autologous), autologous stem cell rescue (SCR) was shown to be at least equal to allogeneic SCR. Multivariate analysis of clinical prognostic factors in children with stage 4 disease over 1 year showed that event-free survival was mainly influenced by two adverse factors before the megatherapy procedure: persisting skeleton lesions (99Tc and/or mIBG scan positive) as well as persisting bone marrow (BM) involvement.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2012

Advanced Stage, Increased Lactate Dehydrogenase, and Primary Site, but Not Adolescent Age (≥ 15 Years), Are Associated With an Increased Risk of Treatment Failure in Children and Adolescents With Mature B-Cell Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma: Results of the FAB LMB 96 Study

Mitchell S. Cairo; Richard Sposto; Mary Gerrard; Anne Auperin; Stanton Goldman; Lauren Harrison; Ross Pinkerton; Martine Raphael; Keith McCarthy; Sherrie L. Perkins; Catherine Patte

PURPOSE Adolescents (age 15 to 21 years) compared with younger children with mature B-cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma (NHL) have been historically considered to have an inferior prognosis. We therefore analyzed the impact of age and other diagnostic factors on the risk of treatment failure in children and adolescents treated on the French-American-British Mature B-Cell Lymphoma 96 (FAB LMB 96) trial. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients were divided by risk: group A (limited), group B (intermediate), and group C (advanced), as previously described. Prognostic factors analyzed for event-free survival (EFS) included age (< 15 v ≥ 15 years), stage (I/II v III/IV), primary site, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), bone marrow/CNS (BM/CNS) involvement, and histology (diffuse large B-cell lymphoma v mediastinal B-cell lymphoma v Burkitt lymphoma or Burkitt-like lymphoma). RESULTS The 3-year EFS for the whole cohort was 88% ± 1%. Age was not associated as a risk factor for increased treatment failure in either univariate analysis (P = .15) or multivariate analysis (P = .58). Increased LDH (≥ 2 × upper limit of normal [ULN] v < 2 × ULN), primary site, and BM-positive/CNS-positive disease were all independent risk factors associated with a significant increase in treatment failure rate (relative risk, 2.0; P < .001, P < .012, and P < .001, respectively). CONCLUSION LDH level at diagnosis, mediastinal disease, and combined BM-positive/CNS-positive involvement are independent risk factors in children with mature B-cell NHL. Future studies should be developed to identify specific therapeutic strategies (immunotherapy) to overcome these risk factors and to identify the biologic basis associated with these prognostic factors in children with mature B-cell NHL.


British Journal of Cancer | 1993

Double megatherapy and autologous bone marrow transplantation for advanced neuroblastoma: the LMCE2 study.

T. Philip; Ruth Ladenstein; Jean-Michel Zucker; Ross Pinkerton; Eric Bouffet; D. Louis; W. Siegert; J. L. Bernard; Didier Frappaz; Carole Coze

In the LMCE1 study using a single course of megatherapy most of the relapses occurred during the first 2 years after autologous bone marrow transplantation. A second pilot study (LMCE2) was therefore set up using a double harvest/double graft approach with two different megatherapy regimens. Objectives were to test the role of increased dose intensity on response status, relapse pattern and overall survival. Thirty-three patients (20 boys, 13 girls) with a median age of 53 months at first megatherapy (range, 17-202 months) entered this study. They were cases either with refractory disease in partial response after second line treatment for stage 4 neuroblastoma (n = 25) or after relapse from stage 4 (n = 5) or stage 3 disease (n = 3). All patients received Etoposid and/or Cisplatinum (or Carboplatin) containing treatments before megatherapy. The first megatherapy regimen was a combination of Tenoposid, Carmustine and Cisplatinum (or Carboplatin), the second applied Vincristin, Melphalan and Total Body Irradiation. The first harvest was scheduled 4 weeks after the last chemotherapy, the second 60 to 90 days after megatherapy. All marrows were purged in vitro by an immunomagnetic technique. Median follow up time since first megatherapy is 56 months. Response rates for evaluable patients were 65% (complete response rate: 16%) for megatherapy 1 and 60% (complete response rate: 25%) for megatherapy 2. Considering that only patients with delayed response or relapse were eligible for this pilot study the overall survival was encouraging with 36% at 2 years and still 32% at 5 years. The costs for these survival rates were high in terms of morbidity (four early and four late toxic deaths; toxic death rate: 24%). Double harvesting may have the disadvantage of delayed engraftments related in part to a disturbance of marrow microenvironment by megatherapy 1. This double megatherapy approach achieved a prolonged relapse free interval (median 11 months, range 2-31 months) in patients reaching megatherapy 2 and justifies further evaluation of concepts with consecutive dose-escalation.


Pediatric Blood & Cancer | 2009

Vincristine: Can its therapeutic index be enhanced?

