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result(s) for
"Harrison, N"
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Four seasons in one day
by
Cotton, Katie, author
,
Courtney-Tickle, Jessica, illustrator
,
Flint, Katy, editor
in
Seasons Juvenile fiction.
,
Concertos (Violin with string orchestra) Juvenile fiction.
,
Concertos (Violin with string orchestra)
2016
\"From the dawn chorus to an icy sunset, follow one girl and her dog as they adventure through spring, summer, autumn and winter in just one day.\"--Back cover.
Classification and Personalized Prognosis in Myeloproliferative Neoplasms
by
Gundem, Gunes
,
Harrison, Claire N
,
McMullin, Mary F
in
Bayes Theorem
,
Blood cancer
,
Bone marrow
2018
Genetic analysis involving 2035 patients with a myeloproliferative disorder identified eight genomic subgroups with distinct clinical phenotypes, risk of leukemic transformation, and event-free survival.
Journal Article
Long-term findings from COMFORT-II, a phase 3 study of ruxolitinib vs best available therapy for myelofibrosis
by
Vannucchi, A M
,
Barbui, T
,
Gopalakrishna, P
in
631/67/1990/2331
,
692/308/2779/109/1942
,
692/699/67/1059
2016
Ruxolitinib is a Janus kinase (JAK) (JAK1/JAK2) inhibitor that has demonstrated superiority over placebo and best available therapy (BAT) in the Controlled Myelofibrosis Study with Oral JAK Inhibitor Treatment (COMFORT) studies. COMFORT-II was a randomized (2:1), open-label phase 3 study in patients with myelofibrosis; patients randomized to BAT could crossover to ruxolitinib upon protocol-defined disease progression or after the primary end point, confounding long-term comparisons. At week 48, 28% (41/146) of patients randomized to ruxolitinib achieved ⩾35% decrease in spleen volume (primary end point) compared with no patients on BAT (
P
<0.001). Among the 78 patients (53.4%) in the ruxolitinib arm who achieved ⩾35% reductions in spleen volume at any time, the probability of maintaining response was 0.48 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.35–0.60) at 5 years (median, 3.2 years). Median overall survival was not reached in the ruxolitinib arm and was 4.1 years in the BAT arm. There was a 33% reduction in risk of death with ruxolitinib compared with BAT by intent-to-treat analysis (hazard ratio (HR)=0.67; 95% CI, 0.44–1.02;
P
=0.06); the crossover-corrected HR was 0.44 (95% CI, 0.18–1.04;
P
=0.06). There was no unexpected increased incidence of adverse events with longer exposure. This final analysis showed that spleen volume reductions with ruxolitinib were maintained with continued therapy and may be associated with survival benefits.
Journal Article
Disorders of compulsivity: a common bias towards learning habits
2015
Why do we repeat choices that we know are bad for us? Decision making is characterized by the parallel engagement of two distinct systems, goal-directed and habitual, thought to arise from two computational learning mechanisms, model-based and model-free. The habitual system is a candidate source of pathological fixedness. Using a decision task that measures the contribution to learning of either mechanism, we show a bias towards model-free (habit) acquisition in disorders involving both natural (binge eating) and artificial (methamphetamine) rewards, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. This favoring of model-free learning may underlie the repetitive behaviors that ultimately dominate in these disorders. Further, we show that the habit formation bias is associated with lower gray matter volumes in caudate and medial orbitofrontal cortex. Our findings suggest that the dysfunction in a common neurocomputational mechanism may underlie diverse disorders involving compulsion.
