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  1. Article ; Online: Detection of early changes in the post-radiosurgery vestibular schwannoma microenvironment using multinuclear MRI

    Daniel Lewis / Damien J. McHugh / Ka-loh Li / Xiaoping Zhu / Catherine Mcbain / Simon K. Lloyd / Alan Jackson / Omar N. Pathmanaban / Andrew T. King / David J. Coope

    Scientific Reports, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-

    2021  Volume 13

    Abstract: Abstract Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is an established, effective therapy against vestibular schwannoma (VS). The mechanisms of tumour response are, however, unknown and in this study we sought to evaluate changes in the irradiated VS tumour ... ...

    Abstract Abstract Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is an established, effective therapy against vestibular schwannoma (VS). The mechanisms of tumour response are, however, unknown and in this study we sought to evaluate changes in the irradiated VS tumour microenvironment through a multinuclear MRI approach. Five patients with growing sporadic VS underwent a multi-timepoint comprehensive MRI protocol, which included diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI and a spiral 23Na-MRI acquisition for total sodium concentration (TSC) quantification. Post-treatment voxelwise changes in TSC, DTI metrics and DCE-MRI derived microvascular biomarkers (Ktrans, ve and vp) were evaluated and compared against pre-treatment values. Changes in tumour TSC and microvascular parameters were observable as early as 2 weeks post-treatment, preceding changes in structural imaging. At 6 months post-treatment there were significant voxelwise increases in tumour TSC (p < 0.001) and mean diffusivity (p < 0.001, repeated-measures ANOVA) with marked decreases in tumour microvascular parameters (p < 0.001, repeated-measures ANOVA). This study presents the first in vivo evaluation of alterations in the VS tumour microenvironment following SRS, demonstrating that changes in tumour sodium homeostasis and microvascular parameters can be imaged as early as 2 weeks following treatment. Future studies should seek to investigate these clinically relevant MRI metrics as early biomarkers of SRS response.
    Keywords Medicine ; R ; Science ; Q
    Subject code 610 ; 616
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-08-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Nature Portfolio
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article ; Online: High content screening of patient-derived cell lines highlights the potential of non-standard chemotherapeutic agents for the treatment of glioblastoma.

    Kenny Kwok-Hei Yu / Jessica T Taylor / Omar N Pathmanaban / Amir Saam Youshani / Deniz Beyit / Joanna Dutko-Gwozdz / Roderick Benson / Gareth Griffiths / Ian Peers / Peter Cueppens / Brian A Telfer / Kaye J Williams / Catherine McBain / Ian D Kamaly-Asl / Brian W Bigger

    PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 3, p e

    2018  Volume 0193694

    Abstract: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary brain malignancy in adults, yet survival outcomes remain poor. First line treatment is well established, however disease invariably recurs and improving prognosis is challenging. With the aim of personalizing ...

    Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary brain malignancy in adults, yet survival outcomes remain poor. First line treatment is well established, however disease invariably recurs and improving prognosis is challenging. With the aim of personalizing therapy at recurrence, we have established a high content screening (HCS) platform to analyze the sensitivity profile of seven patient-derived cancer stem cell lines to 83 FDA-approved chemotherapy drugs, with and without irradiation.Seven cancer stem cell lines were derived from patients with GBM and, along with the established cell line U87-MG, each patient-derived line was cultured in tandem in serum-free conditions as adherent monolayers and three-dimensional neurospheres. Chemotherapeutics were screened at multiple concentrations and cells double-stained to observe their effect on both cell death and proliferation. Sensitivity was classified using high-throughput algorithmic image analysis.Cell line specific drug responses were observed across the seven patient-derived cell lines. Few agents were seen to have radio-sensitizing effects, yet some drug classes showed a marked difference in efficacy between monolayers and neurospheres. In vivo validation of six drugs suggested that cell death readout in a three-dimensional culture scenario is a more physiologically relevant screening model and could be used effectively to assess the chemosensitivity of patient-derived GBM lines.The study puts forward a number of non-standard chemotherapeutics that could be useful in the treatment of recurrent GBM, namely mitoxantrone, bortezomib and actinomycin D, whilst demonstrating the potential of HCS to be used for personalized treatment based on the chemosensitivity profile of patient tumor cells.
    Keywords Medicine ; R ; Science ; Q
    Subject code 616 ; 610
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: External validation and recalibration of an incidental meningioma prognostic model – IMPACT

