SENTINEL LYMPH node (SLN) biopsy has become

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "SENTINEL LYMPH node (SLN) biopsy has become"

Transcription

1 COMMENTARY Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy for Melanoma: Controversy Despite Widespread Agreement By Kelly M. McMasters, Douglas S. Reintgen, Merrick I. Ross, Jeffrey E. Gershenwald, Michael J. Edwards, Arthur Sober, Neil Fenske, Frank Glass, Charles M. Balch, and Daniel G. Coit Abstract: Although sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy for melanoma has been adopted throughout the United States and abroad as a standard method of determining the pathologic status of the regional lymph nodes, some controversy still exists regarding the validity and utility of this procedure. SLN biopsy is a minimally invasive procedure, performed on an outpatient basis at the time of wide local excision of the melanoma, with little morbidity. Numerous studies have documented the accuracy of this procedure for identifying nodal metastases. There are four major reasons to perform SLN biopsy. First, SLN biopsy improves the accuracy of staging and provides valuable SENTINEL LYMPH node (SLN) biopsy has become widely accepted as a minimally invasive method of staging the regional lymph nodes for melanoma. Recently, it has been suggested that this procedure is highly controversial 1,2 ; however, this is a controversy about which there is widespread agreement. SLN biopsy has been adopted as the standard method of nodal staging for melanoma at nearly every major medical center in the United States. Furthermore, the World Health Organization has issued a statement indicating that SLN biopsy should be considered standard of care for patients with melanoma. 3 We believe that there are four major reasons to perform SLN biopsy. All of them involve the critically important issue of accurate staging. First, SLN biopsy improves the accuracy of staging and provides valuable prognostic information for patients and physicians to guide subsequent treatment decisions. Second, SLN biopsy facilitates early therapeutic lymph node dissection for those patients with nodal metastases. Third, SLN biopsy identifies patients who are candidates for adjuvant therapy with interferon alfa-2b. Fourth, SLN biopsy identifies homogeneous patient populations for entry onto clinical trials of novel adjuvant therapy agents. PROGNOSTIC INFORMATION FOR PATIENTS AND PHYSICIANS Morton et al 4 first demonstrated the feasibility and accuracy of SLN biopsy for nodal staging of patients with melanoma. The low false-negative rate of SLN biopsy for melanoma has been confirmed in additional studies from other institutions, not only by comparing SLN biopsy prognostic information for patients and physicians to guide subsequent treatment decisions. Second, SLN biopsy facilitates early therapeutic lymph node dissection for those patients with nodal metastases. Third, SLN biopsy identifies patients who are candidates for adjuvant therapy with interferon alfa-2b. Fourth, SLN biopsy identifies homogeneous patient populations for entry onto clinical trials of novel adjuvant therapy agents. Overall, the benefit of accurate nodal staging obtained by SLN biopsy far outweighs the risks and has important implications for patient management. J Clin Oncol 19: by American Society of Clinical Oncology. results to completion lymphadenectomy specimens, but also by long-term follow-up to determine recurrence in undissected nodal basins after a negative SLN biopsy SLN status is the most important predictor of survival of patients with melanoma. In fact, in the report by Gershenwald et al, 14 the hazard ratio for survival associated with a positive SLN was 6.53, much greater than that for any other prognostic factor (Table 1). No combination of prognostic factors of the primary tumor can provide this prognostic information. This nodal staging information serves two purposes. First, it identifies a population of patients with a relatively favorable prognosis for which adjuvant therapy may not be necessary. Second, it identifies a high-risk population of patients who may benefit from additional From the Department of Surgery, University of Louisville, James Graham Brown Cancer Center; Center for Advanced Surgical Technologies at Norton Healthcare; and the Alliant Community Trust Fund, Louisville, KY; University of South Florida, Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, FL; The American Society of Clinical Oncology, Alexandria, VA; The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD; The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX; Harvard University, Boston, MA; and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Center, New York, NY. Submitted November 15, 2000; accepted March 5, Address reprint requests to Kelly M. McMasters, MD, PhD, University of Louisville-James Graham Brown Cancer Center, 529 S Jackson St, Louisville, KY 40202; kelly.mcmasters@ nortonhealthcare.org by American Society of Clinical Oncology X/01/ Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol 19, No 11 (June 1), 2001: pp

2 2852 Table 1. Prognostic Factors Relative to Disease-Specific Survival* Disease-Specific Survival Prognostic Factor Hazard Ratio 95% CI P Age Sex Tumor thickness Clark level III Axial location Ulceration SLN status *Table adapted with permission from Gershenwald et al. 14 therapy. This information is immediately worthwhile in guiding patients to make appropriate choices regarding additional treatment and has important implications for patient follow-up. It has been suggested that, unless SLN biopsy can be shown to improve overall survival for patients with melanoma, it is not valuable. 1,2 An ongoing study, the Multicenter Selective Lymphadenectomy Trial (MSLT) by Morton et al, 15 will address the impact of SLN on survival. While we await the results of this study, we believe that even if SLN biopsy in and of itself does not improve survival, it has inherent value and should be continued until or unless another less invasive staging test with similar predictive value is developed. SLN biopsy is a diagnostic staging test. We do not impose the burden of therapeutic efficacy on other diagnostic staging tests in oncology, including computed tomography scan, magnetic resonance imaging, positron emission tomography scan, or for that matter, axillary lymph node dissection for breast cancer. SLN biopsy is minimally invasive, is performed at the same time as the wide local excision of the primary melanoma, and has been shown to be cost effective and less morbid compared with elective lymph node dissection. 16,17 That is not to say that this test should be over-utilized. SLN biopsy is appropriate for patients with a significant risk of nodal metastasis, including those with melanomas 1.0 mm Breslow thickness or greater SLN biopsy for melanomas less than 1.0 mm Breslow thickness with poor prognostic features (eg, ulceration and Clark s level IV) may be appropriate and requires further investigation. IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS WHO MAY BENEFIT FROM EARLY THERAPEUTIC LYMPH NODE DISSECTION Before the advent of SLN biopsy, the pathologic nodal status of patients with melanoma was known only after elective lymph node dissection. However, four prospective randomized trials have failed to demonstrate an overall survival benefit for patients who undergo elective lymph node dissection This has led to the common misconception that lymphadenectomy offers no therapeutic benefit for patients with melanoma. However, the important distinction between elective and therapeutic lymph node dissection is often overlooked or obscured. Lymph node dissection is curative for some patients with nodal metastases. A substantial and reproducible fraction of stage III melanoma patients is cured by lymphadenectomy, and this was true long before any adjuvant therapy was available. Furthermore, in patients with positive nodes, tumor burden as measured by the number of positive nodes has been consistently the best predictor of outcome. Therefore, it makes intuitive sense that early removal of lymph nodes should be better than waiting until the patient develops multiple positive nodes with bulky, palpable disease. Why, then, has there been no survival benefit in the trials of elective lymph node dissection? The answer has to do with the fact that with elective lymph node dissection, the majority of patients do not have cancer in the lymph nodes. As an example, consider the Intergroup Melanoma Trial of elective lymph node dissection. In that study, patients with intermediate thickness melanoma were randomized to observation versus elective lymph node dissection. 21,22 The hypothesis was that early lymph node dissection while the patients had subclinical nodal metastasis would improve survival compared with waiting until the patients developed palpable nodal metastases. Overall, 20% of the patients in the observation arm developed positive lymph nodes. Therefore, 80% of the patients had no potential or real therapeutic benefit from early lymph node dissection. Let s consider that elective lymph node dissection imparts a survival advantage similar to other forms of adjuvant therapy, approximately 25% to 50% reduction in the relative risk of death. This is similar to the magnitude of benefit of adjuvant therapy in breast cancer, colon cancer, and so on. Because elective lymph node dissection could only potentially benefit the patients who have cancer in the lymph nodes, at best one quarter to one half of the 20% of patients with positive nodes, or 5% to 10% of patients overall, could be expected to be cured as a result of elective lymph node dissection. Any survival benefit in favor of elective lymph node dissection in randomized trials is diluted by the majority of patients with negative nodes. None of the prospective trials had adequate statistical power to detect this small benefit of elective lymph node dissection in the overall patient population studied. In fact, the 10-year follow-up results that have recently been published for the Intergroup Melanoma Trial demonstrate a 4% overall survival advantage in favor of elective lymph node dissection, although this did not reach statistical significance. 21,22 However, certain prospectively stratified