Journal Article
SP0146 The link between inflammation and depression
2018
Inflammation is increasingly implicated in the etiology of depression. Patients with idiopathic depression have been shown to express increased circulating pro-inflammatory cytokines and 30% of patients receiving chronic Interferon-alpha for the treatment of Hepatitis-C develop major depression. Recently, anti-inflammatory agents, including ‘biologics’ developed for rheumatoid arthritis, have shown potential efficacy for the treatment of idiopathic depression. However, the utility of these medications is highly variable emphasising the importance of identifying biomarkers that may predict treatment response. Interestingly, neuroimaging studies have recently demonstrated that increases in inflammation can rapidly alter brain function and microstructural integrity. Further, these acute changes in brain structure/function can additionally predict the later development of depressive response during sustained inflammatory challenge. For example, in patients with Hepatitis-C given Interferon-alpha over a prolonged period, acute changes in ventral striatal microstructure (observed within 4 hours of the first injection of Interferon) predict the magnitude of fatigue/motivational impairment experienced 4 weeks later while acute changes in amygdala processing of emotionally valenced stimuli predicts the magnitude of depressive symptoms. Conversely, inhibitors of Tumour Necrosis Factor (TNF) reduce amygdala reactivity to emotional stimuli, which correlate with improvement in mood. Together, these studies highlight the importance of inflammatory processes in depression and support on-going trials of anti-inflammatory agents in this common and functionally impairing disorder.Disclosure of InterestN. Harrison Grant/research support from: Janssen, Consultant for: GSK
Journal Article
Maternal immune activation leads to selective functional deficits in offspring parvalbumin interneurons
2016
Abnormalities in prefrontal gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA)ergic transmission, particularly in fast-spiking interneurons that express parvalbumin (PV), are hypothesized to contribute to the pathophysiology of multiple psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders and depression. While primarily histological abnormalities have been observed in patients and in animal models of psychiatric disease, evidence for abnormalities in functional neurotransmission at the level of specific interneuron populations has been lacking in animal models and is difficult to establish in human patients. Using an animal model of a psychiatric disease risk factor, prenatal maternal immune activation (MIA), we found reduced functional GABAergic transmission in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of adult MIA offspring. Decreased transmission was selective for interneurons expressing PV, resulted from a decrease in release probability and was not observed in calretinin-expressing neurons. This deficit in PV function in MIA offspring was associated with increased anxiety-like behavior and impairments in attentional set shifting, but did not affect working memory. Furthermore, cell-type specific optogenetic inhibition of mPFC PV interneurons was sufficient to impair attentional set shifting and enhance anxiety levels. Finally, we found that
in vivo
mPFC gamma oscillations, which are supported by PV interneuron function, were linearly correlated with the degree of anxiety displayed in adult mice, and that this correlation was disrupted in MIA offspring. These results demonstrate a selective functional vulnerability of PV interneurons to MIA, leading to affective and cognitive symptoms that have high relevance for schizophrenia and other psychiatric disorders.
Journal Article
Ruxolitinib versus Standard Therapy for the Treatment of Polycythemia Vera
2015
Ruxolitinib, an oral inhibitor of Janus kinase (JAK) 1 and 2, was associated with hematocrit control and spleen size reduction in 21% of patients with polycythemia vera who had an inadequate response to or unacceptable side effects from hydroxyurea.
Polycythemia vera is a chronic clonal myeloproliferative neoplasm characterized by increased red-cell mass; elevated white-cell and platelet counts are also common.
1
Patients have an increased risk of thrombotic and cardiovascular events
2
and a substantial symptom burden that includes pruritus, fatigue, and night sweats.
3
Splenomegaly often develops as the disease progresses.
4
The main goal of therapy is to prevent thrombotic events while avoiding iatrogenic harm and minimizing the risk of transformation to post–polycythemia vera myelofibrosis or acute myeloid leukemia (AML).
5
,
6
Most patients receive low-dose aspirin and undergo phlebotomy,
7
with a goal of maintaining hematocrit values of less than 45%. Aggressive . . .
Journal Article
Management of myelofibrosis after ruxolitinib failure
2020
Myelofibrosis is a BCR-ABL1–negative myeloproliferative neoplasm characterized by anemia, progressive splenomegaly, extramedullary hematopoiesis, bone marrow fibrosis, constitutional symptoms, leukemic progression, and shortened survival. Constitutive activation of the Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK-STAT) pathway, and other cellular pathways downstream, leads to myeloproliferation, proinflammatory cytokine expression, and bone marrow remodeling. Transplant is the only curative option for myelofibrosis, but high rates of morbidity and mortality limit eligibility. Several prognostic models have been developed to facilitate treatment decisions. Until the recent approval of fedratinib, a JAK2 inhibitor, ruxolitinib was the only available JAK inhibitor for treatment of intermediate- or high-risk myelofibrosis. Ruxolitinib reduces splenomegaly to some degree in almost all treated patients; however, many patients cannot tolerate ruxolitinib due to dose-dependent drug-related cytopenias, and even patients with a good initial response often develop resistance to ruxolitinib after 2–3 years of therapy. Currently, there is no consensus definition of ruxolitinib failure. Until fedratinib approval, strategies to overcome ruxolitinib resistance or intolerance were mainly different approaches to continued ruxolitinib therapy, including dosing modifications and ruxolitinib rechallenge. Fedratinib and two other JAK2 inhibitors in later stages of clinical development, pacritinib and momelotinib, have been shown to induce clinical responses and improve symptoms in patients previously treated with ruxolitinib. Fedratinib induces robust spleen responses, and pacritinib and momelotinib may have preferential activity in patients with severe cytopenias. Reviewed here are strategies to ameliorate ruxolitinib resistance or intolerance, and outcomes of clinical trials in patients with myelofibrosis receiving second-line JAK inhibitors after ruxolitinib treatment.
