Introduction: Lymph node status in patients with cutaneous malignant melanoma is the most important prognostic factor. Patients with clinically positive nodes (stage III) should undergo therapeutic lymphadenectomy; however, the surgical approach to the regional disease in patients with negative clinical examination (stage I and II) is still controversial. Selective lymphadenectomy consists of the intraoperative identification of the first node in the nodal basin, the sentinel lymph node (SLN). Routine examination, serial sectioning, and immunohistochemistry may underestimate the presence of tumor cells. PCR is a molecular biology technique that may be useful for the detection of malignant melanoma nodal metastases in the SLN.
Aim: The aim of this study was to use tyrosinase messenger RNA (mRNA) amplification for the detection of micrometastases in fresh frozen SLNs.
Methods: 46 hematoxylin-eosin (HE)-negative sentinel node samples from 42 patients with malignant melanoma were included in this study. Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sections were immunostained with S-100 protein and HMB-45. A central portion of the node was submitted for PCR. This method was accomplished with a combination of reverse transcription and amplification of the tyrosinase complementary DNA and double- round PCR (nested reverse transcriptase [RT]-PCR).
Results: In 1 of the 42 SLN-negative patients, immunohistochemistry stains allowed the detection of micrometastases. With molecular biology, 14 of the 42 SLN patients were positive (33%); in another 12 (29%), only the nested RT-PCR was positive. Of the 42 patients, 24 were put into 3 groups and followed for a 5-year period with 1, 7, and 16 patients, respectively, in the groups. The first group involved 1 patient who had provided 2 SLN samples that were found to be SLN-positive using both techniques, immunohistochemistry stains and nested RT-PCR (he had hepatic metastasis and died 24 months after diagnosis). The second group, with only nested RT-PCR positive SLN samples, included 7 of 12 patients who were followed and had a median survival of 37 months; 4 died of widespread metastatic disease, the other 3 patients had event-free survival, but 1 consented to undergo a therapeutic lymphadenectomy as a result of a positive test. The last group consisting of 16 of 32 patients, with complete 5-year survival, who were SLN-negative with both techniques, immunohistochemistry stains and nested RT-PCR. Fourteen of the 16 (88%) were event-free survival during the follow-up, and 2 had local relapse.
Conclusion: Tyrosinase mRNA amplification may be a negative prognostic factor for the detection of micrometastases in fresh frozen SLNs using molecular biology techniques.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF03260070 | DOI Listing |
World J Urol
January 2025
Department of Urology, Urooncology, Robot-assisted and Focal Therapy, University Hospital Magdeburg, Otto-von Guericke University Magdeburg, Leipziger Str. 44, 39120, Magdeburg, Germany.
Background And Objectives: Radical prostatectomy is a standard treatment for prostate cancer, yet about 30% of patients experience rising biochemical markers within a decade post-surgery. Pelvic lymph node sampling during prostatectomy assesses potential lymph node metastases, but standard histological assessments, which typically examine only 2-3 tissue sections, often miss occult metastases. This study assesses the effectiveness of qPCR in detecting PSA coding KLK3 mRNA for identifying lymph node metastases post-prostatectomy and explores the correlation between PSA-mRNA and biochemical recurrence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Med
January 2025
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Medical Institute of Bioregulation, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
Background: Metastasis is the major cause of cancer-related mortality. The premetastatic niche is a promising target for its prevention. However, the generality and cellular dynamics in premetastatic niche formation have remained unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
December 2024
Division of Urology, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA.
J Clin Med
December 2024
Faculty of Medicine, University of Novi Sad, 21000 Novi Sad, Serbia.
Surgery
February 2025
Department of Surgery and Transplantation, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark. Electronic address: https://www.twitter.com/nikolajnerup.
Background: Although fluorescence guidance during various surgical procedures has been shown to be safe and have possible better clinical outcomes than without the guidance, the use of fluorophores in pancreatic surgery is novel and not yet well described. This scoping review involved a systematic methodology of the currently available literature and aimed to illuminate the use of fluorophores in pancreatic surgery from a clinical view.
Methods: The PRISMA and the PRISMA-ScR guidelines were used when appropriate and the following databases were searched: PubMed, Embase, Scopus, The Cochrane Collection, and Web of Science.
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