3 2853 Table 2. Subgroup Analysis of the Intergroup Melanoma Surgical Trial* Subgroup 10-Year Survival (%) P Reduction in Risk of Death (%) Absolute Difference Relative Difference Nonulcerated melanoma Nodal observation 77 ELND Breslow thickness 1.0 to 2.0 mm Nodal observation 80 ELND Extremity melanoma Nodal observation 78 ELND All patients Nodal observation 73 ELND Abbreviation: ELND, elective lymph node dissection. *Table adapted with permission from Balch et al. 21 subgroups of patients, most notably those with nonulcerated melanomas, did benefit from elective lymph node dissection. The magnitude of the benefit in these subgroups of patients was equivalent to that which we would expect based on the above calculations (Table 2). Although retrospective subgroup analysis of clinical trials is always subject to criticism, it is important to point out that patients in this study were prospectively stratified by tumor thickness, anatomic site, and ulceration, and these analyses were planned during the design of the trial. Another crucial piece of evidence regarding the value of early lymph node dissection versus delayed dissection for palpable disease is derived from the World Health Organization Programme 14 Trial of elective lymph node dissection for patients with truncal melanomas. 20 Overall, there was no difference in survival for the two randomized arms (nodal observation v elective lymph node dissection). However, when the survival of the patients with positive lymph nodes, either detected histologically at elective lymph node dissection or by palpation in the observation arm is evaluated, quite a different picture emerges. The overall survival of patients with nodal micrometastases removed at elective lymph node dissection was significantly greater than that of patients who underwent lymphadenectomy for palpable lymph nodes in the observation arm (48% v 27% 5-year survival, respectively, P.04). 20 This difference is significant both statistically and, more important, clinically, despite the relatively small numbers of patients in each subgroup. Therefore, if occult micrometastatic disease can be accurately identified, the data from the Intergroup Melanoma Trial and the World Health Organization Programme 14 trial suggest that early therapeutic lymph node dissection may improve survival. Certainly there is no evidence that patients who undergo delayed lymph node dissection at the time of palpable recurrence have a better prognosis than those who undergo lymphadenectomy when they have microscopic nodal metastases. Therefore, the available evidence suggests that early therapeutic lymph node dissection for microscopic nodal disease may be superior to delayed lymph node dissection once the patients develop palpable nodal disease. 23,24 The problem with elective lymph node dissection is that the procedure is applied indiscriminately to all patients who have clinically negative lymph nodes. Therefore, the majority of patients (without nodal metastases) are subjected to the morbidity of lymphadenectomy without any therapeutic benefit. The ideal situation would be to identify the patients with positive lymph nodes for therapeutic lymph node dissection and spare the rest the need for complete lymph node dissection. This is the advantage of SLN biopsy. When SLN biopsy is performed for patients with melanomas 1.0 mm Breslow thickness, 20% or more will be found to have positive SLNs when careful pathologic analysis is performed Therefore, at least 20% of patients are identified as candidates for additional therapy, which includes therapeutic lymph node dissection. Importantly, patients harboring occult metastatic disease are offered an early therapeutic lymph node dissection, not an elective lymph node dissection. The 80% of patients who have negative SLN are spared the need for lymph node dissection and have undergone a procedure that amounts to little more than a lymph node biopsy performed on an outpatient basis at the time of the wide local excision of the melanoma. IDENTIFICATION OF PATIENTS WHO ARE CANDIDATES FOR ADJUVANT INTERFERON ALFA-2B THERAPY Interferon alfa-2b therapy has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for adjuvant therapy of high-risk melanoma patients. The vast majority of these high-risk melanoma patients are those with positive lymph nodes. This indication for interferon alfa-2b is based on the the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Trial E1684, which demonstrated a disease-free and overall survival benefit for treatment with interferon. 25 However, a follow-up study, E1690, confirmed a disease-free survival benefit, but did not demonstrate an overall survival benefit for patients treated with high-dose interferon alfa-2b. 26 This has generated some controversy regarding the overall benefit of interferon alfa-2b therapy for adjuvant treatment of high-risk melanoma. Part of the explanation for a lack of an overall

4 2854 survival benefit in the E1690 study for high-dose interferon is related to the fact that the observation group had substantially better overall survival than the patients in the observation group in the E1684 study. However, in the E1690 study there was somewhat of a cross-over effect; patients in the observation group in the E1690 study were more likely to receive interferon alfa-2b and other salvage therapies than patients in the interferon-treated group (J. Kirkwood, unpublished data). How can the results of E1684 and E1690 be reconciled? Both studies concluded that high-dose interferon imparts a significant disease-free survival advantage; however, an overall survival advantage was demonstrated only in E1684. Therefore, it is clear that high-dose interferon alfa-2b has activity against melanoma. The advantages in terms of disease-free survival are not disputed. The impact on overall survival remains to be clearly defined. To add further support for adjuvant high-dose interferon alfa-2b therapy, the results of the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group study E1694 have been presented recently (J. Kirkwood, unpublished data). In this study, 774 high-risk melanoma patients were randomized to receive adjuvant high-dose interferon alfa-2b versus a GM2 ganglioside vaccine. The study was stopped early by the data-monitoring committee based on a planned interim analysis that showed superiority of interferon alfa-2b in terms of both disease-free and overall survival. This study adds important new evidence confirming a beneficial impact of high-dose interferon alfa-2b in melanoma. The goal that lies ahead is to identify the patient populations that benefit most from this therapy. IDENTIFICATION OF HOMOGENEOUS PATIENT POPULATIONS FOR CLINICAL TRIALS OF ADJUVANT THERAPY A significant concern regarding the E1684 and E1690 studies is that very heterogeneous patient populations were studied. The vast majority of patients had palpable nodal disease either synchronous with the primary tumor or recurrent at some time after the primary tumor had been previously excised. Very few patients (12% in E1684% and 11% in E1690) had microscopically positive lymph nodes. These studies were performed before the wide-spread acceptance of SLN biopsy for nodal staging. Whereas, in E1684, pathologic nodal staging by elective lymph node dissection was required, only a few patients in the E1690 study who were staged as T4N0 actually underwent nodal staging with SLN biopsy. As SLN biopsy has become a standard practice in most major medical centers throughout the country, few patients with bulky palpable nodal disease are seen any longer, suggesting that the spectrum of stage III melanoma has changed. The vast majority of stage III patients are now represented by those patients who have microscopically positive nodes detected at SLN biopsy, most frequently a single positive sentinel node. Therefore, the patients with stage III disease currently identified by SLN biopsy represent a significantly different population than that studied in E1684 and E1690. The heterogeneity of the patients entered onto these two studies certainly confounds the interpretation of the results. Therefore, one of the major goals of SLN biopsy is to identify homogeneously staged patient populations for entry onto clinical trials. Only by entry of patients with similar prognoses will meaningful interpretation of adjuvant therapy results be possible. As a result of a major effort on the part of the American Joint Committee on Cancer Melanoma Task Force, major changes in the staging system for melanoma have been proposed. 27,28 These new changes incorporate several important independent prognostic factors that were not taken into account in these two trials. For instance, the number of positive lymph nodes was not a stratification criterion in E1684, although it is now known to be an important prognostic factor. 27,28 Furthermore, it is now known that tumor ulceration is such an important independent prognostic factor that it may be used to upstage patients in each T category of the new American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system. 27,28 Not only is ulceration an important prognostic factor for patients with node-negative melanoma, but it retains its prognostic significance for patients with positive lymph nodes. Therefore, a relatively minor imbalance in ulceration between treatment arms could result in significant differences in survival. Ulceration was not a stratification factor in either E1684 or E1690. This underscores the importance of stratifying patients in clinical trials not only by Breslow thickness, but also by the number of positive lymph nodes and the presence of ulceration. In conclusion, SLN biopsy is a diagnostic staging test to determine the pathologic status of the regional lymph nodes and accurately identifies the presence of nodal metastasis. The presence of a positive SLN is the single most important prognostic factor in determining the likelihood of survival. As such, patients should be offered the option of SLN biopsy, when appropriate, to determine the status of the regional lymph nodes. This provides the opportunity for early therapeutic lymph node dissection, for which there is evidence of benefit in node-positive patients. Furthermore, those patients identified with positive SLNs are then eligible for adjuvant therapy with interferon alfa-2b, which is still the only Food and Drug Administration approved adjuvant therapy for melanoma and is consid-

