DON MORTON: I just want to make you aware that my tissue bank
is available to the general research community on a collaborative
basis.
If you will
go on the Internet, NCI tissue, you will see all the details and
the IRB hoops that we have to jump through.
If that is the problem, I have about 8,000 individual samples
of melanomas frozen over the years.
DR. SCHUCTER:
Do you have primaries frozen?
DON MORTON:
I don't have primaries, but I think what kills people is not the
primaries, it is the metastases.
PARTICIPANT:
What do you mean by frozen primaries?
DR. SCHUCTER:
To take it from the primary and getting, at that time, fresh tissue.
So, sectioning a piece of the primary.
PARTICIPANT:
Really, just also, to echo what Don has said, we have got a fairly
extensive tissue bank as well, and we have had requests by various
people in Australia and New Zealand for access to the tissue bank.
When we actually
look at the people who are going to do the work, we haven't had
enough confidence that they are actually competent to do the studies.
I suppose
one of the things we would like to see before we give the tissues
to anyone, that the studies are going to be done competently and
well.
I just wonder,
how are you going to address that particular issue? Are you going
to offer a contract for someone to do this work and look at their
--
DR. SCHUCHTER:
We did not go the next step in sort of developing what the consortium
would look like and how the funding would happen, but I think
you are absolutely right, that it would have to be absolutely
clear in terms of the expertise and the quality of the group doing
the work. That is critical.
PARTICIPANT:
I agree, that the B16 melanoma cell line is a pretty hopeless
thing and it has been the death knell of many therapeutics.
I do think
that the subcutaneous model does have some value. I think the
problem with going to a wholly transgenic mouse-based system is
that you will cut out people who don't have those sorts of facilities.
I think you
also have to remember that we have much more relaxed systems for
testing these things before we put them into patients.
If you had
a system where only drugs that have been through this transgenic
model will be tested in patients, you will fall behind the Europeans,
who will simply carry on with the subcutaneous models, and they
will beat you hands down with all the new drugs.
PARTICIPANT:
There was a little bit of confusion there. It depends on the question
that you are asking. Once the target is identified, yes, we are
going to use the subcutaneous and the IV models to see, what is
the contribution of this. So, we are not dismissing it. So, let
me make it very clear.
PARTICIPANT:
Just one addition to your excellent presentation. You know, I
really think that, overall, academic biologists don't pay enough
attention to chemistry and they sort of defer it to the pharmaceutical
companies.
We all have
fine chemistry departments. For example, on transcription factors,
there is a whole field of inorganic mimetics that have been developed
that people don't seem to be aware of.
That is probably
true for every target you have listed up there, that your chemists
are probably working on it and you are not even aware of it.
I think that
enjoining academic biologists and chemists is really a very important
thing to try to do, so that we don't have to always be primarily
dependent on the pharmaceutical companies.
DR. SCHUCHTER:
I think that is a good point.
DR. SOSMAN:
Just a couple of things. First, I think the fact that Don and
Peter just said that sort of gives a momentum right off the bat.
They really
do have incredibly powerful -- even though it is not the primary
lesions, they have clinical follow up.
If you could
even get those together and set up a system in place so biologists
could study those. I think that would be an incredibly positive
effect.
I guess the
other -- two other things. One is this whole issue of, I think
all of us are sort of aghast at this idea of trying to get frozen
tissue from a primary.
There are
probably technologic advances, and whatever they are now, and
whatever they become, it should be fairly rapid.
So, if that
can be disseminated, whoever is trying to do them outside the
two centimeter primary melanoma, which may not be really representative,
and for the melanomas you want, or we talked about needing, those
were not the cases that maybe would be that representative.
Then, I think
the third, which could go under either of yours, I think these
tumors modelers and clinicians have to get together to talk about
therapeutic trials in these mice, and try to at least set those
trials up right so we learn the markers, and so those of us who
have been so frustrated by human trials that we can take some
of that and improve some of the trial development in the mouse
models.
PARTICIPANT:
Lynn, I think everybody here would agree with your blueprint of
collecting all stages of tumor progression as a means of studying
melanoma.
I would want
to reemphasize what Don said. If we are looking for therapeutic
targets, if that is the problem, it is metastatic patients that
kills patients.
I don't think
I even saw that on your list as a stage of progression to focus
on, and I think it is the phase that should be focused on.
