Publications by authors named "S P Richman"

BRAF mutations in colorectal cancer (CRC) comprise three functional classes: Class 1 (V600E) with strong constitutive activation, Class 2 with pathogenic kinase activity lower than Class 1, and Class 3 which paradoxically lacks kinase activity. Non-Class 1 mutations associate with better prognosis, microsatellite stability, distal tumour location and better anti-EGFR response. Analysis of 13 CRC cohorts (n=6,605 tumours) compared Class 1 (n=709, 10.

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Tumour content plays a pivotal role in directing the bioinformatic analysis of molecular profiles such as copy number variation (CNV). In clinical application, tumour purity estimation (TPE) is achieved either through visual pathological review [conventional pathology (CP)] or the deconvolution of molecular data. While CP provides a direct measurement, it demonstrates modest reproducibility and lacks standardisation.

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Microsatellite instability (MSI) occurs across a number of cancers and is associated with different clinical characteristics when compared to microsatellite stable (MSS) cancers. As MSI cancers have different characteristics, routine MSI testing is now recommended for a number of cancer types including colorectal cancer (CRC). Using gene panels for sequencing of known cancer mutations is routinely performed to guide treatment decisions.

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Article Synopsis
  • High densities of CD3 and CD8 T-cells in colorectal cancer are linked to better patient prognosis, but their effectiveness in predicting chemotherapy benefits remains unclear.
  • A study analyzed tumor tissue from 868 colorectal cancer patients and found that those with high-risk CD3/CD8 cell densities had recurrence rates twice as high as low-risk patients, consistently observed in both training and validation sets.
  • The findings suggest that while high-risk patients experience more recurrences, chemotherapy provides similar proportional benefits across both high- and low-risk groups, leading to updated treatment recommendations based on the CD3/CD8 cell density scores.
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Unlabelled: Response to neoadjuvant radiotherapy (RT) in rectal cancer has been associated with immune and stromal features that are captured by transcriptional signatures. However, how such associations perform across different chemoradiotherapy regimens and within individual consensus molecular subtypes (CMS) and how they affect survival remain unclear. In this study, gene expression and clinical data of pretreatment biopsies from nine cohorts of primary rectal tumors were combined (N = 826).

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