5 2855 ered by many to be the standard of care and the reference treatment against which all other adjuvant therapies should be compared. The value of SLN biopsy for identifying homogeneous patient populations for entry into clinical trials of novel adjuvant agents cannot be underestimated. Only by identifying populations of patients with similar prognosis will we be likely to develop more effective adjuvant therapies. 1. Otley CC, Zitelli JA: Review of sentinel lymph node biopsy and systemic interferon for melanoma: Promising but investigational modalities. Dermatol Surg : Thomas JM, Patocskai EJ: The argument against sentinel node biopsy for malignant melanoma: Its use should be confined to patients in clinical trials. BMJ 321:3-4, WHO declares lymphatic mapping to be the standard of care for melanoma. Oncology 13:288, Morton DL, Wen DR, Wong JH, et al: Technical details of intraoperative lymphatic mapping for early stage melanoma. Arch Surg 127: , Morton DL, Wen DR, Foshag LJ, et al: Intraoperative lymphatic mapping and selective cervical lymphadenectomy for early-stage melanoma of the head and neck. J Clin Oncol 11: , Ross MI, Reintgen D, Balch CM: Selective lymphadenectomy: Emerging role for lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy in the management of early stage melanoma. Semin Surg Oncol 9: , Reintgen D, Cruse CW, Wells K, et al: The orderly progression of melanoma nodal metastases. Ann Surg 220: , Miliotes G, Albertini J, Berman C, et al: The tumor biology of melanoma nodal metastases. Am Surg 62:81-88, Gershenwald JE, Colome MI, Lee JE, et al: Patterns of recurrence following a negative sentinel lymph node biopsy in 243 patients with stage I or II melanoma. J Clin Oncol 16: , Albertini, JJ, Cruse CW, Rapaport D, et al: Intraoperative radiolymphoscintigraphy improves sentinel lymph node identification for patients with melanoma. Ann Surg 223: , Essner R, Bostick PJ, Glass EC, et al: Standardized probedirected sentinel node dissection in melanoma. Surgery 127: Gershenwald JE, Tseng CH, Thompson W, et al: Improved sentinel lymph node localization in patients with primary melanoma with the use of radiolabeled colloid. Surgery 124: , Essner R, Conforti A, Kelley MC, et al: Efficacy of lymphatic mapping, sentinel lymphadenectomy, and selective complete lymph node dissection as a therapeutic procedure for early-stage melanoma. Ann Surg Oncol 6: , Gershenwald JE, Thompson W, Mansfield PF, et al: Multiinstitutional melanoma lymphatic mapping experience: The prognostic value of sentinel lymph node status in 612 stage I or II melanoma patients. J Clin Oncol 17: , Morton DL, Thompson JF, Essner R, et al: Validation of the accuracy of intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymphadenectomy for early-stage melanoma: A multicenter trial Multicenter REFERENCES Selective Lymphadenectomy Trial Group. Ann Surg 230: , Brobeil A, Cruse CW, Messina JL, et al: Cost analysis of sentinel lymph node biopsy as an alternative to elective lymph node dissection in patients with malignant melanoma. Surg Oncol Clin N Am 8: , Wrightson WR, Reintgen DS, Edwards MJ, et al: Morbidity of sentinel lymph node biopsy for melanoma. Abstract presented at the Society of Surgical Oncology, March 15-18, 2001, Washington, DC 18. Veronesi U, Adamus J, Bandiera DC, et al: Delayed regional lymph node dissection in stage I melanoma of the skin of the lower extremities. Cancer 49: , Sim FH, Taylor WF, Ivins JC, et al: A prospective randomized study of the efficacy of routine elective lymphadenectomy in management of malignant melanoma. Cancer 41: , Cascinelli N, Morabito A, Santinami M, et al: Immediate or delayed dissection of regional nodes in patients with melanoma of the trunk: A randomized trial WHO Melanoma Programme. Lancet 351: , Balch CM, Soong S-J, Bartolucci AA, et al: Efficacy of an elective regional lymph node dissection of 1 to 4 mm thick melanomas for patients 60 years of age and younger. Ann Surg 224: , Balch CM, Soong S, Ross MI, et al: Long-term results of a multi-institutional randomized trial comparing prognostic factors and surgical results for intermediate thickness melanomas (1.0 to 4.0 mm): Intergroup Melanoma Surgical Trial. Ann Surg Oncol : Reintgen DS: Emerging evidence for a survival benefit associated with regional lymph node dissection for melanoma. Ann Surg Oncol 7:75-76, Reintgen DS: Regional nodal surgery for melanoma impacts recurrence rates and survival. Ann Surg Oncol 7:80-81, Kirkwood JM, Strawderman MH, Ernstoff MS, et al: Interferon alfa-2b adjuvant therapy of high-risk resected cutaneous melanoma: the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Trial EST J Clin Oncol 14:7-17, Kirkwood JM, Ibrahim J, Sondak V, et al: High- and low-dose interferon alpha-2b in high-risk melanoma: First analysis of intergroup trial E1690/S9111/C9190. J Clin Oncol 18: , Buzaid AC, Ross MI, Balch CM, et al: Critical analysis of the current American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system for cutaneous melanoma and proposal of a new staging system. J Clin Oncol 15: , Balch CM, Buzaid AC, Atkins MB, et al: A new American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system for cutaneous melanoma. Cancer 88: , 2000

Observation After a Positive Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Patients with Melanoma

Observation After a Positive Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Patients with Melanoma Ann Surg Oncol (2014) 21:3117 3123 DOI 10.1245/s10434-014-3758-7 ORIGINAL ARTICLE MELANOMAS Observation After a Positive Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy in Patients with Melanoma Zubin M. Bamboat, MD 1, Ioannis

More information

Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping for Endometrial Cancer. Locke Uppendahl, MD Grand Rounds

Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping for Endometrial Cancer. Locke Uppendahl, MD Grand Rounds Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping for Endometrial Cancer Locke Uppendahl, MD Grand Rounds Endometrial Cancer Most common gynecologic malignancy in US estimated 52,630 new cases in 2014 estimated 8,590 deaths

More information

ADJUVANT RADIATION FOR MALIGNANT MELANOMA

ADJUVANT RADIATION FOR MALIGNANT MELANOMA ADJUVANT RADIATION FOR MALIGNANT MELANOMA Effective Date: February 2014 The recommendations contained in this guideline are a consensus of the Alberta Cutaneous Tumour Team and are a synthesis of currently

More information

Breast cancer close to the nipple: Does this carry a higher risk ofaxillary node metastasesupon diagnosis?

