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1.
BJU Int ; 131(6): 734-744, 2023 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36680312

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We report NHS England data for patients with bladder cancer (BC), upper tract urothelial cancer (UTUC: renal pelvic and ureteric), and urethral cancers from 2013 to 2019. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Hospital episode statistics, waiting times, and cancer registrations were extracted from NHS Digital. RESULTS: Registrations included 128 823 individuals with BC, 16 018 with UTUC, and 2533 with urethral cancer. In 2019, 150 816 persons were living with a diagnosis of BC, of whom 113 067 (75.0%) were men, 85 117 (56.5%) were aged >75 years, and 95 553 (91.7%) were Caucasian. Incidence rates were stable (32.7-34.3 for BC, 3.9-4.2 for UTUC and 0.6-0.7 for urethral cancer per 100 000 population). Most patients 52 097 (mean [range] 41.3% [40.7-42.0%]) were referred outside the 2-week-wait pathway and 15 340 (mean [range] 12.2% [11.7-12.6%]) presented as emergencies. Surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or multimodal treatment use varied with disease stage, patient factors and Cancer Alliance. Between 27% and 29% (n = 6616) of muscle-invasive BCs did not receive radical treatment. Survival rates reflected stage, grade, location, and tumour histology. Overall survival rates did not improve over time (relative change: 0.97, 95% confidence interval 0.97-0.97) at 2 years in contrast to other cancers. CONCLUSION: The diagnostic pathway for BC needs improvement. Increases in survival might be delivered through greater use of radical treatment. NHS Digital data offers a population-wide picture of this disease but does not allow individual outcomes to be matched with disease or patient features and key parameters can be missing or incomplete.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Transitional Cell , Ureteral Neoplasms , Urethral Neoplasms , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms , Female , Humans , Male , Carcinoma, Transitional Cell/therapy , Carcinoma, Transitional Cell/drug therapy , Kidney Pelvis , Retrospective Studies , State Medicine , Ureteral Neoplasms/diagnosis , Urinary Bladder/pathology , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/therapy , Urinary Bladder Neoplasms/drug therapy , Aged
2.
Cancers (Basel) ; 13(16)2021 Aug 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34439077

ABSTRACT

Metastatic recurrence, the major cause of breast cancer mortality, is driven by reactivation of dormant disseminated tumour cells that are defined by mitotic quiescence and chemoresistance. The molecular mechanisms underpinning mitotic quiescence in cancer are poorly understood, severely limiting the development of novel therapies for removal of residual, metastasis-initiating tumour cells. Here, we present a molecular portrait of the quiescent breast cancer cell transcriptome across the four main breast cancer sub-types (luminal, HER2-enriched, basal-like and claudin-low) and identify a novel quiescence-associated 22-gene signature using an established lipophilic-dye (Vybrant® DiD) retention model and whole-transcriptomic profiling (mRNA-Seq). Using functional association network analysis, we elucidate the molecular interactors of these signature genes. We then go on to demonstrate that our novel 22-gene signature strongly correlates with low tumoural proliferative activity, and with dormant disease and late metastatic recurrence (≥5 years after primary tumour diagnosis) in metastatic breast cancer in multiple clinical cohorts. These genes may govern the formation and persistence of disseminated tumour cell populations responsible for breast cancer recurrence, and therefore represent prospective novel candidates to inform future development of therapeutic strategies to target disseminated tumour cells in breast cancer, eliminate minimal residual disease and prevent metastatic recurrence.

