Online tools for predicting melanoma survival: including sentinel node status as a variable improves prediction accuracy.
No abstract available. Read Full Paper
Immune checkpoint inhibitor-induced neurotoxicity is not associated with seroprevalence of neurotropic infections.
Abstract Background: Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) substantially improve outcome for patients with cancer. However, the majority of patients develops immune-related adverse events (irAEs), which can be persistent and significantly reduce quality of life. Neurological irAEs occur in 1-5% of patients and can induce severe, permanent sequelae or even be fatal. In order to improve the diagnosis and treatment of neurological irAEs and to better understand their pathogenesis, we assessed whether previous neurotropic infections are associated with neurological irAEs. Methods: Neurotropic infections that might predispose to ICI-induced neurological irAEs were analyzed in 61 melanoma patients from 3 countries, the Netherlands, Australia and [...]
Single cell profiling of tumour biopsies and heterogeneity in response of dedifferentiated melanoma
Abstract Background: Patients with advanced BRAFV600-mutant melanoma can be treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors or combination BRAF/MEK inhibitors. The sequence of these therapies can influence response to second-line treatment. Patients who progress on first-line PD1 blockade have poorer outcomes on BRAF/MEK inhibitors compared to patients who are treatment-naïve. Thus, defining the molecular features that are modified by therapy and that influence subsequent treatment responses require thorough characterization. Methods: In this study, tumor biopsies from five BRAF-mutant melanoma patients progressing on anti-PD1 (PROG) and five BRAF-mutant treatment-naïve (NAÏVE) patients were dissociated and treated ex vivo with BRAF/MEK inhibitors (dabrafenib+trametinib (DT)) before flow cytometry profiling [...]
Definitive treatment with PD-1 blockade and radiation therapy of unresected primary desmoplastic melanoma of the nose
Abstract Two patients with primary desmoplastic melanoma of the nose were treated with definitive anti-PD-1 checkpoint inhibitor (anti-PD1) and radiation therapy. Both patients were technically resectable with partial rhinectomy but both declined for cosmetic reasons. The melanoma multidisciplinary team recommended that the patients receive PD1 blockade. The initial response to PD-1 blockade was temporary in the first case and partial in the second one. With the addition of high-dose radiotherapy, complete responses were obtained in both patients, with recurrence-free and good functional and cosmetic outcomes at a six-year and 22-month follow-up. Despite surgery being the gold standard, both cases [...]
Implementing structured pathology reporting protocol for non-melanocytic skin cancers: practical considerations
Abstract Non-melanocytic skin cancers (NMSCs) account for five times the incidence of all other cancers combined and cost US $6 billion annually. These are the most frequent specimens encountered in community pathology practice in many Western countries. Lack of standardised structured pathology reporting protocols (SPRPs) can result in omission of critical information or miscommunication leading to suboptimal patient management. The lack of standardised data has significant downstream public health implications, including insufficient data for reliable development of prognostic tools and health-economy planning. The Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia has developed an NMSC SPRP. A multidisciplinary expert committee including [...]
Looking beyond workforce parity: addressing gender inequity in pathology
Abstract While women pathologists have made up over one-third of pathologists in the Australian workforce for over 15 years and at least 50% since 2019, they are under-represented in senior leadership roles, scientific publications, grant recipients, editorial boards, key presentations, and professional awards. This is not unique to pathology and is seen in the broader medical and academic community. Barriers to gender equity and equality in pathology, medicine and academia include gender stereotypes, gender-based discrimination, structural and organisational barriers as well as broader social and cultural barriers. A diverse leadership reflective of the whole professional body and the broader [...]
Looking beyond workforce parity: addressing gender inequity in pathology.
Abstract While women pathologists have made up over one-third of pathologists in the Australian workforce for over 15 years and at least 50% since 2019, they are under-represented in senior leadership roles, scientific publications, grant recipients, editorial boards, key presentations, and professional awards. This is not unique to pathology and is seen in the broader medical and academic community. Barriers to gender equity and equality in pathology, medicine and academia include gender stereotypes, gender-based discrimination, structural and organisational barriers as well as broader social and cultural barriers. A diverse leadership reflective of the whole professional body and the broader [...]
Towards modulating the gut microbiota to enhance the efficacy of immune-checkpoint inhibitors
Abstract The gut microbiota modulates immune processes both locally and systemically. This includes whether and how the immune system reacts to emerging tumours, whether antitumour immune responses are reactivated during treatment with immune-checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs), and whether unintended destructive immune pathologies accompany such treatment. Advances over the past decade have established that the gut microbiota is a promising target and that modulation of the microbiota might overcome resistance to ICIs and/or improve the safety of treatment. However, the specific mechanisms through which the microbiota modulates antitumour immunity remain unclear. Understanding the biology underpinning microbial associations with clinical outcomes in [...]
Cutaneous melanoma: a contemporary overview.
Abstract Cutaneous melanoma is a malignancy arising from melanocytes of the skin. Incidence rates are rising, particularly in White populations. Cutaneous melanoma is typically driven by exposure to ultraviolet radiation from natural sunlight and indoor tanning, although there are several subtypes that are not related to ultraviolet radiation exposure. Primary melanomas are often darkly pigmented, but can be amelanotic, with diagnosis based on a combination of clinical and histopathological findings. Primary melanoma is treated with wide excision, with margins determined by tumour thickness. Further treatment depends on the disease stage (following histopathological examination and, where appropriate, sentinel lymph node [...]