69 research outputs found

    Correlation of positive RT-PCR for tyrosinase in peripheral blood of malignant melanoma patients with clinical stage, survival and other risk factors

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    The clinical value of the reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay for tyrosinase in peripheral blood of melanoma patients is still under debate. A total of 212 blood samples from 212 melanoma patients in all clinical stages (AJCC) were examined. Erythrocytes were lysed prior to RNA extraction by phenol precipitation from 2.7 ml of blood. cDNA for tyrosinase PCR was synthesized using random hexamers. Positive tyrosinase RT-PCR results were obtained in 11% of 106 stage I patients, 18% of 56 stage II patients, 31% of 26 stage III patients and 67% of 24 stage IV patients. After a median follow-up of 36 months (range 26–41), stage III patients with positive RT-PCR for tyrosinase had a shortened disease-free interval as compared to negative patients (P< 0.01). In stage IV patients, median overall survival was 8 months in case of a positive RT-PCR in contrast to 12 months in case of a negative test. While univariate analysis showed sex and primary tumour location associated with positive RT-PCR, multiple regression analysis revealed clinical stage and detection of tyrosinase transcripts in peripheral blood as best prognostic factors. Hazard ratios for disease-free survival were 19.7 (confidence interval (CI) 8.53–45.5, P = 0.0001) for metastatic vs primary disease and 2.96 (Cl 1.49–5.89, P = 0.002) for positive vs negative tyrosinase RT-PCR. The corresponding hazard ratios for overall survival were 97.0 (Cl 12.7–741, P = 0.0001) and 4.33 (Cl 1.69–11.1, P = 0.002). Our results emphasize the importance of tyrosinase RT-PCR testing in peripheral blood. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig

    Tyrosinase expression in the peripheral blood of stage III melanoma patients is associated with a poor prognosis: a clinical follow-up study of 110 patients

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    The aim of this study is to define the relationship between the tyrosinase expression in the peripheral blood and the clinical course of the disease in stage III disease-free melanoma patients after radical lymph node dissection. RT-PCR techniques were used to identify tyrosinase mRNA in 110 patients; a total of 542 blood samples were investigated. In all, 54 patients (49%) showed at least one positive result; 13 patients (11.8%) showed baseline positive results: six became negative thereafter, whereas seven showed follow-up positive results until disease progression occurred. One or more positive determinations were found during follow-up in 41 patients with negative baseline tyrosinase. No correlation was found between baseline results and the relapse rate or disease-free survival (DFS), whereas a significant correlation was found between positive tyrosinase results and disease recurrence during follow-up. In fact, 72.9% of positive patients relapsed, but only 19.3% of negative cases did so. The median interval between the positive results and the clinical demonstration of the relapse was 1.9 months (range 1-6.6). Disease-free survival multivariate analysis selected, as independent variables, Breslow thickness (P=0.05), lymph node involvement according to the AJCC classification (P=0.05) and tyrosinase expression (P=0.0001). In conclusion, RT-PCR tyrosinase mRNA expression is a reliable and reproducible marker associated with a high risk of melanoma progression and we encourage its clinical use in routine follow-up

    Quantitative methylation analyses of resection margins predict local recurrences and disease-specific deaths in patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinomas

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    This study sought to determine whether the presence of hypermethylated genes in the surgical margins can predict local recurrences in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs). We prospectively collected tumour and surgical margin specimens from patients with HNSCCs who had undergone surgical resections. Quantitative methylation-specific PCR (QMSP) of CDKN2A, CCNA1 and DCC were performed in these specimens and correlated with clinical data. Of the 42 patients eligible for the study, 27 were hypermethylation informative for the above three genes. This latter group was associated with longer disease-free survivals (P=0.007) and longer time to disease-specific deaths (P=0.004). Multivariate analyses confirmed hypermethylation non-informative tumours as an independent prognosticating factor for disease-specific deaths (risk ratio 3.8, P=0.026). Quantitative MSP of the margins of 24 hypermethylation informative tumours revealed that 11 patients had molecularly positive margins, of which, five developed disease-specific events (DSEs, three local recurrences and two metastases), compared to none in patients with molecularly negative margins, after a median follow-up of 48 months. Log-rank analyses showed that molecularly positive margins were associated with shorter time to local recurrences and disease-specific deaths (P=0.03 and 0.01, respectively). This study demonstrated that QMSP of hypermethylated promoters in surgical margins predicted all the local recurrences in our series of HNSCC patients. We have also identified hypermethylation non-informative tumours as an independent predictor for the development of DSEs
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