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Dive into the research topics where Tiffany-Jane Evans is active.

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Featured researches published by Tiffany-Jane Evans.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2009

A Multicenter Blinded Study to Evaluate KRAS Mutation Testing Methodologies in the Clinical Setting

Vicki Whitehall; Kayla Tran; Aarti Umapathy; Fabienne Grieu; Chelsee A. Hewitt; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Tuty Muliana Ismail; Wei Qi Li; Peter William Collins; Paul Ravetto; Barbara A. Leggett; Manuel Salto-Tellez; Richie Soong; Stephen B. Fox; Rodney J. Scott; Alexander Dobrovic; Barry Iacopetta

Evidence that activating mutations of the KRAS oncogene abolish the response to anti-epidermal growth factor receptor therapy has revolutionized the treatment of advanced colorectal cancer. This has resulted in the urgent demand for KRAS mutation testing in the clinical setting to aid choice of therapy. The aim of this study was to evaluate six different KRAS mutation detection methodologies on two series of primary colorectal cancer samples. Two series of 80 frozen and 74 formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue samples were sourced and DNA was extracted at a central site before distribution to seven different testing sites. KRAS mutations in codons 12 and 13 were assessed by using single strand conformation polymorphism analysis, pyrosequencing, high resolution melting analysis, dideoxy sequencing, or the commercially available TIB Molbiol (Berlin, Germany) or DxS Diagnostic Innovations (Manchester, UK) kits. In frozen tissue samples, concordance in KRAS status (defined as consensus in at least five assays) was observed in 66/80 (83%) cases. In paraffin tissue, concordance was 46/74 (63%) if all assays were considered or 71/74 (96%) using the five best performing assays. These results demonstrate that a variety of detection methodologies are suitable and provide comparable results for KRAS mutation analysis of clinical samples.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Common variants at 6p21.1 are associated with large artery atherosclerotic stroke

Elizabeth G. Holliday; Jane Maguire; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Simon A. Koblar; Jim Jannes; Jonathan Sturm; Graeme J. Hankey; Ross Baker; Jonathan Golledge; Mark W. Parsons; Rainer Malik; Mark McEvoy; Erik Biros; Martin D. Lewis; Lisa F. Lincz; Roseanne Peel; Christopher Oldmeadow; Wayne Smith; Pablo Moscato; Simona Barlera; Steve Bevan; Joshua C. Bis; Eric Boerwinkle; Giorgio B. Boncoraglio; Thomas G. Brott; Robert D. Brown; Yu-Ching Cheng; John W. Cole; Ioana Cotlarciuc; William J. Devan

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have not consistently detected replicable genetic risk factors for ischemic stroke, potentially due to etiological heterogeneity of this trait. We performed GWAS of ischemic stroke and a major ischemic stroke subtype (large artery atherosclerosis, LAA) using 1,162 ischemic stroke cases (including 421 LAA cases) and 1,244 population controls from Australia. Evidence for a genetic influence on ischemic stroke risk was detected, but this influence was higher and more significant for the LAA subtype. We identified a new LAA susceptibility locus on chromosome 6p21.1 (rs556621: odds ratio (OR) = 1.62, P = 3.9 × 10−8) and replicated this association in 1,715 LAA cases and 52,695 population controls from 10 independent population cohorts (meta-analysis replication OR = 1.15, P = 3.9 × 10−4; discovery and replication combined OR = 1.21, P = 4.7 × 10−8). This study identifies a genetic risk locus for LAA and shows how analyzing etiological subtypes may better identify genetic risk alleles for ischemic stroke.


Leukemia | 2012

Genetic polymorphisms and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: GWAS of the ESCALE study (SFCE)

Laurent Orsi; Jérémie Rudant; Audrey Bonaventure; Stéphanie Goujon-Bellec; E. Corda; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Arnaud Petit; Yves Bertrand; Brigitte Nelken; Alain Robert; Gérard Michel; Nicolas Sirvent; Pascal Chastagner; Stéphane Ducassou; Xavier Rialland; Denis Hémon; Elizabeth Milne; Rodney J. Scott; André Baruchel; Jacqueline Clavel

Genetic polymorphisms and childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia: GWAS of the ESCALE study (SFCE)


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2011

Colorectal cancer susceptibility loci on chromosome 8q23.3 and 11q23.1 as modifiers for disease expression in lynch syndrome

