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235


Polymorphisms of p53 and its negative regulator MDM2 in human melanoma [Meeting Abstract]

Firoz, EF; Warycha, M; Shapiro, R; Berman, R; Kamino, H; Darvishian, F; Rolnitzky, L; Goldberg, J; Osman, I; Polsky, D
ISI:000254353801348
ISSN: 0022-202x
CID: 78655

Rate of re-excision with breast conserving therapy with and without additional margins in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ [Meeting Abstract]

Wen, YH; Roses, DF; Axelrod, DM; Guth, AA; Shapiro, RL; Berman, R; Singh, B
ISI:000252887900237
ISSN: 1068-9265
CID: 98149

A decade of change: an institutional experience with breast surgery in 1995 and 2005

Guth, Amber A; Shanker, Beth Ann; Roses, Daniel F; Axelrod, Deborah; Singh, Baljit; Toth, Hildegard; Shapiro, Richard L; Hiotis, Karen; Diflo, Thomas; Cangiarella, Joan F
INTRODUCTION: With the adoption of routine screening mammography, breast cancers are being diagnosed at earlier stages, with DCIS now accouting for 22.5% of all newly diagnosed breast cancers. This has been attributed to both increased breast cancer awareness and improvements in breast imaging techniques. How have these changes, including the increased use of image-guided sampling techniques, influenced the clinical practice of breast surgery? METHODS: The institutional pathology database was queried for all breast surgeries, including breast reconstruction, performed in 1995 and 2005. Cosmetic procedures were excluded. The results were analysed utilizing the Chi-square test. RESULTS: Surgical indications changed during 10-year study period, with an increase in preoperatively diagnosed cancers undergoing definitive surgical management. ADH, and to a lesser extent, ALH, became indications for surgical excision. Fewer surgical biopsies were performed for indeterminate abnormalities on breast imaging, due to the introduction of stereotactic large core biopsy. While the rate of benign breast biopsies remained constant, there was a higher percentage of precancerous and DCIS cases in 2005. The overall rate of mastectomy decreased from 36.8% in 1995 to 14.5% in 2005. With the increase in sentinel node procedures, the rate of ALND dropped from 18.3% to 13.7%. Accompanying the increased recognition of early-stage cancers, the rate of positive ALND also decreased, from 43.3% to 25.0%. CONCLUSIONS: While the rate of benign breast biopsies has remained constant over a recent 10-year period, fewer diagnostic surgical image-guided biopsies were performed in 2005. A greater percentage of patients with breast cancer or preinvasive disease have these diagnoses determined before surgery. More preinvasive and Stage 0 cancers are undergoing surgical management. Earlier stage invasive cancers are being detected, reflected by the lower incidence of axillary nodal metastases
PMCID:3091402
PMID: 21655372
ISSN: 1178-2234
CID: 149787

Prophylactic mastectomy - trends in pathology findings [Meeting Abstract]

Wen, YH; Roses, DF; Axelrod, DM; Guth, AA; Shapiro, RL; Cangiarella, J; Ziguridis, N; Darvishian, F; Singh, B
ISI:000251398500377
ISSN: 0167-6806
CID: 75803

Three-dimensional imaging provides valuable clinical data to aid in unilateral tissue expander-implant breast reconstruction [Meeting Abstract]

Tepper, OM; Karp, NS; Small, K; Unger, J; Pritchard, A; Roses, D; Shapiro, R; Guth, A; Axelrod, D; Choi, M
ISI:000251398500666
ISSN: 0167-6806
CID: 75806

Role of radiologic imaging at the time of initial diagnosis of stage T1b-T3b melanoma

Yancovitz, Molly; Finelt, Nika; Warycha, Melanie A; Christos, Paul J; Mazumdar, Madhu; Shapiro, Richard L; Pavlick, Anna C; Osman, Iman; Polsky, David; Berman, Russell S
BACKGROUND: In patients with T1b-T3b cutaneous melanoma the utility of radiologic imaging at the time of diagnosis is unclear. Whether initial imaging led to a change in stage or treatment plan was investigated. METHODS: The melanoma database was searched for patients with T1b-T3b primary lesions, clinically N0, and asymptomatic for metastatic disease. Radiologic studies conducted before wide local excision +/- sentinel lymph node biopsy as well as all further imaging and investigations were analyzed. Outcome measures included upstaging, change in initial surgical management, true-positive, false-positive, true-negative, and false-negative rates of each imaging modality. RESULTS: In all, 344 preoperative imaging studies (chest x-ray [CXR], computed tomography [CT], positron emission tomography [PET]/CT) were performed on 158 patients, resulting in 49 findings suspicious for metastatic melanoma and 134 findings suggestive of nonmelanoma pathology. Only 1 of 344 (0.3%) studies, a PET/CT, correlated with confirmed metastatic melanoma. The false-positive rates were CXR 5 of 7 (71.4%), chest CT 21 of 24 (87.5%), abdomen/pelvis CT 10 of 11 (90.9%), head CT 2 of 2 (100.0%), PET/CT 3 of 5 (60.0%). No patient was upstaged or had a change in initial surgical management based on preoperative imaging. The cost of all initial imaging and imaging to follow-up abnormal findings was estimated as $555,308 for the 158 patients studied. CONCLUSIONS: Imaging at the time of initial diagnosis of T1b-T3b, clinically N0, M0 melanoma was of low yield with a high false-positive rate, and did not lead to upstaging or change in initial surgical management. These findings suggest that imaging of asymptomatic patients at the time of diagnosis may not be warranted
PMID: 17620286
ISSN: 0008-543x
CID: 74405