Journal Article
Single reconstructed Fermi surface pocket in an underdoped single-layer cuprate superconductor
2016
The observation of a reconstructed Fermi surface via quantum oscillations in hole-doped cuprates opened a path towards identifying broken symmetry states in the pseudogap regime. However, such an identification has remained inconclusive due to the multi-frequency quantum oscillation spectra and complications accounting for bilayer effects in most studies. We overcome these impediments with high-resolution measurements on the structurally simpler cuprate HgBa
2
CuO
4+
δ
(Hg1201), which features one CuO
2
plane per primitive unit cell. We find only a single oscillatory component with no signatures of magnetic breakdown tunnelling to additional orbits. Therefore, the Fermi surface comprises a single quasi-two-dimensional pocket. Quantitative modelling of these results indicates that a biaxial charge density wave within each CuO
2
plane is responsible for the reconstruction and rules out criss-crossed charge stripes between layers as a viable alternative in Hg1201. Lastly, we determine that the characteristic gap between reconstructed pockets is a significant fraction of the pseudogap energy.
The identification of broken symmetry states in underdoped cuprate superconductors via quantum oscillation measurements remains inconclusive. Here, Chan
et al
. report the reconstructed Fermi surface of HgBa
2
CuO
4+
δ
comprises only a single pocket indicating a biaxial charge-density-wave order within each CuO
2
plane.
Journal Article
Long-term survival in patients treated with ruxolitinib for myelofibrosis: COMFORT-I and -II pooled analyses
by
Mesa, Ruben A.
,
Gotlib, Jason
,
Verstovsek, Srdan
in
Anemia
,
Anemia - chemically induced
,
Cancer Research
2017
Background
Myelofibrosis (MF) is associated with a variety of burdensome symptoms and reduced survival compared with age-/sex-matched controls. This analysis evaluated the long-term survival benefit with ruxolitinib, a Janus kinase (JAK)1/JAK2 inhibitor, in patients with intermediate-2 (int-2) or high-risk MF.
Methods
This was an exploratory analysis of 5-year data pooled from the phase 3 COMFORT-I and -II trials. In both trials, patients could cross over to ruxolitinib from the control group (COMFORT-I, placebo; COMFORT-II, best available therapy). All continuing patients in the control groups crossed over to ruxolitinib by the 3-year follow-up. Overall survival (OS; a secondary endpoint in both trials) was evaluated using pooled intent-to-treat data from patients randomized to ruxolitinib or the control groups. OS was also evaluated in subgroups stratified by baseline anemia and transfusion status at week 24.
Results
A total of 528 patients were included in this analysis; 301 were originally randomized to ruxolitinib (COMFORT-I,
n
= 155; COMFORT-II,
n
= 146) and 227 to control (
n
= 154 and
n
= 73, respectively). The risk of death was reduced by 30% among patients randomized to ruxolitinib compared with patients in the control group (median OS, 5.3 vs 3.8 years, respectively; hazard ratio [HR], 0.70 [95% CI, 0.54–0.91];
P
= 0.0065). After correcting for crossover using a rank-preserving structural failure time (RPSFT) method, the OS advantage was more pronounced for patients who were originally randomized to ruxolitinib compared with patients who crossed over from control to ruxolitinib (median OS, 5.3 vs 2.3 years; HR [ruxolitinib vs RPSFT], 0.35 [95% CI, 0.23–0.59]). An analysis of OS censoring patients at the time of crossover also demonstrated that ruxolitinib prolonged OS compared with control (median OS, 5.3 vs 2.4 years; HR [ruxolitinib vs censored at crossover], 0.53 [95% CI, 0.36–0.78];
P
= 0.0013). The survival benefit with ruxolitinib was observed irrespective of baseline anemia status or transfusion requirements at week 24.
Conclusions
These findings support ruxolitinib treatment for patients with int-2 or high-risk MF, regardless of anemia or transfusion status. Further analyses will be important for exploring ruxolitinib earlier in the disease course to assess the effect on the natural history of MF.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov
identifiers,
NCT00952289
and
NCT00934544
.
Journal Article