Bente A. Talseth-Palmer; Ingvild S Brenne; Katie A. Ashton; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Mary McPhillips; Claire Groombridge; Janina Suchy; Grzegorz Kurzawski; Allan D. Spigelman; Jan Lubinski; Rodney J. Scott

Objective Recently, six colorectal cancer (CRC) susceptibility loci have been identified, and two single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)—rs16892766 (8q23.3) and rs3802842 (11q23.1)—from two of these regions have been found to be significantly associated with an increased CRC risk in patients with Lynch syndrome. The objective of this study was to genotype nine SNPs within these six loci to confirm previous findings and investigate whether they act as modifiers of disease risk in patients with Lynch syndrome. Design The patient cohort consisted of 684 mutation-positive patients with Lynch syndrome from 298 Australian and Polish families. Nine SNPs were genotyped: rs16892766 (8q23.3), rs7014346 and rs6983267 (8q24.21), rs10795668 (10p14), rs3802842 (11q23.1), rs10318 and rs4779584 (15q13.3), and rs4939827 and rs4464148 (18q21.1). The data were analysed to investigate possible associations between the presence of variant alleles and the risk of developing disease. Results An association between SNP rs3802842 on chromosome 11q23.1 and rs16892766 on chromosome 8q23.3 and the risk of developing CRC and age of diagnosis was found in MLH1 mutation carriers. Female MLH1 mutation carriers harbouring the homozygous variant genotype for SNP rs3802842 have the highest risk of developing CRC. When the number of risk alleles for the two SNPs combined was analysed, a difference of 24 years was detected between individuals carrying three risk alleles and those carrying no risk alleles. Conclusion The authors were able to replicate the association between the CRC susceptibility loci on chromosomes 8q23.3 and 11q23 and the risk of developing CRC in patients with Lynch syndrome, but the association could only be detected in MLH1 mutation carriers in this study.


International Journal of Cancer | 2009

Haemochromatosis HFE gene polymorphisms as potential modifiers of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer risk and onset age

Zumin Shi; Daniel M. Johnstone; Bente A. Talseth-Palmer; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Allan D. Spigelman; Claire Groombridge; Elizabeth A. Milward; John K. Olynyk; Janina Suchy; Grzegorz Kurzawski; Jan Lubinski; Rodney J. Scott

Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is characterized by germline mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes; however, variation in disease expression suggests that there are potential modifying factors. Polymorphisms of the HFE gene, which cause the iron overload disorder hereditary haemochromatosis, have been proposed as potential risk factors for the development of colorectal cancer (CRC). To understand the relationship between HNPCC disease phenotype and polymorphisms of the HFE gene, a total of 362 individuals from Australia and Poland with confirmed causative MMR gene mutations were genotyped for the HFE C282Y and H63D polymorphisms. A significantly increased risk of developing CRC was observed for H63D homozygotes when compared with combined wild‐type homozygotes and heterozygotes (hazard ratio = 2.93, p = 0.007). Evidence for earlier CRC onset was also observed in H63D homozygotes with a median age of onset 6 years earlier than wild type or heterozygous participants (44 vs. 50 years of age). This effect was significant by all tests used (log‐rank test p = 0.026, Wilcoxon p = 0.044, Tarone‐Ware p = 0.035). No association was identified for heterozygosity of either polymorphism and limitations on power‐prevented investigation of C282Y homozygosity or compound C282Y/H63D heterozygosity. In the Australian sample only, women had a significantly reduced risk of developing CRC when compared with men (hazard ratio = 0.58, p = 0.012) independent of HFE genotype for either single nucleotide polymorphisms. In conclusion, homozygosity for the HFE H63D polymorphism seems to be a genetic modifier of disease expression in HNPCC. Understanding the mechanisms by which HFE interrelates with colorectal malignancies could lead to reduction of disease risk in HNPCC.


