Spillane, Andrew

Global Applicability of a Risk Prediction Tool for Sentinel Node Positivity in Patients With Primary Cutaneous Melanoma.

Abstract Importance: The Melanoma Institute Australia (MIA) sentinel node (SN) metastasis risk calculator provides estimates of positivity for individual patients based on 6 standard clinicopathological parameters and the full 6-parameter model has been externally validated previously using US data. However, given its geographically widespread use, further validation is required to ensure its applicability to other populations. Objective: To further externally validate the MIA SN metastasis risk calculator and increase its precision by refinement of the 95% CIs. Design, setting, and participants: A retrospective multicenter cohort study was carried out using data from 4 continents, including the national Danish Melanoma Database and cancer [...]

April 9th, 2025|Comments Off on Global Applicability of a Risk Prediction Tool for Sentinel Node Positivity in Patients With Primary Cutaneous Melanoma.

FDG-PET associations with pathological response and survival with neoadjuvant immunotherapy for melanoma.

Abstract Background: Neoadjuvant immunotherapy has become the new standard of care for stage III melanoma. This study sought to describe the metabolic changes seen with fludeoxyglucose-18-positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) following neoadjuvant immunotherapy in patients with melanoma and explore associations with pathological response and recurrence-free survival (RFS). Methods: Data from patients with macroscopic stage III nodal melanoma treated with neoadjuvant checkpoint inhibitor therapy were pooled from five melanoma centers. All patients underwent baseline and preoperative FDG-PET and CT assessments, and all had surgery. Pathological response was determined using the International Neoadjuvant Melanoma Consortium criteria, radiological response using Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid [...]

March 3rd, 2025|Tags: , , |Comments Off on FDG-PET associations with pathological response and survival with neoadjuvant immunotherapy for melanoma.

Economic Evaluation of Inguinal Versus Ilio-inguinal Lymphadenectomy for Patients with Stage III Metastatic Melanoma to Groin Lymph Nodes: Evidence from the EAGLE FM Randomized Trial.

Abstract Purpose: We compared health outcomes and costs of inguinal lymphadenectomy (IL) versus ilio-inguinal lymphadenectomy (I-IL) for removal of metastatic melanoma to lymph nodes of the groin in adults with stage III melanoma. Methods: A within-trial cost-utility analysis was performed alongside an international randomized trial (EAGLE-FM) with 36 months follow-up from a health system perspective. Healthcare costs were measured by using trial records, and effectiveness measured in quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Deterministic sensitivity analyses assessed the impact of changes in costs or quality of life on overall results. Statistical bootstrapping was employed to estimate confidence intervals around the cost-utility ratio. Results: Among [...]

February 27th, 2025|Tags: , , , , , |Comments Off on Economic Evaluation of Inguinal Versus Ilio-inguinal Lymphadenectomy for Patients with Stage III Metastatic Melanoma to Groin Lymph Nodes: Evidence from the EAGLE FM Randomized Trial.

Clinical significance of intra-thoracic and intra-abdominal sentinel lymph nodes detected on lymphoscintigraphy in truncal melanoma patients.

Abstract Background: Although most melanomas drain to the more common major lymph node basins (axilla, groin, neck), rarely they drain to deep SLN locations such as intra-abdominal and intra-thoracic (including intercostal and internal mammary) sites, which pose a higher surgical risk and complexity for procurement. Our study is aimed at determining the rate of positivity and likelihood of recurrence in these nodal sites to guide management decisions for patients with truncal melanomas which drain to these 'deep' SLN locations. Methods: Retrospective data collected between May 2008 and May 2022 including all patients with truncal melanomas who underwent lymphoscintigraphy resulting in the [...]

December 9th, 2024|Comments Off on Clinical significance of intra-thoracic and intra-abdominal sentinel lymph nodes detected on lymphoscintigraphy in truncal melanoma patients.

Patient and Staff Experiences of Embedding Electronic Patient Reported Outcome Measures for Distress Screening and Quality of Life Assessment, Into Routine Melanoma Care: A Mixed-Methods Study

Abstract Objective: Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are commonly collected in melanoma research. However, they are not used to guide immediate clinical care in Australia. This study explored the views and experiences of patients with Stage III melanoma and clinic staff during implementation of an electronic Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in melanoma (ePROMs-MEL) pilot to assess distress and quality of life. Methods: A prospective mixed-methods study in specialist melanoma clinics in Sydney, Australia between May 2021 and February 2023. Forty-two post-ePROMs implementation surveys and 17 semi-structured interviews were undertaken among patients and staff (including oncologists, melanoma nurses and clinic managers). Survey responses [...]

