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Challenging the current paradigm of melanoma progression: brain metastasis as isolated first visceral site
Ma, Michelle W; Qian, Meng; Lackaye, Daniel J; Berman, Russell S; Shapiro, Richard L; Pavlick, Anna C; Golfinos, John G; Parker, Erik C; Darvishian, Farbod; Hernando, Eva; Shao, Yongzhao; Osman, Iman
Melanoma brain metastasis that develops as the isolated first visceral site challenges the current paradigm of tumor progression in which brain metastasis is regarded as the final stage. Here we test the hypothesis that melanoma patients who develop brain metastasis as the isolated first visceral site have distinct clinicopathological features at the time of primary melanoma diagnosis. Cutaneous melanoma patients enrolled in 2 prospectively collected databases were studied (Cohort 1: 1972-1982, Cohort 2: 2002-2009). Patients who developed brain metastasis as isolated first visceral site were compared with (1) all other patients, (2) patients who developed visceral metastasis: extracranial only or extracranial and brain, and (3) patients who progressed to other isolated visceral sites first. Two hundred seven of 2280 (9.1%) patients developed brain metastasis (median follow-up, 5.2 y). Seventy-four of 207 (35.7%) brain metastasis patients progressed to brain metastasis as the isolated first visceral site. These patients presented with primaries that were thinner and had no mitosis compared with all other visceral metastasis patients (Fisher's combined P = .02, .05, respectively), and there was a significant difference in American Joint Committee on Cancer stage distribution at initial melanoma diagnosis (combined P = .02). Post-visceral metastasis survival, however, was shorter in patients with brain metastasis as isolated first visceral site than in patients with visceral metastasis: extracranial and brain (combined P = .03). Brain metastasis as isolated first visceral site is a distinct clinicopathological entity. Studies are needed to better understand the biological factors driving this phenotype at the time of primary melanoma diagnosis and to determine its clinical implications.
PMCID:3379800
PMID: 22561799
ISSN: 1522-8517
CID: 169477
Immune response in melanoma: an in-depth analysis of the primary tumor and corresponding sentinel lymph node
Ma, Michelle W; Medicherla, Ratna C; Qian, Meng; Vega-Saenz de Miera, Eleazar; Friedman, Erica B; Berman, Russell S; Shapiro, Richard L; Pavlick, Anna C; Ott, Patrick A; Bhardwaj, Nina; Shao, Yongzhao; Osman, Iman; Darvishian, Farbod
The sentinel lymph node is the initial site of metastasis. Downregulation of antitumor immunity has a role in nodal progression. Our objective was to investigate the relationship between immune modulation and sentinel lymph node positivity, correlating it with outcome in melanoma patients. Lymph node/primary tissues from melanoma patients prospectively accrued and followed at New York University Medical Center were evaluated for the presence of regulatory T cells (Foxp3(+)) and dendritic cells (conventional: CD11c(+), mature: CD86(+)) using immunohistochemistry. Primary melanoma immune cell profiles from sentinel lymph node-positive/-negative patients were compared. Logistic regression models inclusive of standard-of-care/immunological primary tumor characteristics were constructed to predict the risk of sentinel lymph node positivity. Immunological responses in the positive sentinel lymph node were also compared with those in the negative non-sentinel node from the same nodal basin and matched negative sentinel lymph node. Decreased immune response was defined as increased regulatory T cells or decreased dendritic cells. Associations between the expression of these immune modulators, clinicopathological variables, and clinical outcome were evaluated using univariate/multivariate analyses. Primary tumor conventional dendritic cells and regression were protective against sentinel lymph node metastasis (odds ratio=0.714, 0.067; P=0.0099, 0.0816, respectively). Antitumor immunity was downregulated in the positive sentinel lymph node with an increase in regulatory T cells compared with the negative non-sentinel node from the same nodal basin (P=0.0005) and matched negative sentinel lymph node (P=0.0002). The positive sentinel lymph node also had decreased numbers of conventional dendritic cells compared with the negative sentinel lymph node (P<0.0001). Adding sentinel lymph node regulatory T cell expression improved the discriminative power of a recurrence risk assessment model using clinical stage. Primary tumor regression was associated with prolonged disease-free (P=0.025) and melanoma-specific (P=0.014) survival. Our results support an assessment of local immune profiles in both the primary tumor and sentinel lymph node to help guide therapeutic decisions.