International Journal of Cancer | 2013

Combined analysis of three lynch syndrome cohorts confirms the modifying effects of 8q23.3 and 11q23.1 in MLH1 mutation carriers

Bente A. Talseth-Palmer; Juul T. Wijnen; Ingvild S Brenne; Shantie Jagmohan-Changur; Daniel Barker; Katie A. Ashton; Carli M. J. Tops; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Mary McPhillips; Claire Groombridge; Janina Suchy; Grzegorz Kurzawski; Allan D. Spigelman; Pål Møller; Hans Morreau; Tom van Wezel; Jan Lubinski; Hans F. A. Vasen; Rodney J. Scott

Two colorectal cancer (CRC) susceptibility loci have been found to be significantly associated with an increased risk of CRC in Dutch Lynch syndrome (LS) patients. Recently, in a combined study of Australian and Polish LS patients, only MLH1 mutation carriers were found to be at increased risk of disease. A combined analysis of the three data‐sets was performed to better define this association. This cohort‐study includes three sample populations combined totaling 1,352 individuals from 424 families with a molecular diagnosis of LS. Seven SNPs, from six different CRC susceptibility loci, were genotyped by both research groups and the data analyzed collectively. We identified associations at two of the six CRC susceptibility loci in MLH1 mutation carriers from the combined LS cohort: 11q23.1 (rs3802842, HR = 2.68, p ≤ 0.0001) increasing risk of CRC, and rs3802842 in a pair‐wise combination with 8q23.3 (rs16892766) affecting age of diagnosis of CRC (log‐rank test; p ≤ 0.0001). A significant difference in the age of diagnosis of CRC of 28 years was observed in individuals carrying three risk alleles compared to those with 0 risk alleles for the pair‐wise SNP combination. A trend (due to significance threshold of p ≤ 0.0010) was observed in MLH1 mutation carriers towards an increased risk of CRC for the pair‐wise combination (p = 0.002). This study confirms the role of modifier loci in LS. We consider that LS patients with MLH1 mutations would greatly benefit from additional genotyping of SNPs rs3802842 and rs16892766 for personalized risk assessment and a tailored surveillance program.


Nature Communications | 2016

A variant at 9p21.3 functionally implicates CDKN2B in paediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia aetiology.

Eric A. Hungate; Sapana Vora; Eric R. Gamazon; Takaya Moriyama; Timothy Best; Imge Hulur; Younghee Lee; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Eva Ellinghaus; Martin Stanulla; Jérémie Rudant; Laurent Orsi; Jacqueline Clavel; Elizabeth Milne; Rodney J. Scott; Ching-Hon Pui; Nancy J. Cox; Mignon L. Loh; Jun Yang; Andrew D. Skol; Kenan Onel

Paediatric B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (BCP-ALL) is the most common cancer of childhood, yet little is known about BCP-ALL predisposition. In this study, in 2,187 cases of European ancestry and 5,543 controls, we discover and replicate a locus indexed by rs77728904 at 9p21.3 associated with BCP-ALL susceptibility (Pcombined=3.32 × 10−15, OR=1.72) and independent from rs3731217, the previously reported ALL-associated variant in this region. Of correlated SNPs tagged by this locus, only rs662463 is significant in African Americans, suggesting it is a plausible causative variant. Functional analysis shows that rs662463 is a cis-eQTL for CDKN2B, with the risk allele associated with lower expression, and suggests that rs662463 influences BCP-ALL risk by regulating CDKN2B expression through CEBPB signalling. Functional analysis of rs3731217 suggests it is associated with BCP-ALL by acting within a splicing regulatory element determining CDKN2A exon 3 usage (P=0.01). These findings provide new insights into the critical role of the CDKN2 locus in BCP-ALL aetiology.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2014

Combined analysis of exon splicing and genome wide polymorphism data predict schizophrenia risk loci.

Christopher Oldmeadow; David Mossman; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Elizabeth G. Holliday; Paul A. Tooney; Murray J. Cairns; Jing Qin Wu; Vaughan J. Carr; John Attia; Rodney J. Scott

Schizophrenia has a strong genetic basis, and genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have shown that effect sizes for individual genetic variants which increase disease risk are small, making detection and validation of true disease-associated risk variants extremely challenging. Specifically, we first identify genes with exons showing differential expression between cases and controls, indicating a splicing mechanism that may contribute to variation in disease risk and focus on those showing consistent differential expression between blood and brain tissue. We then perform a genome-wide screen for SNPs associated with both normalised exon intensity of these genes (so called splicing QTLs) as well as association with schizophrenia. We identified a number of significantly associated loci with a biologically plausible role in schizophrenia, including MCPH1, DLG3, ZC3H13, and BICD2, and additional loci that influence splicing of these genes, including YWHAH. Our approach of integrating genome-wide exon intensity with genome-wide polymorphism data has identified a number of plausible SZ associated loci.