    Julie Woodfield / Boris Krischek / Giles Critchley / Damian Holliman / Angelos Kolias / Thomas Santarius / Ola Rominiyi / Michael McDermott / Michael D Jenkinson / Jörg-Christian Tonn / Mohsen Javadpour / Andrea Saladino / Tiit Illimar Mathiesen / Rory Piper / Michael Vogelbaum / Chaya Brodie / Sara Venturini / Daniel M Fountain / Roland Goldbrunner /
    Elliot Tilling / Felix Sahm / Priscilla Brastianos / Rory J Piper / Antonio Santoro / Sylvia Kurz / Pierfrancesco Lapolla / Andrea Mingoli / Jennifer Brown / Debraj Mukherjee / Simon Walling / Andrew Morokoff / Patrick Wen / Ghazaleh Tabatabai / Jill Barnholtz-Sloan / Ryan K Mathew / Alexander Smedley / Helen Shih / William Taylor / Minh Nguyen / Bryony Ford / Samantha J Mills / Tamara Ali / Ruwanthi Kolamunnage-Dona / Josephine Jung / Muhammed Elhadi / Erminia Albanese / Aswin Chari / David Rowland / Melissa Gough / Michael Cearns / Simon Lammy / Yasir Chowdhury / Christian Mawrin / Mahmoud Saleh / Jens Schittenhelm / Farshad Nassiri / Raymond Huang / Pietro Familiari / Manfred Westphal / Warren Selman / Daniel Brown / Nathan McSorley / Oliver Hanemann / Richard Pullicino / Francesco Gaillard / Mirjam Renovanz / Chris Barrett / Christine Jungk / Aaron Cohen-Gadol / Javier Martín-Alonso / Gelareh Zadeh / Hytham Hamid / Abdurrahman I Islim / Christopher P Millward / Shaveta Mehta / Usama Ali / Shelli Diane Koszdin / Theo Georgious / Andrew R Brodbelt / Mohamed Abdelsadg / Suhaib Abualsaud / Amro Abuleil / Kevin Agyemang / Hanan Akbari / Likhith Alakandy / Clarissa Alfonso / Arousa Ali / Michael Amoo / Mohamed A. R. Arbab / Mutiu Asha / Kareem Austin / Khaled Badran / Jarnail Bal / Parameswaran Bhattathiri / Paul M. Brennan / Andrew R. Brodbelt / Ferran Brugada-Bellsolà / Placido Bruzzaniti / Annabel Butcher / Rory S. Cairns / Michael Canty / Sachiv Chakravarti / Rebecca Chave-Cox / Anna Craig-McQuade / Peter Crossley / Elizabeth Culpin / Alessia D'Amico / Bassam Dabbous / Pedro David Delgado-López / Mohamed Draz / Katharine J. Drummond / Rusiru T. Ekanayaka / Ibrahim Elmaadawi / Omar Elmandouh / Mazin Elsharif / Daisy Evans / Andreas Fahlström / Fleur L. Fisher / Daniel M. Fountain / Keiko Fox / Chloé Gelder / Shamayitri Ghosh / Aimee Goel / Athanasios Grivas / Andrew Gvozdanovic / Allan Hall / Liv Hartrick / Samih Hassan / Jack Henry / Abdurrahman I. Islim / Asgeir S. Jakola / Michael D. Jenkinson / Sanjeeva Jeyaretna / Adrian Jimenez / Andranik Kahramanian / Neeraj Kalra / David O. Kamson / Oliver Kennion / Adham M. Khalafallah / Sarah Kingdon / Howra Ktayen / Aditaya Kumar / Jun Yi Lau / Jing Xian Lee / Ryan Leyden / Patricia Littlechild / Sophie Liu / Darmanin Lora-Kay / Vivia Lung / Stephen T. Magill / Hani J. Marcus / Fawaz E. Marhoom / Ryan K. Mathew / Calan Mathieson / Tobias Mederer / Torstien R. Meling / Samantha J. Mills / Christopher P. Millward / Mujtaba Mohammad / Amir H. Zamanipoor Najafabadi / Olivia Näslund / Imran Noorani / Gildas Patet / Omar N. Pathmanaban / Andrea Perera / Amit Persad / See Yung Phang / Rory J. Piper / Jonathan Pollock / Benjamin Price / Martin Proescholdt / James Robins / Bobby Sachdev / Fozia Saeed / Ieva Sataite / Antony Kevin Scafa / Verena Schadewaldt / Syed Wajahat Shah / Mustafa El Sheikh / Zenab Sher / Bente Sandvei Skeie / Agbolahan Sofela / Jerome St George / Torbjørn Strømsnes / Nigel Suttner / Philip Theodosopoulos / Manjul Tripathi / Ismail Ughratdar / James Ulrich / Adithya Varma / Anil Varma / Maria Velicu / Esther Wu / Jacob Young / Giuseppa Zancana / Catherine Zhang / Karolyn Au / Felix Behling / Linda Bi / Nicholas Butowski / Ana Castro / Marta Couce / Francesco Dimeco / Katherine J. Drummond / Ian Dunn / Craig Erker / Michelle Felicella / Eva Galanis / Norbert Galldiks / Caterina Giannini / Christel Herold-Mende / Luke Hnenny / Craig Horbinski / Gerhard Jungwirth / Timothy Kaufmann / Daniel Lachance / Christian Lafougere / Katrin Lamszus / Serge Makarenko / Tathiana Malta / Jennifer Moliterno-Gunel / HK Ng / Houtan Noushmehr / Arie Perry / Laila Poisson / Bianco Pollo / Aditya Ragunathan / David Raleigh / Franz Ricklefs / Antonio Santacroce / Christian Schichor / Nils Schimdt / Andrew Sloan / Matija Snuderl / Jim Snyder / Erik Sulman / Suganth Suppiah / Marcos Tatagiba / Marco Timmer / Andreas Von Deimling / Tobias Walbert / Justin Z. Wang / Stephen Yip / Gabriel Zada / Viktor Zherebitskiy / Michael T.C. Poon

    BMJ Open, Vol 12, Iss

    protocol for an international multicentre retrospective cohort study

    2022  Volume 1

    Keywords Medicine ; R
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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