Breast cancer close to the nipple: Does this carry a higher risk ofaxillary node metastasesupon diagnosis? Breast cancer close to the nipple: Does this carry a higher risk ofaxillary node metastasesupon diagnosis? Erin I. Lewis, BUSM 2010 Cheri Nguyen, BUSM 2008 Priscilla Slanetz, M.D., MPH Al Ozonoff, Ph.d.

More information

The lymphatic system consists of a network of vessels

The lymphatic system consists of a network of vessels IMAGING Whole-Body Lymphoscintigraphy Using Transmission Scans Martha Vallejo Mar, BBA, CNMT; Sonia Gee-Johnson, BS, CNMT; E. Edmund Kim, MD; and Donald A. Podoloff, MD Department of Nuclear Medicine,

More information

PAPER. Surgical Management of the Groin Lymph Nodes in Melanoma in the Era of Sentinel Lymph Node Dissection

PAPER. Surgical Management of the Groin Lymph Nodes in Melanoma in the Era of Sentinel Lymph Node Dissection PAPER Surgical Management of the Groin Lymph Nodes in Melanoma in the Era of Sentinel Lymph Node Dissection Richard Essner, MD; Randall Scheri, MD; Maihgan Kavanagh, MD; Hitoe Torisu-Itakura, MD, PhD;

More information

Management of Postmenopausal Women with T1 ER+ Tumors: Options and Tradeoffs. Case Study. Surgery. Lumpectomy and Radiation

Management of Postmenopausal Women with T1 ER+ Tumors: Options and Tradeoffs. Case Study. Surgery. Lumpectomy and Radiation Management of Postmenopausal Women with T1 ER+ Tumors: Options and Tradeoffs Michael Alvarado, MD Associate Professor of Surgery University of California San Francisco Case Study 59 yo woman with new palpable

More information

Pathologic Assessment Of The Breast And Axilla After Preoperative Therapy

Pathologic Assessment Of The Breast And Axilla After Preoperative Therapy Pathologic Assessment Of The Breast And Axilla After Preoperative Therapy W. Fraser Symmans, M.D. Associate Professor of Pathology UT M.D. Anderson Cancer Center Pathologic Complete Response (pcr) Proof

More information

How To Compare The Effects Of A Hysterectomy And A Hysterectomy

How To Compare The Effects Of A Hysterectomy And A Hysterectomy A RANDOMIZED TRIAL COMPARING RADICAL HYSTERECTOMY AND PELVIC NODE DISSECTION VS SIMPLE HYSTERECTOMY AND PELVIC NODE DISSECTION IN PATIENTS WITH LOW RISK EARLY STAGE CERVICAL CANCER A Gynecologic Cancer

More information

RESEARCH EDUCATE ADVOCATE. Just Diagnosed with Melanoma Now What?

RESEARCH EDUCATE ADVOCATE. Just Diagnosed with Melanoma Now What? RESEARCH EDUCATE ADVOCATE Just Diagnosed with Melanoma Now What? INTRODUCTION If you are reading this, you have undergone a biopsy (either of a skin lesion or a lymph node) or have had other tests in which

More information

The Revised Melanoma Staging System and the Impact of Mitotic Rate

The Revised Melanoma Staging System and the Impact of Mitotic Rate THE ME L A N O M A LET TER A PUBLICATION OF THE SKIN CANCER FOUNDATION PERRY ROBINS, MD, President www.skincancer.org FALL 2010, Vol. 28, No. 3 MARY STINE, Executive Director The Revised Melanoma Staging

More information

Current Status and Perspectives of Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer

Current Status and Perspectives of Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer Breast Cancer Current Status and Perspectives of Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer JMAJ 45(10): 434 439, 2002 Masahiro HIRAOKA, Masaki KOKUBO, Chikako YAMAMOTO and Michihide MITSUMORI Department of Therapeutic

More information

Rotation Specific Goals & Objectives: University Health Network-Princess Margaret Hospital/ Sunnybrook Breast/Melanoma

Rotation Specific Goals & Objectives: University Health Network-Princess Margaret Hospital/ Sunnybrook Breast/Melanoma Rotation Specific Goals & Objectives: University Health Network-Princess Margaret Hospital/ Sunnybrook Breast/Melanoma Medical Expert: Breast Rotation Specific Competencies/Objectives 1.0 Medical History

More information

GUIDELINES ADJUVANT SYSTEMIC BREAST CANCER

GUIDELINES ADJUVANT SYSTEMIC BREAST CANCER GUIDELINES ADJUVANT SYSTEMIC BREAST CANCER Author: Dr Susan O Reilly On behalf of the Breast CNG Written: December 2008 Agreed at CNG: June 2009 & June 2010 Review due: June 2011 Guidelines Adjuvant Systemic

More information

Does Resection of an Intact Breast Primary Improve Survival in Metastatic Breast Cancer?

Does Resection of an Intact Breast Primary Improve Survival in Metastatic Breast Cancer? rvival in Metastatic Breast Cancer? Review Article [1] July 01, 2007 By Seema A. Khan, MD [2] The recommended primary treatment approach for women with metastatic breast cancer and an intact primary tumor

More information

7. Prostate cancer in PSA relapse

7. Prostate cancer in PSA relapse 7. Prostate cancer in PSA relapse A patient with prostate cancer in PSA relapse is one who, having received a primary treatment with intent to cure, has a raised PSA (prostate-specific antigen) level defined

More information

Integrating Chemotherapy and Liver Surgery for the Management of Colorectal Metastases

Integrating Chemotherapy and Liver Surgery for the Management of Colorectal Metastases I Congresso de Oncologia D Or July 5-6, 2013 Integrating Chemotherapy and Liver Surgery for the Management of Colorectal Metastases Michael A. Choti, MD, MBA, FACS Department of Surgery Johns Hopkins University

More information

Cancer of the Cardia/GE Junction: Surgical Options

Cancer of the Cardia/GE Junction: Surgical Options Cancer of the Cardia/GE Junction: Surgical Options Michael A Smith, MD Associate Chief Thoracic Surgery Center for Thoracic Disease St Joseph s Hospital and Medical Center Phoenix, AZ Michael Smith, MD

More information

Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Breast Cancer Kyle T. Bradley, MD, MS CAP Cancer Committee

Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Breast Cancer Kyle T. Bradley, MD, MS CAP Cancer Committee Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Breast Cancer Kyle T. Bradley, MD, MS CAP Cancer Committee Breast cancer is the most common malignant tumor in American women and is second only to lung cancer as a

More information

Management of Peritoneal Metastases (PM) from colorectal cancers: New Perspectives. Dominique ELIAS

Management of Peritoneal Metastases (PM) from colorectal cancers: New Perspectives. Dominique ELIAS Management of Peritoneal Metastases (PM) from colorectal cancers: New Perspectives Dominique ELIAS Declaration of interest BOARDS Congress and teaching 0 Merck 0 Ipsen Novartis Sanofi Trials The peritoneum

More information

Effects of Herceptin on circulating tumor cells in HER2 positive early breast cancer

Effects of Herceptin on circulating tumor cells in HER2 positive early breast cancer Effects of Herceptin on circulating tumor cells in HER2 positive early breast cancer J.-L. Zhang, Q. Yao, J.-H. Chen,Y. Wang, H. Wang, Q. Fan, R. Ling, J. Yi and L. Wang Xijing Hospital Vascular Endocrine

More information

Individual Prediction

Individual Prediction Individual Prediction Michael W. Kattan, Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve University Chairman, Department

More information

The common feature of all melanomas is the cell of origin, the

The common feature of all melanomas is the cell of origin, the 1664 COMMUNICATION The American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer and the American Cancer Society The National Cancer Data Base Report on Cutaneous and Noncutaneous Melanoma A Summary of 84,836

More information

Protein kinase C alpha expression and resistance to neo-adjuvant gemcitabine-containing chemotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer

Protein kinase C alpha expression and resistance to neo-adjuvant gemcitabine-containing chemotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer Protein kinase C alpha expression and resistance to neo-adjuvant gemcitabine-containing chemotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer Dan Vogl Lay Abstract Early stage non-small cell lung cancer can be cured

More information

Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Oncology. Mustafa Benekli, M.D.

Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Oncology. Mustafa Benekli, M.D. Prognostic and Predictive Factors in Oncology Mustafa Benekli, M.D. NCI Definitions ESMO Course -Essentials of Medical Oncology -Istanbul 2 Prognostic factor: NCI Definition A situation or condition, or

More information

Objectives. Mylene T. Truong, MD. Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma Background

Objectives. Mylene T. Truong, MD. Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma Background Imaging of Pleural Tumors Mylene T. Truong, MD Imaging of Pleural Tumours Mylene T. Truong, M. D. University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX Objectives To review tumors involving the

More information

Management of low grade glioma s: update on recent trials

Management of low grade glioma s: update on recent trials Management of low grade glioma s: update on recent trials M.J. van den Bent The Brain Tumor Center at Erasmus MC Cancer Center Rotterdam, the Netherlands Low grades Female, born 1976 1 st seizure 2005,

More information

In Practice Whole Body MR for Visualizing Metastatic Prostate Cancer

In Practice Whole Body MR for Visualizing Metastatic Prostate Cancer In Practice Whole Body MR for Visualizing Metastatic Prostate Cancer Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men worldwide, accounting for 15% of all new cancer cases. 1 Great strides have

More information

Post-PET Restaging Cancer Form National Oncologic PET Registry

Post-PET Restaging Cancer Form National Oncologic PET Registry Post-PET Restaging Cancer Form National Oncologic PET Registry Facility ID #: Registry Case Number: Patient Name: Your patient had a PET scan on: mm/dd/yyyy. The PET scan was done for restaging of (cancer

More information

SUNY DOWNSTATE MEDICAL CENTER SURGERY GRAND ROUNDS February 28, 2013 VERENA LIU, MD ROSEANNA LEE, MD

SUNY DOWNSTATE MEDICAL CENTER SURGERY GRAND ROUNDS February 28, 2013 VERENA LIU, MD ROSEANNA LEE, MD SUNY DOWNSTATE MEDICAL CENTER SURGERY GRAND ROUNDS February 28, 2013 VERENA LIU, MD ROSEANNA LEE, MD Case Presentation 35 year old male referred from PMD with an asymptomatic palpable right neck mass PMH/PSH:

More information

How to treat early gastric cancer. Surgery

How to treat early gastric cancer. Surgery How to treat early gastric cancer Surgery Mark I. van Berge Henegouwen Department of Surgery, AMC, Amsterdam Director upper GI surgical unit Academic Medical Center Upper GI surgery at AMC 100 oesophagectomies

More information

TOXIC EFFECTS OF CHEMOTHERAPY, IMMUNOTHERAPY AND CHEMOIMMUNOTHERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH CUTANEOUS MELANOMA

TOXIC EFFECTS OF CHEMOTHERAPY, IMMUNOTHERAPY AND CHEMOIMMUNOTHERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH CUTANEOUS MELANOMA 2014 TOXIC EFFECTS OF CHEMOTHERAPY, IMMUNOTHERAPY AND CHEMOIMMUNOTHERAPY IN PATIENTS WITH CUTANEOUS MELANOMA * Oradea University, Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy, 10 Decembrie 1 St St., Oradea, Romania,

More information

Sonneveld, P; de Ridder, M; van der Lelie, H; et al. J Clin Oncology, 13 (10) : 2530-2539 Oct 1995

Sonneveld, P; de Ridder, M; van der Lelie, H; et al. J Clin Oncology, 13 (10) : 2530-2539 Oct 1995 Comparison of Doxorubicin and Mitoxantrone in the Treatment of Elderly Patients with Advanced Diffuse Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma Using CHOP Versus CNOP Chemotherapy. Sonneveld, P; de Ridder, M; van der Lelie,

More information

Surgical guidelines for the management of breast cancer

Surgical guidelines for the management of breast cancer Available online at www.sciencedirect.com EJSO xx (2009) S1eS22 www.ejso.com Guidelines Surgical guidelines for the management of breast cancer Contents Association of Breast Surgery at BASO 2009 Introduction...

More information

Update on thyroid cancer surveillance and management of recurrent disease. Minimally invasive thyroid surgery

Update on thyroid cancer surveillance and management of recurrent disease. Minimally invasive thyroid surgery Update on thyroid cancer surveillance and management of recurrent disease Minimally invasive thyroid surgery July 2006 Michael W. Yeh, MD Program Director, Endocrine Surgery Assistant Professor, David

More information

Travel Distance to Healthcare Centers is Associated with Advanced Colon Cancer at Presentation

Travel Distance to Healthcare Centers is Associated with Advanced Colon Cancer at Presentation Travel Distance to Healthcare Centers is Associated with Advanced Colon Cancer at Presentation Yan Xing, MD, PhD, Ryaz B. Chagpar, MD, MS, Y Nancy You MD, MHSc, Yi Ju Chiang, MSPH, Barry W. Feig, MD, George

More information

Superficial and deep lymph node dissection for stage III cutaneous melanoma: clinical outcome and prognostic factors

Superficial and deep lymph node dissection for stage III cutaneous melanoma: clinical outcome and prognostic factors Mozzillo et al. World Journal of Surgical Oncology 2013, 11:36 WORLD JOURNAL OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY RESEARCH Open Access Superficial and deep lymph node dissection for stage III cutaneous melanoma: clinical

More information

Targeted Therapy What the Surgeon Needs to Know

Targeted Therapy What the Surgeon Needs to Know Targeted Therapy What the Surgeon Needs to Know AATS Focus in Thoracic Surgery 2014 David R. Jones, M.D. Professor & Chief, Thoracic Surgery Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center I have no disclosures

More information

Measure #257 (NQF 1519): Statin Therapy at Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass (LEB) National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care

Measure #257 (NQF 1519): Statin Therapy at Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass (LEB) National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care Measure #257 (NQF 1519): Statin Therapy at Discharge after Lower Extremity Bypass (LEB) National Quality Strategy Domain: Effective Clinical Care 2016 PQRS OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUAL MEASURES: REGISTRY ONLY

More information

Lung Cancer Treatment Guidelines

Lung Cancer Treatment Guidelines Updated June 2014 Derived and updated by consensus of members of the Providence Thoracic Oncology Program with the aid of evidence-based National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) national guidelines,

More information

Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [Preauthorization Required]

Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [Preauthorization Required] Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [Preauthorization Required] Medical Policy: MP-SU-01-11 Original Effective Date: February 24, 2011 Reviewed: Revised: This policy applies