BMC Medical Genomics | 2013

Continuing difficulties in interpreting CNV data: lessons from a genome-wide CNV association study of Australian HNPCC/lynch syndrome patients

Bente A. Talseth-Palmer; Elizabeth G. Holliday; Tiffany-Jane Evans; Mark McEvoy; John Attia; Desma M. Grice; Amy L. Masson; Cliff Meldrum; Allan D. Spigelman; Rodney J. Scott

BackgroundHereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC)/Lynch syndrome (LS) is a cancer syndrome characterised by early-onset epithelial cancers, especially colorectal cancer (CRC) and endometrial cancer. The aim of the current study was to use SNP-array technology to identify genomic aberrations which could contribute to the increased risk of cancer in HNPCC/LS patients.MethodsIndividuals diagnosed with HNPCC/LS (100) and healthy controls (384) were genotyped using the Illumina Human610-Quad SNP-arrays. Copy number variation (CNV) calling and association analyses were performed using Nexus software, with significant results validated using QuantiSNP. TaqMan Copy-Number assays were used for verification of CNVs showing significant association with HNPCC/LS identified by both software programs.ResultsWe detected copy number (CN) gains associated with HNPCC/LS status on chromosome 7q11.21 (28% cases and 0% controls, Nexus; p = 3.60E-20 and QuantiSNP; p < 1.00E-16) and 16p11.2 (46% in cases, while a CN loss was observed in 23% of controls, Nexus; p = 4.93E-21 and QuantiSNP; p = 5.00E-06) via in silico analyses. TaqMan Copy-Number assay was used for validation of CNVs showing significant association with HNPCC/LS. In addition, CNV burden (total CNV length, average CNV length and number of observed CNV events) was significantly greater in cases compared to controls.ConclusionA greater CNV burden was identified in HNPCC/LS cases compared to controls supporting the notion of higher genomic instability in these patients. One intergenic locus on chromosome 7q11.21 is possibly associated with HNPCC/LS and deserves further investigation. The results from this study highlight the complexities of fluorescent based CNV analyses. The inefficiency of both CNV detection methods to reproducibly detect observed CNVs demonstrates the need for sequence data to be considered alongside intensity data to avoid false positive results.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Confirmation of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia variants, ARID5B and IKZF1, and interaction with parental environmental exposures

Tiffany-Jane Evans; Elizabeth Milne; Denise Anderson; Nicholas de Klerk; Sarra E. Jamieson; Bente A. Talseth-Palmer; Nikola A. Bowden; Elizabeth G. Holliday; Jérémie Rudant; Laurent Orsi; Ebony Richardson; Laura Lavis; Daniel Catchpoole; John Attia; Bruce K. Armstrong; Jacqueline Clavel; Rodney J. Scott

Genome wide association studies (GWAS) have established association of ARID5B and IKZF1 variants with childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Epidemiological studies suggest that environmental factors alone appear to make a relatively minor contribution to disease risk. The polygenic nature of childhood ALL predisposition together with the timing of environmental triggers may hold vital clues for disease etiology. This study presents results from an Australian GWAS of childhood ALL cases (n = 358) and population controls (n = 1192). Furthermore, we utilised family trio (n = 204) genotypes to extend our investigation to gene-environment interaction of significant loci with parental exposures before conception, and child’s sex and age. Thirteen SNPs achieved genome wide significance in the population based case/control analysis; ten annotated to ARID5B and three to IKZF1. The most significant SNPs in these regions were ARID5B rs4245595 (OR 1.63, CI 1.38–1.93, P = 2.13×10−9), and IKZF1 rs1110701 (OR 1.69, CI 1.42–2.02, p = 7.26×10−9). There was evidence of gene-environment interaction for risk genotype at IKZF1, whereby an apparently stronger genetic effect was observed if the mother took folic acid or if the father did not smoke prior to pregnancy (respective interaction P-values: 0.04, 0.05). There were no interactions of risk genotypes with age or sex (P-values >0.2). Our results evidence that interaction of genetic variants and environmental exposures may further alter risk of childhood ALL however, investigation in a larger population is required. If interaction of folic acid supplementation and IKZF1 variants holds, it may be useful to quantify folate levels prior to initiating use of folic acid supplements.

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John Attia

University of Newcastle

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Allan D. Spigelman

University of New South Wales

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Jan Lubinski

New York Academy of Medicine

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Grzegorz Kurzawski

Pomeranian Medical University

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