December 1st, 2024|Comments Off on Patient and Staff Experiences of Embedding Electronic Patient Reported Outcome Measures for Distress Screening and Quality of Life Assessment, Into Routine Melanoma Care: A Mixed-Methods Study

Patient and Staff Experiences of Embedding Electronic Patient Reported Outcome Measures for Distress Screening and Quality of Life Assessment, Into Routine Melanoma Care: A Mixed-Methods Study.

Abstract Objective: Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are commonly collected in melanoma research. However, they are not used to guide immediate clinical care in Australia. This study explored the views and experiences of patients with Stage III melanoma and clinic staff during implementation of an electronic Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in melanoma (ePROMs-MEL) pilot to assess distress and quality of life. Methods: A prospective mixed-methods study in specialist melanoma clinics in Sydney, Australia between May 2021 and February 2023. Forty-two post-ePROMs implementation surveys and 17 semi-structured interviews were undertaken among patients and staff (including oncologists, melanoma nurses and clinic managers). Survey responses [...]

December 1st, 2024|Tags: , , , , , , , , |Comments Off on Patient and Staff Experiences of Embedding Electronic Patient Reported Outcome Measures for Distress Screening and Quality of Life Assessment, Into Routine Melanoma Care: A Mixed-Methods Study.

Impact of an online risk prediction tool for sentinel node metastasis on clinical decision-making in melanoma care: A mixed methods study.

Abstract Background The decision to perform a sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) procedure can be guided by risk prediction tools. We aimed to investigate the impact of an online risk prediction tool for sentinel node metastasis on clinical decision-making. Methods We conducted a mixed methods study using an online questionnaire and semi-structured interviews between April 2022 and March 2023. Australian clinicians and patients/carers who were using the Melanoma Institute Australia risk prediction tool were invited to participate. Results Sixty-one participants completed the questionnaire (52 clinicians including 36 general practitioners of whom 32 worked at skin cancer clinics; 14 surgeons; [...]

December 1st, 2024|Tags: , , , , |Comments Off on Impact of an online risk prediction tool for sentinel node metastasis on clinical decision-making in melanoma care: A mixed methods study.

Impact of personalized response-directed surgery and adjuvant therapy on survival after neoadjuvant immunotherapy in stage III melanoma: Comparison of 3-year data from PRADO and OpACIN-neo.

Abstract Background: Pathologic response following neoadjuvant immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in stage III melanoma serves as a surrogate marker for long-term outcomes. This may support more personalized, response-directed treatment strategies. Methods: The OpACIN-neo and PRADO trials were phase 2 studies evaluating neoadjuvant treatment with ipilimumab and nivolumab in stage III melanoma. In OpACIN-neo, all patients underwent therapeutic lymph node dissection (TLND) without subsequent adjuvant therapy. In contrast, PRADO explored a response- directed strategy, where patients achieving a major pathologic response (MPR) omitted TLND and adjuvant therapy, while those without a pathologic response (pNR) received TLND and adjuvant therapy. Here, we provide [...]

November 19th, 2024|Tags: , , , , , |Comments Off on Impact of personalized response-directed surgery and adjuvant therapy on survival after neoadjuvant immunotherapy in stage III melanoma: Comparison of 3-year data from PRADO and OpACIN-neo.

1090P High concurrent interferon gamma signature expression in the primary tumor and lymph node metastasis is associated with superior outcome upon neoadjuvant ipilimumab + nivolumab in stage III melanoma

Background The interferon gamma gene signature (IFNg) has been shown to be predictive and prognostic in patients (pts) with macroscopic stage III or IV melanoma. In macroscopic stage III melanoma, IFNg from lymph node biopsies (LN-IFNg) might be used in the future for neoadjuvant treatment decisions (combination vs monotherapy). To address the question of whether the IFNg can be analyzed using primary tumor material (P-IFNg) instead of LN-IFNg or, in the case of incongruencies, has a higher predictive value when combined with LN-IFNg, we analyzed the IFNg signature in paired samples (P and LN) from stage III melanoma pts. [...]

September 27th, 2024|Comments Off on 1090P High concurrent interferon gamma signature expression in the primary tumor and lymph node metastasis is associated with superior outcome upon neoadjuvant ipilimumab + nivolumab in stage III melanoma
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