I think distinguishing
between progressive microscopic metastases and dormant micrometastases
also ought to be a focus.
At least in
the adjuvant group, we spent some time talking about the fact
that dormant micrometastases might be different from progressive
macrometastases, and yet, if we could control them, we could cure
cancer, even if we couldn't actually destroy them. So, I would
recommend adding an emphasis on metastatic disease.
Going back
to the earlier disease, I don't think there is any question that
it is ethically challenging to collect fresh tissue from early
lesions of melanoma, because you really do need to identify those
patients who do have some risk and distinguish them from those
patients who have no risk.
At the moment,
the only way to do that is really by total examination of the
lesion by pathology. I am grateful for the fact that the pathologists
haven't been picked on very much at this meeting, and for Peggy
Tucker for pointing out the rarity of the truly advanced tumors
that are relatively easy to collect.
It is a difficult
issue to say -- and it may be impossible to say -- that you can
truly collect a substantial amount of tissue from early primary
melanomas.
That leads
me to, I guess, follow up on Jeff's comment. New technology, I
think the new technology that should probably be emphasized in
this report is technology that enables us to address these questions
in paraffin sections.
DR. SAXMAN:
Let me just comment on that. I was going to comment on that in
a minute, but since you raised that as an issue -- I am sorry
for interrupting Don -- but I am not going to let you off the
hook.
One of the
unique problems with melanoma in terms of tissue banking, I don't
want to get into the broad issues with tissue banking, but there
is a unique aspect to melanoma, and it is just what you described.
It is the struggle between the needs of the diagnostician and
the needs of the researcher.
So, if we
are going to get to some of the early genetic effects that occur
in melanoma and dysplastic nevi and those sorts of things, we
need you pathologists to figure out how we can do both of those
things at the same time, the needs of the patient and the needs
of the researcher.
So, how are
you going to do that? How can that be done so that both of those
things can be served in this disease.
I think for
several reasons that is very unique to this disease. I mean, you
can take out a pancreas and the pathologist is willing to give
you a big old chunk of tumor, but the pathologists can't do that
here in melanoma, as it relates to the primaries at least.
DR. ELDER:
If I can just respond to that, I am glad you rephrased your initial
comment, the needs of the diagnostician, to say the needs of the
patient.
The reason
that it is ethically challenging to take chunks of fresh tissues
out of early lesions is that the patient needs to be assured that
their lesion has been thoroughly examined, so that those patients
who have some risk will be aware of it.
Yes, I believe
that the pathologists, but also everybody else, needs to be working
on methods of getting around this difficulty.
I would suggest
that microdissection, amplification of paraffin embedded DNA and
RNA is the way to go.
Boris Bastian
has produced an enormous body of work, I think almost entirely
out of paraffin sections. Now, DNA is easier, but I think we need
to be working hard on RNA. Of course, proteins are fine out of
paraffin sections as well.
PARTICIPANT:
I think this is an important enough issue for moving ahead in
melanoma research, and unique enough to melanoma that it might
be worth having some sort of workshop where industry investigators,
pathologists, patient advocates, are brought together and could
discuss some of the strategies that people are using, investigating,
maybe bring some new ideas to sampling or working with paraffin
or some of the clever ways that some institutions have used to
get these tissues, or potentially places where one could actually
find some samples that are maybe stored somewhere that you didn't
know about, that might be able to be used for this.
I think we
could actually move the field forward if we could just figure
out a way of getting 1,000 primary melanomas banked and classified.
PARTICIPANT:
I think one of the biggest hurdles is going to end up being, especially
in this country, is going to end up being the regulatory things
that we are going to have to run into.
As somebody
with a relatively large tumor bank of my own, trying to share
these tumors with anybody else is horrifically difficult in my
institution.
The biggest
hurdle I think we have run into is with all the new regulations,
both HIPAA and IRB regulations, that there is no consensus right
now.
So, everybody's
individual institution has their own lawyers who say, this is
what we can do and can't do, and it may not be the same thing
that the other institution down the road says.
So, one of
the things that we probably need to do is get at least a national
agreement as to what are the guidelines that you can do here,
so that one person doesn't get burned in their own particular
institution, while the other institution might not have the same
problems.
DR. SONDAK:
Actually, there are very clear guidelines that make it probably
easier to share anonymous de-identified tissue outside your institution
than within your institution.
