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Prognostic Gene Expression Profiling in Cutaneous Melanoma: Identifying the Knowledge Gaps and Assessing the Clinical Benefit

Authors :
Adil Daud
Philip D. Leming
Caroline C. Kim
Siwen Hu-Lieskovan
Menashe Bar-Eli
Elizabeth I. Buchbinder
Sandra J. Lee
Jennifer A. Stein
Richard A. Scolyer
Douglas Grossman
Dekker C. Deacon
Michael A. Marchetti
Jeffrey E. Gershenwald
Elizabeth M. Burton
Nwanneka Okwundu
John M. Kirkwood
Kenneth F. Grossmann
Vernon K. Sondak
Clara Curiel-Lewandrowski
John R. Hyngstrom
Emily Y. Chu
Daniel G. Coit
David Polsky
Marianne Berwick
Sancy A. Leachman
Georgina V. Long
Kari Kendra
Tawnya L. Bowles
John A. Thompson
Elizabeth G. Berry
Joanne M. Jeter
Rebecca I. Hartman
Susan M. Swetter
Megan Othus
Eric A. Smith
Robert L. Judson-Torres
Mitchell S. Stark
Michael E. Ming
Laura K. Ferris
Edmund K. Bartlett
Kelly C. Nelson
Ashfaq A. Marghoob
Julia A. Curtis
John F. Thompson
Suraj S. Venna
Janice M. Mehnert
Maria L. Wei
Larissa A. Korde
David H. Lawson
Source :
JAMA dermatology, vol 156, iss 9, JAMA Dermatol
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Use of prognostic gene expression profile (GEP) testing in cutaneous melanoma (CM) is rising despite a lack of endorsement as standard of care. OBJECTIVE: To develop guidelines within the national Melanoma Prevention Working Group (MPWG) on integration of GEP testing into the management of patients with CM, including (1) review of published data using GEP tests, (2) definition of acceptable performance criteria, (3) current recommendations for use of GEP testing in clinical practice, and (4) considerations for future studies. EVIDENCE REVIEW: The MPWG members and other international melanoma specialists participated in 2 online surveys and then convened a summit meeting. Published data and meeting abstracts from 2015 to 2019 were reviewed. FINDINGS: The MPWG members are optimistic about the future use of prognostic GEP testing to improve risk stratification and enhance clinical decision-making but acknowledge that current utility is limited by test performance in patients with stage I disease. Published studies of GEP testing have not evaluated results in the context of all relevant clinicopathologic factors or as predictors of regional nodal metastasis to replace sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB). The performance of GEP tests has generally been reported for small groups of patients representing particular tumor stages or in aggregate form, such that stage-specific performance cannot be ascertained, and without survival outcomes compared with data from the American Joint Committee on Cancer 8th edition melanoma staging system international database. There are significant challenges to performing clinical trials incorporating GEP testing with SLNB and adjuvant therapy. The MPWG members favor conducting retrospective studies that evaluate multiple GEP testing platforms on fully annotated archived samples before embarking on costly prospective studies and recommend avoiding routine use of GEP testing to direct patient management until prospective studies support their clinical utility. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: More evidence is needed to support using GEP testing to inform recommendations regarding SLNB, intensity of follow-up or imaging surveillance, and postoperative adjuvant therapy. The MPWG recommends further research to assess the validity and clinical applicability of existing and emerging GEP tests. Decisions on performing GEP testing and patient management based on these results should only be made in the context of discussion of testing limitations with the patient or within a multidisciplinary group.

Details

ISSN :
21686084
Volume :
156
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA dermatology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....623e9ab7ef5cb40e490fb2ab410673b8