Publications by authors named "Simnett S"

US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved diagnostic assays play an increasingly common role in managing patients to prolong lifespan while also enhancing quality of life. Diagnostic assays can be essential for the safe and effective use of therapeutics (companion diagnostic), or may inform on improving the benefit/risk ratio without restricting drug access (complementary diagnostic). This tutorial reviews strategic considerations for drug and assay development resulting in FDA-approved companion or complementary diagnostic status.

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Rationale, Aims And Objectives: The randomized controlled trial (RCT) is considered the gold standard methodology for determining the efficacy and tolerability of new treatments. However, RCTs cannot provide information on the effectiveness of interventions as they are used in real life. This study was conducted to investigate the effectiveness of montelukast, a leukotriene receptor antagonist, in the real-world management of asthma, through a large-scale, retrospective, observational study: the National Montelukast Survey.

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Purpose: To determine whether a combination of high-dose therapy and autologous stem-cell transplantation (ASCT) is superior to conventional-dose consolidation and maintenance chemotherapy as postremission therapy in adults with lymphoblastic lymphoma.

Patients And Methods: One hundred nineteen patients were entered onto this prospective randomized trial from 37 centers. Patients received standard remission induction therapy, and responding patients were randomized either to continue with a conventional consolidation/maintenance protocol (CC) or to receive high-dose therapy and ASCT.

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A systematic review of the literature was undertaken to assess what published evidence is currently available to support the increasing use of autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT), and to evaluate the published data with regard to the comparative cost of high-dose and conventional therapy. The review aimed to identify all published, randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing high-dose therapy (HDT) with ASCT versus conventional chemotherapy (CC) in acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease, multiple myeloma, and breast, lung, testicular and ovarian cancer. The review also aimed to identify all studies that had compared the cost of the two treatment strategies.

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The aim of this study was to examine the effect of the metabolites H+, ADP, and Pi on the rate of cardiac relaxation. We used guinea pig right ventricular trabeculae that had been chemically skinned, allowing the myofilaments to be studied in isolation. Laser-flash photolysis of the caged Ca2+ chelator diazo 2, causing a rapid fall in intracellular Ca2+, enabled investigation of relaxation independently of the rate of Ca2+ diffusion.

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In vivo, two effects of beta-adrenergic stimulation in cardiac muscle are phosphorylation of troponin I and an increase in relaxation rate. In vitro, cardiac TnI can be phosphorylated by protein kinase A (PKA). We have used the technique of laser flash photolysis of the calcium chelator diazo-2 to investigate the effect of phosphorylation of TnI on the relaxation rate of skinned trabeculae from the guinea-pig at 12 degrees C.

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EMD 57033 is thought to produce its potentiating effect by increasing the apparent Ca2+ sensitivity of the myofilaments, possibly by altering the kinetics of actomyosin interaction. We have investigated the effect of 10 microM EMD 57033 upon activation speed, induced by flash photolysis of 2mM nitr-5 (caged Ca2+), in chemically skinned trabeculae from the guinea-pig at 12 degrees C. EMD 57033 increases the half time of activation from 238 +/- 18.

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EMD 57033 is thought to produce its potentiating effect by increasing the apparent calcium sensitivity of myofibrils. We have investigated the effect of 10 microM EMD 57033 on relaxation speed, induced by flash photolysis of 2mM diazo-2 (a caged Ca2+ chelator), in skinned semitendinosus frog muscle fibres and guinea-pig trabeculae. 10 microM EMD 57033 has no effect on the relaxation speed of semitendinosus fibres.

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In this review, aspects of the ways in which Ca2+ is transported and regulated within muscle cells have been considered, with particular reference to crustacean muscle fibres. The large size of these fibres permits easy access to the internal environment of the cell, allowing it to be altered by microinjection or microperfusion. At rest, Ca2+ is not in equilibrium across the cell membrane, it enters the cell down a steep electrochemical gradient.

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The effect of Ca2+ on the time course of force generation in frog skinned muscle fibres has been investigated using laser flash photolysis of the caged-calcium, either nitr-5 or DM-Nitrophen. Gradations in the rate and extent of contraction could be achieved by changing the energy of the laser pulse, which varied the amount of caged Ca2+ photolysed and hence the amount of calcium released. The half-time for force development at 12 degrees C was noticeably calcium-sensitive when small amounts of calcium were released (low energy pulses) but did not change appreciably for calcium releases which produced a final tension of more than 50% of the maximal tension at pCa 4.

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In a fatigued muscle fibre, the concentrations of ADP, Pi and H+ are all increased and relaxation is slowed. We have used the technique of laser flash photolysis of the caged calcium-chelator, diazo-2, to investigate the direct effect of changes in pH (pH 6.5, 7.

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