More information

Basics and limitations of adjuvant online an internet based decision tool

Basics and limitations of adjuvant online an internet based decision tool Basics and limitations of adjuvant online an internet based decision tool J. Huober SAKK, Bern 31.10.2013 Univ.-Frauenklinik Ulm Integratives Tumorzentrum des Universitätsklinikums und der Medizinischen

More information

OBJECTIVES By the end of this segment, the community participant will be able to:

OBJECTIVES By the end of this segment, the community participant will be able to: Cancer 101: Cancer Diagnosis and Staging Linda U. Krebs, RN, PhD, AOCN, FAAN OCEAN Native Navigators and the Cancer Continuum (NNACC) (NCMHD R24MD002811) Cancer 101: Diagnosis & Staging (Watanabe-Galloway

More information

Melanoma. Edward Buckingham, M.D. Combined Plastics & Otolaryngology Conference The University of Texas Medical Branch September 6, 2000

Melanoma. Edward Buckingham, M.D. Combined Plastics & Otolaryngology Conference The University of Texas Medical Branch September 6, 2000 Melanoma Edward Buckingham, M.D. Combined Plastics & Otolaryngology Conference The University of Texas Medical Branch September 6, 2000 Melanoma - Outline General statistics and development Risk factors

More information

J Clin Oncol 23:6149-6156. 2005 by American Society of Clinical Oncology INTRODUCTION

J Clin Oncol 23:6149-6156. 2005 by American Society of Clinical Oncology INTRODUCTION VOLUME 23 NUMBER 25 SEPTEMBER 1 2005 JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY O R I G I N A L R E P O R T Outcome Analysis for Patients With Elevated Serum Tumor Markers at Postchemotherapy Retroperitoneal Lymph Node

More information

Detection and staging of recurrent prostate cancer is still one of the important clinical problems in prostate cancer. A rise in PSA or biochemical

Detection and staging of recurrent prostate cancer is still one of the important clinical problems in prostate cancer. A rise in PSA or biochemical Summary. 111 Detection and staging of recurrent prostate cancer is still one of the important clinical problems in prostate cancer. A rise in PSA or biochemical recurrence (BCR) is the first sign of recurrent

More information

Local control in ductal carcinoma in situ treated by excision alone: incremental benefit of larger margins

Local control in ductal carcinoma in situ treated by excision alone: incremental benefit of larger margins The American Journal of Surgery 190 (2005) 521 525 George Peter s Award Winner Local control in ductal carcinoma in situ treated by excision alone: incremental benefit of larger margins Heather R. MacDonald,

More information

PET/CT in Lung Cancer

PET/CT in Lung Cancer PET/CT in Lung Cancer Rodolfo Núñez Miller, M.D. Nuclear Medicine and Diagnostic Imaging Section Division of Human Health International Atomic Energy Agency Vienna, Austria GLOBOCAN 2012 #1 #3 FDG-PET/CT

More information

A new score predicting the survival of patients with spinal cord compression from myeloma

A new score predicting the survival of patients with spinal cord compression from myeloma A new score predicting the survival of patients with spinal cord compression from myeloma (1) Sarah Douglas, Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Lubeck, Germany; sarah_douglas@gmx.de (2) Steven

More information

Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [Pre-authorization Required]

Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [Pre-authorization Required] Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [Pre-authorization Required] Medical Policy: MP-SU-01-11 Original Effective Date: February 24, 2011 Reviewed: February 24, 2012 Revised:

More information

Concurrent Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy for Head and Neck Cancer

Concurrent Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy for Head and Neck Cancer Concurrent Chemotherapy and Radiotherapy for Head and Neck Cancer Ryan J. Burri; Nancy Y. Lee Published: 03/23/2009 Abstract and Introduction Abstract Head and neck cancer is best managed in a multidisciplinary

More information

Ductal Carcinoma In Situ Treated With Breast-Conserving Surgery and Radiotherapy: A Comparison With ECOG Study 5194

Ductal Carcinoma In Situ Treated With Breast-Conserving Surgery and Radiotherapy: A Comparison With ECOG Study 5194 Ductal Carcinoma In Situ Treated With Breast-Conserving Surgery and Radiotherapy: A Comparison With ECOG Study 5194 Sabin B. Motwani, MD 1 ; Sharad Goyal, MD 1 ; Meena S. Moran, MD 2 ; Arpit Chhabra, BS

More information

Thyroid Cancer: Resection, Dissection, Surveillance and Recurrence. Cord Sturgeon, MD

Thyroid Cancer: Resection, Dissection, Surveillance and Recurrence. Cord Sturgeon, MD Thyroid Cancer: Resection, Dissection, Surveillance and Recurrence Cord Sturgeon, MD Associate Professor of Surgery Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine Director of Endocrine Surgery Chicago,

More information

Recommendations for cross-sectional imaging in cancer management, Second edition

Recommendations for cross-sectional imaging in cancer management, Second edition www.rcr.ac.uk Recommendations for cross-sectional imaging in cancer management, Second edition Breast cancer Faculty of Clinical Radiology www.rcr.ac.uk Contents Breast cancer 2 Clinical background 2 Who

More information

L Lang-Lazdunski, A Bille, S Marshall, R Lal, D Landau, J Spicer

L Lang-Lazdunski, A Bille, S Marshall, R Lal, D Landau, J Spicer Pleurectomy/decortication, hyperthermic pleural lavage with povidone-iodine and systemic chemotherapy in malignant pleural mesothelioma. A 10-year experience. L Lang-Lazdunski, A Bille, S Marshall, R Lal,

More information

ALCHEMIST (Adjuvant Lung Cancer Enrichment Marker Identification and Sequencing Trials)

ALCHEMIST (Adjuvant Lung Cancer Enrichment Marker Identification and Sequencing Trials) ALCHEMIST (Adjuvant Lung Cancer Enrichment Marker Identification and Sequencing Trials) 3 Integrated Trials Testing Targeted Therapy in Early Stage Lung Cancer Part of NCI s Precision Medicine Effort in

More information

A new score predicting the survival of patients with spinal cord compression from myeloma

A new score predicting the survival of patients with spinal cord compression from myeloma A new score predicting the survival of patients with spinal cord compression from myeloma (1) Sarah Douglas, Department of Radiation Oncology, University of Lubeck, Germany; sarah_douglas@gmx.de (2) Steven

More information

Significance of Sentinel Lymph Node Micrometastases in Human Breast Cancer

Significance of Sentinel Lymph Node Micrometastases in Human Breast Cancer Significance of Sentinel Lymph Node Micrometastases in Human Breast Cancer Charles E Cox, MD, FACS, John V Kiluk, MD, Adam I Riker, MD, FACS,JohnMCox,MD, Nathon Allred, BA, Daniel C Ramos, BS, Elisabeth

More information

Breast Cancer Screening in Low- and Middle-Income Countries A Framework To Choose Screening Strategies

Breast Cancer Screening in Low- and Middle-Income Countries A Framework To Choose Screening Strategies Breast Cancer Screening in Low- and Middle-Income Countries A Framework To Choose Screening Strategies Richard Wender, MD Session code: www.worldcancercongress.org A Five Step Framework to Guide Screening

More information

Surgical Management of Papillary Microcarcinoma 趙 子 傑 長 庚 紀 念 醫 院 林 口 總 院 一 般 外 科

Surgical Management of Papillary Microcarcinoma 趙 子 傑 長 庚 紀 念 醫 院 林 口 總 院 一 般 外 科 Surgical Management of Papillary Microcarcinoma 趙 子 傑 長 庚 紀 念 醫 院 林 口 總 院 一 般 外 科 Papillary microcarcinoma of thyroid Definition latent aberrant thyroid occult thyroid carcinoma latent papillary carcinoma)

More information

Breast Cancer Recurrence Assay (MammaPrint )