PMCID:3882943
PMID: 22425909
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 171118
TILs in metastatic melanoma tumors: A biomarker for immunotherapy? [Meeting Abstract]
Chandra, S; Ding, Y; Ma, M W; Bannan, M; Darvishian, F; Berman, R S; Shapiro, R; Krogsgaard, M; Osman, I; Pavlick, A C
Background: Increased tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) in primary (P) and locoregional melanoma tissue correlate with improved clinical outcome. Our recent data have suggested that matrix metalloproteinase 23 (MMP 23) expression (exp) in P result in lower prevalence of TILs and correlate with poor clinical outcome. On this basis, we examined P and metastatic (M) melanoma tissues to assess for concordance between the presence of TILs, MMP 23 protein levels and clinical response(resp) to anti-cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen 4 (CTLA4) therapy (tx). Methods: 21 melanoma patients (pts) with M specimens were analyzed. 17 matched P specimens were also evaluated. Immunohistochemical (IHC) staining for TILs of the pre-anti-CTLA4 specimens were conducted and confirmed by 2 pathologists. IHC TILs were graded- 2+: >10% TILs present in multiple foci in both peri- and through the tumor; 1+: 1-10% TILs present in one or more foci in the tumor and predominantly peri-tumor; 0: no TILs were present or if the lymphocytes did not infiltrate the tumor. TILs in P and M were analyzed for concordance and potential for predictability of resp to anti-CTLA4 tx. Staining to identify lymphocyte subtypes and MMP 23 exp in M is being completed. Results: 20 pts received anti-CTLA4 tx. M analysis- 6 pts with 0 TILs in M (5 no response [NR], 1 partial response[PR]); 8 pts with 1-2+ TILs in M (1 complete response [CR], 5 PR, 2 progressive disease [PD]); 6 pts with 2+ TILs in M ( 3 CR, 2 PR, 1PD). 1 pt with 2+ TILs in M resected, no tx and 4 years disease free. TILs present in 13 P, absent in 4 P and not evaluable in 4 pts with unknown P melanoma. MMP 23 protein scores in P (range 2-4) correlated with melanoma recurrence. MMP 23 exp in M will be reported. Conclusions: TILs in P do not appear to correlate with TILs in M or predict for resp to anti-CTLA4 tx. TILs in M may be an indicator of responsiveness to anti-CTLA4 tx. Identification of the type of M TIL subsets may further refine tx recommendations
EMBASE:71004939
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 249972
MicroRNA alterations associated with BRAF status in melanoma [Meeting Abstract]
Ma, M W; Farhadian, J A; Friedman, E B; De, Miera E V -S; Hanniford, D; Segura, M F; Berman, R S; Shapiro, R L; Pavlick, A C; Zavadil, J; Hernando, E; Osman, I
Background: We hypothesize that BRAF mutations result in microRNA (miRNA) alterations which contribute to orchestrating the mutant BRAF's oncogenic effects in melanoma. Our study is the first to examine the association between the BRAF mutation status in primary melanomas and the expression of miRNAs that target known tumor suppressors. Methods: 84 prospectively accrued melanoma patients at New York University Langone Medical Center were studied. DNA and total RNA were extracted from consecutive sections of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded primary tissues. BRAF mutation status was determined by DNA sequencing. RNA was hybridized to miRCURY miRNA microarrays containing 1314 probes. Normalized miRNA data were analyzed using the t-test (p<0.05) to identify differentially expressed miRNAs between BRAFmut vs. BRAFwt cases. Those with an average fold change (FC) > 2 were selected for predicted (TargetScan, PicTar) and validated (miRWalk) gene target analysis, and overlapping genes targeted by 2 miRNAs were analyzed using pathway-mapping algorithms (KEGG, BioCarta, PANTHER). Results: 48 (57%) primaries were BRAFwt and 36 (43%) were BRAFmut (26 V600E, 4 V600K, 1 V600R, 1 V600D, 4 other). 30 miRNAs met the criteria for statistically significant differential expression and FC thresholding: let-7i, miR-23c, -26a/b, -27b, -34a, -98, -126*, -141, -148a, -181b, -195, -199a-3p, -199a/b-5p, -200a/b/c, -203, -205, -455-3p, -491-3p, -606, -641, -646, -1297, -4301; miRPlus-C1070, -C1110, -G1246-3p (average FC: 2.3-3.5, all increased in BRAFmut vs. BRAFwt). Predicted and validated target gene analysis revealed 317 genes, of which 110 (35%) were convergent targets of 2 miRNAs. Pathway analyses of the predicted, validated, and convergent target genes pointed to the potential impact of BRAFmut-associated miRNAs on known tumor suppressors FAS, PTEN, and TNF and the p53 pathway. Conclusions: Differentially expressed miRNAs in BRAFmut vs. BRAFwt primaries target genes with known roles in melanoma biology and/or treatmen!