3.
NPJ Breast Cancer ; 7(1): 95, 2021 Jul 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34290237

ABSTRACT

Breast cancer bone metastasis is currently incurable, ~75% of patients with late-stage breast cancer develop disease recurrence in bone and available treatments are only palliative. We have previously shown that production of the pro-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1B (IL-1B) by breast cancer cells drives bone metastasis in patients and in preclinical in vivo models. In the current study, we have investigated how IL-1B from tumour cells and the microenvironment interact to affect primary tumour growth and bone metastasis through regulation of the immune system, and whether targeting IL-1 driven changes to the immune response improves standard of care therapy for breast cancer bone metastasis. Using syngeneic IL-1B/IL1R1 knock out mouse models in combination with genetic manipulation of tumour cells to overexpress IL-1B/IL1R1, we found that IL-1B signalling elicited an opposite response in primary tumours compared with bone metastases. In primary tumours, IL-1B inhibited growth, by impairing the infiltration of innate immune cell subsets with potential anti-cancer functions but promoted enhanced tumour cell migration. In bone, IL-1B stimulated the development of osteolytic metastases. In syngeneic models of breast cancer, combining standard of care treatments (Doxorubicin and Zoledronic acid) with the IL-1 receptor antagonist Anakinra inhibited both primary tumour growth and metastasis. Anakinra had opposite effects on the immune response compared to standard of care treatment, and its anti-inflammatory signature was maintained in the combination therapy. These data suggest that targeting IL-1B signalling may provide a useful therapeutic approach to inhibit bone metastasis and improve efficacy of current treatments for breast cancer patients.

4.
Clin Exp Metastasis ; 35(8): 831-846, 2018 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30377878

ABSTRACT

Metastatic recurrence in breast cancer is a major cause of mortality and often occurs many years after removal of the primary tumour. This process is driven by the reactivation of disseminated tumour cells that are characterised by mitotic quiescence and chemotherapeutic resistance. The ability to reliably isolate and characterise this cancer cell population is critical to enable development of novel therapeutic strategies for prevention of breast cancer recurrence. Here we describe the identification and characterisation of a sub-population of slow-cycling tumour cells in the MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cell lines based on their ability to retain the lipophilic fluorescent dye Vybrant® DiD for up to six passages in culture. Vybrant® DiD-retaining (DiD+) cells displayed significantly increased aldehyde dehydrogenase activity and exhibited significantly reduced sensitivity to chemotherapeutic agents compared to their rapidly dividing, Vybrant® DiD-negative (DiD-) counterparts. In addition, DiD+ cells were exclusively capable of initiating population re-growth following withdrawal of chemotherapy. The DiD+ population displayed only partial overlap with the CD44+CD24-/low cell surface protein marker signature widely used to identify breast cancer stem cells, but was enriched for CD44+CD24+ cells. Real-time qPCR profiling revealed differential expression of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and stemness genes between DiD+ and DiD- populations. This is the first demonstration that both MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer lines contain a latent therapy-resistant population of slow-cycling cells capable of initiating population regrowth post-chemotherapy. Our data support that label-retaining cells can serve as a model for identification of molecular mechanisms driving tumour cell quiescence and de novo chemoresistance and that further characterisation of this prospective tumour-reinitiating population could yield novel therapeutic targets for elimination of the cells responsible for breast cancer recurrence.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/pathology , Drug Resistance, Neoplasm , Neoplastic Stem Cells/pathology , Staining and Labeling/methods , Cell Line, Tumor , Female , Fluorescent Dyes , Humans
5.
Oncotarget ; 8(51): 88670-88688, 2017 Oct 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29179466

ABSTRACT

Components of the mitochondrial electron transport chain have recently gained much interest as potential therapeutic targets. Since mitochondria are essential for the supply of energy that is required for both angiogenic and tumourigenic activity, targeting the mitochondria represents a promising potential therapeutic approach for treating cancer. Here we investigate the established anti-angiogenesis drugs combretastatin A4, thalidomide, OGT 2115 and tranilast that we hypothesise are able to exert a direct anti-cancer effect in the absence of vasculature by targeting the mitochondria. Drug cytotoxicity was measured using the MTT assay. Mitochondrial function was measured in intact isolated mitochondria using polarography, fluorimetry and enzymatic assays to measure mitochondrial oxygen consumption, membrane potential and complex I-IV activities respectively. Combretastatin A4, OGT 2115 and tranilast were both shown to decrease mitochondrial oxygen consumption. OGT 2115 and tranilast decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and reduced complex I activity while combretastatin A4 and thalidomide did not. OGT 2115 inhibited mitochondrial complex II-III activity while combretastatin A4, thalidomide and tranilast did not. Combretastatin A4, thalidomide and OGT 2115 induced bi-phasic concentration-dependent increases and decreases in mitochondrial complex IV activity while tranilast had no evident effect. These data demonstrate that combretastatin A4, thalidomide, OGT 2115 and tranilast are all mitochondrial modulators. OGT 2115 and tranilast are both mitochondrial inhibitors capable of eliciting concentration-dependent reductions in cell viability by decreasing mitochondrial membrane potential and oxygen consumption.

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