Breast Cancer Recurrence Assay (MammaPrint ) Harmony Behavioral Health, Inc. Harmony Behavioral Health of Florida, Inc. Harmony Health Plan of Illinois, Inc. HealthEase of Florida, Inc. Ohana Health Plan, a plan offered by WellCare Health Insurance

More information

Adiuwantowe i neoadiuwantowe leczenie chorych na zaawansowanego raka żołądka

Adiuwantowe i neoadiuwantowe leczenie chorych na zaawansowanego raka żołądka Adiuwantowe i neoadiuwantowe leczenie chorych na zaawansowanego raka żołądka Neoadiuvant and adiuvant therapy for advanced gastric cancer Franco Roviello, IT Neoadjuvant and adjuvant therapy for advanced

More information

version 1.0, approved June 15, 2002 I. Purpose Background Information and Definitions

version 1.0, approved June 15, 2002 I. Purpose Background Information and Definitions Society of Nuclear Medicine Procedure Guideline for Lymphoscintigraphy and the Use of Intraoperative Gamma Probe for Sentinel Lymph Node Localization in Melanoma of Intermediate Thickness version 1.0,

More information

The Need for Accurate Lung Cancer Staging

The Need for Accurate Lung Cancer Staging The Need for Accurate Lung Cancer Staging Peter Baik, DO Thoracic Surgery Cancer Treatment Centers of America Oklahoma Osteopathic Association 115th Annual Convention Financial Disclosures: None 2 Objectives

More information

CLINICAL TRIALS SHOULD YOU PARTICIPATE? by Gwen L. Nichols, MD

CLINICAL TRIALS SHOULD YOU PARTICIPATE? by Gwen L. Nichols, MD CLINICAL TRIALS SHOULD YOU PARTICIPATE? by Gwen L. Nichols, MD Gwen L. Nichols, M.D., is currently the Oncology Site Head of the Roche Translational Clinical Research Center at Hoffman- LaRoche. In this

More information

Carcinoma of the Cervix. Kathleen M. Schmeler, MD Associate Professor Department of Gynecologic Oncology

Carcinoma of the Cervix. Kathleen M. Schmeler, MD Associate Professor Department of Gynecologic Oncology Carcinoma of the Cervix Kathleen M. Schmeler, MD Associate Professor Department of Gynecologic Oncology Cervical Cancer Treatment Treatment Microinvasive (Stage IA1): Simple (extrafascial) hysterectomy/cone

More information

Komorbide brystkræftpatienter kan de tåle behandling? Et registerstudie baseret på Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group

Komorbide brystkræftpatienter kan de tåle behandling? Et registerstudie baseret på Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group Komorbide brystkræftpatienter kan de tåle behandling? Et registerstudie baseret på Danish Breast Cancer Cooperative Group Lotte Holm Land MD, ph.d. Onkologisk Afd. R. OUH Kræft og komorbiditet - alle skal

More information

Breast and Lung Cancer Biomarker Research at ASCO: Changing Treatment Patterns

Breast and Lung Cancer Biomarker Research at ASCO: Changing Treatment Patterns July 2013 Edition Vol. 7, Issue 7 Breast and Lung Cancer Biomarker Research at ASCO: Changing Treatment Patterns By Julie Katz, MPH, MPhil Biomarkers played a prominent role in the research presented in

More information

Chemotherapy or Not? Anthracycline or Not? Taxane or Not? Does Density Matter? Chemotherapy in Luminal Breast Cancer: Choice of Regimen.

Chemotherapy or Not? Anthracycline or Not? Taxane or Not? Does Density Matter? Chemotherapy in Luminal Breast Cancer: Choice of Regimen. Chemotherapy in Luminal Breast Cancer: Choice of Regimen Andrew D. Seidman, MD Attending Physician Breast Cancer Medicine Service Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Professor of Medicine Weill Cornell

More information

9. Discuss guidelines for follow-up post-thyroidectomy for cancer (labs/tests) HH

9. Discuss guidelines for follow-up post-thyroidectomy for cancer (labs/tests) HH 9. Discuss guidelines for follow-up post-thyroidectomy for cancer (labs/tests) HH Differentiated thyroid cancer expresses the TSH receptor on the cell membrane and responds to TSH stimulation by increasing

More information

Temporal Trends in Demographics and Overall Survival of Non Small-Cell Lung Cancer Patients at Moffitt Cancer Center From 1986 to 2008

Temporal Trends in Demographics and Overall Survival of Non Small-Cell Lung Cancer Patients at Moffitt Cancer Center From 1986 to 2008 Special Report Temporal Trends in Demographics and Overall Survival of Non Small-Cell Lung Cancer Patients at Moffitt Cancer Center From 1986 to 2008 Matthew B. Schabath, PhD, Zachary J. Thompson, PhD,

More information

When it comes to treating breast cancer, doing less does more October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month

When it comes to treating breast cancer, doing less does more October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month For Immediate Release Oct. 8, 2012 When it comes to treating breast cancer, doing less does more October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month SEATTLE Oncologists and researchers are discovering that when it

More information

Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer

Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer Accelerated Partial Breast Irradiation (APBI) for Breast Cancer [For the list of services and procedures that need preauthorization, please refer to www.mcs.pr Go to Comunicados a Proveedores, and click

More information

Adjuvant Therapy Non Small Cell Lung Cancer. Sunil Nagpal MD Director, Thoracic Oncology Jan 30, 2015

Adjuvant Therapy Non Small Cell Lung Cancer. Sunil Nagpal MD Director, Thoracic Oncology Jan 30, 2015 Adjuvant Therapy Non Small Cell Lung Cancer Sunil Nagpal MD Director, Thoracic Oncology Jan 30, 2015 No Disclosures Number of studies Studies Per Month 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3

More information

Chapter 6. Deep lymph node metastases in the groin significantly affect prognosis, particularly in sentinel node positive melanoma patients

Chapter 6. Deep lymph node metastases in the groin significantly affect prognosis, particularly in sentinel node positive melanoma patients Chapter 6 Deep lymph node metastases in the groin significantly affect prognosis, particularly in sentinel node positive melanoma patients M.G. Niebling, K.P. Wevers, A.J.H. Suurmeijer, R.J. van Ginkel,

More information

The Role of Laparoscopy in Endometrial Cancer

The Role of Laparoscopy in Endometrial Cancer The Role of Laparoscopy in Endometrial Cancer Prof. Dr. Tugan BEŞE İstanbul University, Cerrahpaşa Medical Faculty Gynecologic Oncology Department Surgical staging in Endometrial Cancer Laparoscopic surgery

More information

Survival analysis of 220 patients with completely resected stage II non small cell lung cancer

Survival analysis of 220 patients with completely resected stage II non small cell lung cancer 窑 Original Article 窑 Chinese Journal of Cancer Survival analysis of 22 patients with completely resected stage II non small cell lung cancer Yun Dai,2,3, Xiao Dong Su,2,3, Hao Long,2,3, Peng Lin,2,3, Jian

More information

Melanoma: assessment and management of melanoma

Melanoma: assessment and management of melanoma Melanoma: assessment and management of melanoma NICE guideline Draft for consultation, January 2015 If you wish to comment on this version of the guideline, please be aware that all the supporting information

More information

CMScript. Member of a medical scheme? Know your guaranteed benefits! Issue 7 of 2014

CMScript. Member of a medical scheme? Know your guaranteed benefits! Issue 7 of 2014 Background CMScript Member of a medical scheme? Know your guaranteed benefits! Issue 7 of 2014 Prostate cancer is second only to lung cancer as the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in men. It is