EMBASE:71004915
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 250002
The melanoma risk loci as determinants of melanoma prognosis [Meeting Abstract]
Rendleman, J; Shang, S; Brocia, C; Ma, M W; Shapiro, R L; Berman, R S; Pavlick, A C; Shao, Y; Osman, I; Kirchhoff, T
Background: Genetic risk factors of human cancer emerge as promising markers of clinical outcome. The recent melanoma genome-wide scans (GWAS) have identified loci associated with the disease risk, nevi or UV/pigmentation, but the prognostic potential of these variants is yet to be determined. In this study, we performed the first-to-date systematic evaluation of the association between established melanoma risk loci and melanoma progression. Methods: 891 melanoma patients prospectively accrued and followed up at NYU Medical Center were studied. We examined the association of 108 melanoma susceptibility single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), selected or imputed from recent GWASs on melanoma, nevi or pigmentation, with recurrence-free survival (RFS) and overall survival (OS). The genotyping was performed using Sequenom I-plex. Cox PH model was used to test the association between each SNP and RFS and OS adjusted by age at diagnosis, gender, tumor stage and histological subtype. ROC curves were used to measure predictive utility of SNPs in predicting 3-year recurrence. Results: The strong association was observed for rs7538876 (RCC2) with RFS (HR=2.445, 95% CI 1.57 - 3.8, p=0.0006) and rs9960018 (DLGAP1) with both RFS and OS (HR=4.7, 95% CI=2.11-10.43, p=0.0061, HR=1.55, 95% CI=1.11-2.17, p=0.0094, respectively) using adjusted multivariate analysis. In addition, we identified the classifier with rs7538876 and rs9960018, stage and histological type at primary tumor diagnosis, achieving a higher area under the ROC curve (AUC=84%) compared to the baseline (AUC=78%) in predicting 3-year recurrence. Univariate survival analyses have identified associations of several SNPs with ulceration and/or tumor thickness. Conclusions: Our data revealed an association between specific melanoma susceptibility variants and worse clinicopathological variables at the time of diagnosis as well as worse disease outcome. The strength of associations observed for rs7538876 and rs9960018 suggest biological implication of!
EMBASE:71004907
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 306092
Early alterations of microRNA expression to predict and modulate melanoma metastasis. [Meeting Abstract]
Hernando, Eva; Hanniford, Douglas; Shang, Shulian; Segura, Miguel F; Pavlick, Anna C; Berman, Russell S; Shapiro, Richard L; Darvishian, Farbod; Osman, Iman; Shao, Yongzhao
ISI:000318009802154
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 1595512
Prognostic value of mitosis-specific antibodies and computer image analysis in calculating mitotic rate in melanoma. [Meeting Abstract]
Hale, Christopher; Qian, Meng; Ma, Michelle W; Shao, Yongzhao; Polsky, David; Shapiro, Richard L; Berman, Russell S; Pavlick, Anna C; Osman, Iman; Darvishian, Farbod
ISI:000318009803430
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 1595542
Effect of intra-operative fluid volume on peri-operative outcomes after pancreaticoduodenectomy for pancreatic adenocarcinoma
Melis M; Marcon F; Masi A; Sarpel U; Miller G; Moore H; Cohen S; Berman R; Pachter HL; Newman E
BACKGROUND: Excess use of intravenous fluid can increase post-operative complications. We examined the influence of intra-operative crystalloid (IOC) administration on complications following pancreaticodudenectomy (PD) for pancreatic adenocarcinoma. METHODS: We categorized 188 patients who underwent PD for adenocarcinoma (1990-2009) into two groups: Group I received <6,000 ml and Group II received >/=6,000 ml IOC. Differences between groups in length of stay, overall morbidity, and 30-day mortality were evaluated. RESULTS: There were 86 patients in Group I and 102 in Group II. Group I patients were older and with higher percentage of women, but similar in regards to performance status, ASA score, underlying comorbidities, and administration of neo-adjuvant treatment. Group II patients had longer operations, increased blood loss, and higher rates of intra-operative blood transfusions. There were two post-operative deaths, both in the Group II (P = 0.5). Post-operative overall morbidity was 45.7%, without differences between the two groups (44.2% vs. 47.1%, P = 0.7). Likewise, length of post-operative stay was similar in both groups (13.8 days vs. 14.5 days, P = 0.5). CONCLUSIONS: The volume of IOC increased with duration of surgery, intra-operative blood losses, and intra-operative blood transfusion, but did not correlate with post-operative morbidity. J. Surg. Oncol (c) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc
PMID: 21792977
ISSN: 1096-9098
CID: 136611
The professionalism curriculum as a cultural change agent in surgical residency education