Andrew S. Moore; Ross Pinkerton

Vincristine is one of the most widely used and more effective drugs in paediatric oncology. The dose‐limiting toxicity of neuropathy, lack of proven neuroprotective measures and an incomplete understanding of the pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics of vincristine have limited its therapeutic potential. Recent advances in the understanding of vincristine pharmacokinetics and pharmacogenetics, and potential methods of preventing neurotoxicity are reviewed which could enable dose escalation and dose individualisation in order to enhance the therapeutic index. Pediatr Blood Cancer 2009; 53:1180–1187.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2005

Pharmacokinetics of Dactinomycin in a Pediatric Patient Population: a United Kingdom Children's Cancer Study Group Study

Gareth J. Veal; Michael Cole; Julie Errington; Annie Parry; Juliet Hale; Andrew D.J. Pearson; Karen Howe; Julia Chisholm; Carol Beane; Bernadette Brennan; Fiona Waters; Adam Glaser; Sue Hemsworth; Heather P. McDowell; Yvonne Wright; Kathy Pritchard-Jones; Ross Pinkerton; Gail Jenner; James Nicholson; Ann Elsworth; Alan V. Boddy

Purpose: Dactinomycin (actinomycin D) is an antitumor antibiotic used routinely to treat certain pediatric and adult cancers. Despite concerns over the incidence of toxicity, little is known about the pharmacology of dactinomycin. A study was done to investigate dactinomycin pharmacokinetics in children. Experimental Design: Dactinomycin was administered to 31 patients by bolus i.v. infusion, at doses of 0.70 to 1.50 mg/m2. Plasma concentrations were determined by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry up to 24 hours after drug administration and National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria was assessed. Results: Pharmacokinetic data analysis suggested that a three-compartment model most accurately reflected dactinomycin pharmacokinetics. However, there was insufficient data available to fully characterize this model. A median peak plasma concentration (Cmax) of 25.1 ng/mL (range, 3.2-99.2 ng/mL) was observed at 15 minutes after administration. The median exposure (AUC0-6), determined in 16 patients with sampling to 6 hours, was 2.67 mg/L.min (range, 1.12-4.90 mg/L.min). After adjusting for body size, AUC0-6 and Cmax were positively related to dose (P = 0.03 and P = 0.04, respectively). Patients who experienced any level of Common Toxicity Criteria grade had a 1.46-fold higher AUC0-6, 95% confidence interval (1.02-2.09). AUC0-6 was higher in patients <40 kg, possibly indicating a greater toxicity risk. Conclusions: Data presented suggest that dosing of dactinomycin based on surface area is not optimal, either in younger patients in whom the risk of toxicity is greater, or in older patients where doses are capped.


British Journal of Haematology | 1987

Effective Multiagent Chemotherapy in Children with Advanced B-Cell Lymphoma - Who Remains the High-Risk Patient

T. Philip; Ross Pinkerton; Pierre Biron; Y. Ladjadj; E. Bouffet; G. Souillet; N. Phillippe; D. Frappaz; F. Freycon; F. Chauvin; M. Brunat-Mentigny

Summary. Between 1981 and 1985. 50 patients, mainly children and adolescents, with advanced B‐cell lymphoma were entered on a protocol comprising eight drugs: cyclo‐phosphamide. vincristine, prednisolone. high dose methotrexate. adriamycin. BCNU. cytosine arabinoside and thioguanine. Treatment to the central nervous system consisted of intrathecal methotrexate and cytosine‐arabinoside in association with high dose methotrexate without irradiation. Data was collected prospectively with regard to response rate, treatment related complications and survival. Histology was reviewed in all referred cases and in 21 there was supportive evidence from immunological and cytogenetic studies. The overall complete response rate was 86%: 31/36 stage III and 12/14 stage IV. There were four treatment related deaths. The overall disease‐free survival is 75% with a median follow up of 32 months. In the group of stage IV patients 5/7 with only marrow involvement, 2/4 with isolated CNS involvement and 1/3 with combined CNS and marrow infiltration survive. All the patients with CNS involvement at presentation underwent consolidation treatment with high dose chemotherapy and bone marrow transplant.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 1987

A phase II study of high-dose cisplatin and VP-16 in neuroblastoma: a report from the Société Française d'Oncologie Pédiatrique.

Thierry Philip; R Ghalie; Ross Pinkerton; Jean-Michel Zucker; J L Bernard; G Leverger; Olivier Hartmann

Forty-seven children or adolescents with initial stage IV (42 patients) or stage III (five) advanced neuroblastoma (12 were progressing after relapse and 35 had never reached complete remission [CR] after conventional therapy) were included in a phase II study of the combination of high-dose VP-16 (100 mg/m2/d X 5) and high-dose cisplatin (CDDP) (40 mg/m2/d X 5). Twenty patients had received prior CDDP therapy (total dose, 100 to 640 mg/m2; median, 320 mg/m2) and 38 of 47 had bone marrow involvement when included in the study. The overall response rate was 55%, with 22% CR. Duration of response was 5 to 18 months, with a median of 10 months. Eight patients are still disease free, with a median observation time of 13 months, but all had received additional therapy after two courses of this regimen. Gastrointestinal toxicity was frequent but tolerable. Myelosuppression was severe but of brief duration, ie, nadir of neutrophils was observed at day 15 with 95% of the patients recovering a normal count before day 28, and nadir of platelet count was at day 17 with only two severe and reversible episodes of bleeding. The overall incidence of sepsis was 8% (seven of 92 courses), with no death related to infection. No acute renal failure was observed after two courses, and only three of 47 children experienced a clear reduction of renal function. After two courses, only two children showed a hearing loss in the 1,000 to 2,000 Hz range, although hearing loss above the 2,000 Hz level was frequently encountered. It is concluded that high-dose VP-16 and CDDP is an effective regimen in advanced neuroblastoma with acceptable toxicity. Phase III studies are needed in previously untreated patients. J Clin Oncol 5:941-950.

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Anne Auperin

Institut Gustave Roussy

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Mary Gerrard

Boston Children's Hospital

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Richard Sposto

University of Southern California

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Keith McCarthy

Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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B. G. Charles

University of Queensland

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