More information

1. Overview of Clinical Trials

1. Overview of Clinical Trials 1. Overview of Clinical Trials 1.1. What are clinical trials? Definition A clinical trial is a planned experiment which involves patients and is designed to elucidate the most appropriate treatment of

More information

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER)

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Food and Drug Administration Center for Drug Evaluation and Research (CDER) Guidance for Industry Pathological Complete Response in Neoadjuvant Treatment of High-Risk Early-Stage Breast Cancer: Use as an Endpoint to Support Accelerated Approval U.S. Department of Health and Human

More information

Prostate Cancer. Treatments as unique as you are

Prostate Cancer. Treatments as unique as you are Prostate Cancer Treatments as unique as you are UCLA Prostate Cancer Program Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer among men. The UCLA Prostate Cancer Program brings together the elements essential

More information

Access to hormone receptor testing and other basic diagnostic pathology services in Colombia

Access to hormone receptor testing and other basic diagnostic pathology services in Colombia Access to hormone receptor testing and other basic diagnostic pathology services in Colombia Dr Fernando Perry Clínica de seno y tejidos blandos Instituto Nacional de Cancerología de Colombia Breast cancer

More information

Clinical Indications and Results Following Chest Wall Resection

Clinical Indications and Results Following Chest Wall Resection Clinical Indications and Results Following Chest Wall Resection for Recurrent Malignant Pleural Mesothelioma Ali SO, Burt BM, Groth SS, DaSilva MC, Yeap BY, Richards WG, Baldini EH and Sugarbaker DJ. Division

More information

Low-dose CT Imaging. Edgar Fearnow, M.D. Section Chief, Computed Tomography, Lancaster General Hospital

Low-dose CT Imaging. Edgar Fearnow, M.D. Section Chief, Computed Tomography, Lancaster General Hospital Lung Cancer Screening with Low-dose CT Imaging Edgar Fearnow, M.D. Section Chief, Computed Tomography, Lancaster General Hospital Despite recent declines in the incidence of lung cancer related to the

More information

Bone metastases from malignant melanoma: a retrospective review and analysis of 28 cases

Bone metastases from malignant melanoma: a retrospective review and analysis of 28 cases Bone metastases from malignant melanoma: a retrospective review and analysis of 28 cases Elias Brountzos 1, Irene Panagiotou 2, Dimitrios Bafaloukos 2, Dimitrios Kelekis 1 1 Second Department of Radiology,

More information

Captivator EMR Device

Captivator EMR Device Device Clinical Article and Abstract Summary Endoscopic Mucosal Bergman et al: EMR Training Tips Bergman et al: EMR Learning Curve ASGE: EMR & ESD Guidelines Bergman et al: Captivator EMR vs Cook Duette

More information

PCa Commentary. Volume 73 January-February 2012 PSA AND TREATMENT DECISIONS:

PCa Commentary. Volume 73 January-February 2012 PSA AND TREATMENT DECISIONS: 1101 Madison Street Suite 1101 Seattle, WA 98104 P 206-215-2480 www.seattleprostate.com PCa Commentary Volume 73 January-February 2012 CONTENTS PSA SCREENING & BASIC SCIENCE PSA AND TREATMENT 1 DECISIONS

More information

Image. 3.11.3 SW Review the anatomy of the EAC and how this plays a role in the spread of tumors.

Image. 3.11.3 SW Review the anatomy of the EAC and how this plays a role in the spread of tumors. Neoplasms of the Ear and Lateral Skull Base Image 3.11.1 SW What are the three most common neoplasms of the auricle? 3.11.2 SW What are the four most common neoplasms of the external auditory canal (EAC)

More information

Metastatic Melanoma of Unknown Primary: A Unique Entity? November 2012

Metastatic Melanoma of Unknown Primary: A Unique Entity? November 2012 TITLE: Metastatic Melanoma of Unknown Primary: A Unique Entity? SOURCE: Grand Rounds Presentation, Department of Otolaryngology The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB Health) DATE: November 28, 2012

More information

Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer: Questions and Answers

Adjuvant Therapy for Breast Cancer: Questions and Answers CANCER FACTS N a t i o n a l C a n c e r I n s t i t u t e N a t i o n a l I n s t i t u t e s o f H e a l t h D e p a r t m e n t o f H e a l t h a n d H u m a n S e r v i c e s Adjuvant Therapy for Breast

More information

One of the most mature trials that examined PROCEEDINGS. Hormone Therapy in Postmenopausal Women With Breast Cancer * William J.

One of the most mature trials that examined PROCEEDINGS. Hormone Therapy in Postmenopausal Women With Breast Cancer * William J. Hormone Therapy in Postmenopausal Women With Breast Cancer * William J. Gradishar, MD ABSTRACT *Based on a presentation given by Dr Gradishar at a roundtable symposium held in Baltimore on June 28, 25.

More information

Cutaneous Melanoma: Prognostic Factors

Cutaneous Melanoma: Prognostic Factors The clinical and histologic factors related to outcomes in localized and metastatic cutaneous melanoma are reviewed. Bernard Jean Corneille Pothast, 1882-1966. Playing with Baby. Oil on canvas, 20 24¼.

More information

2 nd ESSO Advanced Course on the Surgical and Medical Management of Melanoma

2 nd ESSO Advanced Course on the Surgical and Medical Management of Melanoma 2 nd ESSO Advanced Course on the Surgical and Medical Management of Melanoma Focus on stage III and IV melanoma In partnership with the Society of Surgical Oncology (SSO) 12-14 November 2015 ATHENS (GR)

More information

Chapter 2 Staging of Breast Cancer

Chapter 2 Staging of Breast Cancer Chapter 2 Staging of Breast Cancer Zeynep Ozsaran and Senem Demirci Alanyalı 2.1 Introduction Five decades ago, Denoix et al. proposed classification system (tumor node metastasis [TNM]) based on the dissemination

More information

HER2 Status: What is the Difference Between Breast and Gastric Cancer?

HER2 Status: What is the Difference Between Breast and Gastric Cancer? Ask the Experts HER2 Status: What is the Difference Between Breast and Gastric Cancer? Bharat Jasani MBChB, PhD, FRCPath Marco Novelli MBChB, PhD, FRCPath Josef Rüschoff, MD Robert Y. Osamura, MD, FIAC

More information

Stage IV Renal Cell Carcinoma. Changing Management in A Comprehensive Community Cancer Center. Susquehanna Health Cancer Center

Stage IV Renal Cell Carcinoma. Changing Management in A Comprehensive Community Cancer Center. Susquehanna Health Cancer Center Stage IV Renal Cell Carcinoma Changing Management in A Comprehensive Community Cancer Center Susquehanna Health Cancer Center 2000 2009 Warren L. Robinson, MD, FACP January 27, 2014 Introduction 65,150

More information

NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript

NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH-PA Author Manuscript NIH Public Access Author Manuscript Published in final edited form as: Ann Surg Oncol. 2012 August ; 19(8): 2547 2555. doi:10.1245/s10434-012-2398-z. Metastasectomy for distant metastatic melanoma: Analysis

More information

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC Reviewer s code: 01714224 Reviewer s country: Italy Date reviewed: 2015-01-30 20:36 [ Y] Grade A: Priority publishing [ ] Accept [ ] Grade C: Good [ Y] Grade D: Fair language [ Y] Major revision The article

More information

GUIDELINES FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF LUNG CANCER

GUIDELINES FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF LUNG CANCER GUIDELINES FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF LUNG CANCER BY Ali Shamseddine, MD (Coordinator); as04@aub.edu.lb Fady Geara, MD Bassem Shabb, MD Ghassan Jamaleddine, MD CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINES FOR THE TREATMENT

More information