Hochberg MS; Berman RS; Kalet AL; Zabar SR; Gillespie C; Pachter HL
BACKGROUND: Teaching professionalism effectively to fully engaged residents is a significant challenge. A key question is whether the integration of professionalism into residency education leads to a change in resident culture. METHODS: The goal of this study was to assess whether professionalism has taken root in the surgical resident culture 3 years after implementing our professionalism curriculum. Evidence was derived from 3 studies: (1) annual self-assessments of the residents' perceived professionalism abilities to perform 20 defined tasks representing core Accrediting Council on Graduate Medical Education professionalism domains, (2) objective metrics of their demonstrated professionalism skills as rated by standardized patients annually using the objective structure clinical examination tool, and (3) a national survey of the Surgical Professionalism and Interpersonal Communications Education Study Group. RESULTS: Study 1: aggregate perceived professionalism among surgical residents shows a statistically significant positive trend over time (P = .016). Improvements were seen in all 6 domains: accountability, ethics, altruism, excellence, patient sensitivity, and respect. Study 2: the cohort of residents followed up over 3 years showed a marked improvement in their professionalism skills as rated by standardized patients using the objective structure clinical examination tool. Study 3: 41 members of the national Surgical Professionalism and Interpersonal Communications Education Study Group rated their residents' skills in admitting mistakes, delivering bad news, communication, interdisciplinary respect, cultural competence, and handling stress. Twenty-nine of the 41 responses rated their residents as 'slightly better' or 'much better' compared with 5 years ago (P = .001). Thirty-four of the 41 programs characterized their department's leadership view toward professionalism as 'much better' compared with 5 years ago. CONCLUSIONS: All 3 assessment methods suggest that residents feel increasingly prepared to effectively deal with the professionalism challenges they face. Although professionalism seminars may have seemed like an oddity several years ago, residents today recognize their importance and value their professionalism skills. As importantly, department chairpersons report that formal professionalism education for residents is viewed more favorably compared with 5 years ago
PMID: 21983000
ISSN: 1879-1883
CID: 141463
Intra- and Inter-Tumor Heterogeneity of BRAFMutations in Primary and Metastatic Melanoma
Yancovitz, Molly; Litterman, Adam; Yoon, Joanne; Ng, Elise; Shapiro, Richard L; Berman, Russell S; Pavlick, Anna C; Darvishian, Farbod; Christos, Paul; Mazumdar, Madhu; Osman, Iman; Polsky, David
The rationale for using small molecule inhibitors of oncogenic proteins as cancer therapies depends, at least in part, on the assumption that metastatic tumors are primarily clonal with respect to mutant oncogene. With the emergence of BRAF(V600E) as a therapeutic target, we investigated intra- and inter-tumor heterogeneity in melanoma using detection of the BRAF(V600E) mutation as a marker of clonality. BRAF mutant-specific PCR (MS-PCR) and conventional sequencing were performed on 112 tumors from 73 patients, including patients with matched primary and metastatic specimens (n = 18). Nineteen patients had tissues available from multiple metastatic sites. Mutations were detected in 36/112 (32%) melanomas using conventional sequencing, and 85/112 (76%) using MS-PCR. The better sensitivity of the MS-PCR to detect the mutant BRAF(V600E) allele was not due to the presence of contaminating normal tissue, suggesting that the tumor was comprised of subclones of differing BRAF genotypes. To determine if tumor subclones were present in individual primary melanomas, we performed laser microdissection and mutation detection via sequencing and BRAF(V600E)-specific SNaPshot analysis in 9 cases. Six of these cases demonstrated differing proportions of BRAF(V600E)and BRAF(wild-type) cells in distinct microdissected regions within individual tumors. Additional analyses of multiple metastatic samples from individual patients using the highly sensitive MS-PCR without microdissection revealed that 5/19 (26%) patients had metastases that were discordant for the BRAF(V600E) mutation. In conclusion, we used highly sensitive BRAF mutation detection methods and observed substantial evidence for heterogeneity of the BRAF(V600E) mutation within individual melanoma tumor specimens, and among multiple specimens from individual patients. Given the varied clinical responses of patients to BRAF inhibitor therapy, these data suggest that additional studies to determine possible associations between clinical outcomes and intra- and inter-tumor heterogeneity could prove fruitful
PMCID:3250426
PMID: 22235286
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 149812