Unusual occurrence of a melanoma with intermixed epithelial component: a true melanocarcinoma?: case report and review of epithelial differentiation in melanoma by light microscopy and immunohistochemistry [Case Report]

Wen, Y Hannah; Giashuddin, Shah; Shapiro, Richard L; Velazquez, Elsa; Melamed, Jonathan
We report a case of a 27-year-old woman with a nonpigmented lesion on the right scalp. Histological examination showed a malignant nodular neoplasm with 2 distinct but intimately admixed components: a malignant melanoma with a spindle component and an unusual glandular component. Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated epithelial differentiation on the basis of cytokeratin (CAM5.2 and AE1/AE3) expression in the glandular component and melanocytic differentiation (HMB-45, PNL2, MITF, and S-100) of the spindle cell component. A single melanocytic marker (MITF) was expressed in both components, raising the possibility of dual differentiation in a single tumor, rather than the alternative considerations of a collision tumor or a reactive pseudoepitheliomatous hyperplasia with eccrine duct lumen formation within a melanoma. This unusual tumor with both melanocytic and epithelial components may represent a true melanocarcinoma, which becomes a plausible consideration, in view of melanoma plasticity and recent experimental evidence and speculation about the role of stem cells in melanoma
PMID: 17667176
ISSN: 0193-1091
CID: 73902

Expression of the cancer/testis antigen NY-ESO-1 in primary and metastatic malignant melanoma (MM)--correlation with prognostic factors

Velazquez, Elsa F; Jungbluth, Achim A; Yancovitz, Molly; Gnjatic, Sacha; Adams, Sylvia; O'Neill, David; Zavilevich, Kira; Albukh, Tatyana; Christos, Paul; Mazumdar, Madhu; Pavlick, Anna; Polsky, David; Shapiro, Richard; Berman, Russell; Spira, Joanna; Busam, Klaus; Osman, Iman; Bhardwaj, Nina
Cancer/testis (CT) antigens are potential targets for cancer immunotherapy, with NY-ESO-1 being among the most immunogenic. In several clinical trials in malignant melanoma (MM) patients, NY-ESO-1 protein/peptides showed clear evidence of inducing specific immunity. However, little is known about NY-ESO-1 expression in primary and metastatic MM and its relationship to disease progression. We analyzed NY-ESO-1 expression immunohistochemically in a series of primary and metastatic MMs and its relation to prognostic parameters and survival. We studied 61 primary and 63 metastatic MM specimens (from 61 and 56 patients, respectively). The prevalence of NY-ESO-1 expression was significantly higher in metastatic versus primary tumors [18/56 (32%) versus 8/61 (13%), P = 0.015]. There was a significant association between initial stage at presentation and NY-ESO-1 expression [stage I (3.45%), stage II (9.52%) and stage III (45.45%), P = 0.0014]. Primary MMs expressing NY-ESO-1 were significantly thicker than NY-ESO-1 negative cases (median thickness 4.7 mm versus 1.53 mm respectively, P = 0.03). No significant difference was seen in overall survival. In conclusion, NY-ESO-1 is more frequently expressed in metastatic than in primary MM and its expression is associated with thicker primary lesions and a higher frequency of metastatic disease, indicative of a worse prognosis. Our study suggests that patients with metastatic MM who express NY-ESO-1 may benefit from NY-ESO-1-based immunotherapy
PMCID:2935749
PMID: 17625806
ISSN: 1424-9634
CID: 73347

Detection of mutant BRAF alleles in the plasma of patients with metastatic melanoma

Yancovitz, Molly; Yoon, Joanne; Mikhail, Maryann; Gai, Weiming; Shapiro, Richard L; Berman, Russell S; Pavlick, Anna C; Chapman, Paul B; Osman, Iman; Polsky, David
Mutations in the BRAF oncogene at amino acid 600 have been reported in 40 to 70% of human metastatic melanoma tissues, and the critical role of BRAF in the biology of melanoma has been established. Sampling the blood compartment to detect the mutational status of a solid tumor represents a highly innovative advance in cancer medicine, and such an approach could have advantages over tissue-based techniques. We report the development of a fluorescence-based polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to detect mutant BRAF alleles in plasma. A mutant-specific PCR assay was optimized to specifically amplify the mutant BRAF allele without amplifying the wild-type allele. Experiments mixing DNA from a BRAF mutant melanoma cell line with wild-type human placental DNA in varying proportions were performed to determine the threshold of this assay and to compare it with routine DNA sequencing. The assay was then applied to tissue and plasma specimens from patients with metastatic melanoma. The assay detected 0.1 ng of mutant DNA mixed in 100 ng of wild-type DNA and was 500-fold more sensitive than DNA sequencing. The assay detected mutant BRAF alleles in plasma samples from 14 of 26 (54%) metastatic melanoma patients. These data demonstrate the feasibility of blood-based testing for BRAF mutations in metastatic melanoma patients
PMCID:1867452
PMID: 17384209
ISSN: 1525-1578
CID: 71931

Accuracy of intraoperative sentinel lymph node evaluation for breast [Meeting Abstract]

Richards, V; Roses, DF; Axelrod, DM; Guth, AA; Shapiro, RL; Cangiarella, J; Ziguridis, N; Darvishian, F
ISI:000244922400196
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 93501