This all came
from the stem cell experience, actually, because you had to be
able to certify that you knew stem cells didn't come from an aborted
fetus.
Nonetheless,
that evolved into guidance that says, if you are sharing information
outside your institution, all you need is a written agreement
that you will not share any identifiable data, and it is treated
as exempt from ongoing IRB supervision. I think that is one of
the little known facts, and we can talk about that off line.
PARTICIPANT:
I know, but I think it is also that there are a lot of differences
in IRBs, that everybody's IRB is their own little kingdom and
they will make decisions they want to make.
You know,
identifying information, if you have a relatively small group
of patients, maybe 50 patients you see in your clinic, and half
of them are women, so your identifying information is that she
is a female in this age group with this kind of melanoma. Well,
that narrows it down to 10 people. So, then she gets all upset
that she has been identified. There are a lot of very tricky things
here.
DR. SCHUCHTER:
We are not going to solve that today. Is that okay?
PARTICIPANT:
I know, I just think you have to address that, though.
DR. BASTIAN:
I just wanted to comment on the frozen material and the ethical
challenges. I agree that it is problematic to set material aside,
but I think it is, in fact, clinical practice that, due to poor
biopsy technique, which I think is becoming the standard of care,
partial biopsies of melanoma, this is actually happening all the
time.
I think it
is a very common cause of misdiagnosis of melanocytic neoplasms,
and it is a cause of misstating. If we can address this problem
and actually get back to the point where we actually see, for
the majority of the lesions, the entire lesion in paraffin or
at least excised, I think there will be actually no loss of standard
of care, if we set aside a little bit of material.
It is happening.
The dermatologists are shaving the pigmented lesions. I think
that becomes the predominant mode of dealing with them, and I
think that it is important that we address that.
DR. BRADO:
Victor Brado from Anderson. I just wanted to make two comments.
One was in support of what David was saying. Unlike prostate,
as you know from the discussion, we give 10 different prognostic
factors.
You know,
in prostate, you give the degree of differentiation and in pancreas
it is the same, you are given the degree of differentiation.
In melanoma,
you know, most of the staging, 99 percent of the staging, is just
given by the histological analysis.
We pathologists,
we do the most we can, which is to submit the entire specimen.
I like what was done before, 10, 15, 20 years ago. We submitted
everything. So, everything was in paraffin.
The problem
is, you cannot simply decide, okay, I am going to put half of
it for paraffin and the other half for frozen, because what about
if the ulcerated area is in the frozen tissue? You never know.
As you know,
this is upstaging, completely one more stage, just for the presence
of ulceration. Therefore, I agree with what David was saying.
Definitely,
we need to do more of our studies in paraffin sections. I know
it is more difficult now, but Boris has shown how CGH can be done
in paraffin sections.
Then, supporting
what was said about the IRB, in our institution, if we wanted
to provide any tissue to anybody, it has to be without age, without
sex, without clinical information. So, you only know it is melanoma.
That would be all the tissue that we could share in a tissue bank.
JOHN KIRKWOOD:
I think, working closely with pathologists, our unit has put down
hundreds of nevi, dozens of primaries. The problem still remains,
even though you have a researcher, pathologist, clinician, all
working together to get these frozen specimens without compromising
the pathology, they are so small that even the research needs
of the investigator who, with the pathologist and clinician decides
what parts of the tissue to put down, are not satisfied.
So, the need
to amplify, to reliably amplify the specimens, becomes critical.
I think the technical issues need to be addressed.
MEENHARD HERLYN:
Just a brief clarification on the metastases. The committee had
certainly considered to study the different subtypes of metastases,
but that was not considered to be a major problem in accrual,
so it didn't show up prominently in the list.
DR. SCHUCHTER:
That we could collect frozen metastases readily easily and you
wouldn't need a consortium to get that.
DR. HALUSKA:
I think we all agree that we need human tissue samples to validate
things, but I would like to point out that none of the important
melanoma genes were discovered in human samples.
p16 was discovered in a panel of cell lines at Murigenetics. Pam
Pollock has shown, and Rich Murray have shown how BRAF was demonstrated
from a cell line. Ras was cloned from a cell line, PTEN was cloned
from a series of cell lines.
None of the
targets actually came out of human samples. The most important
step in their application to melanoma was the understanding that,
in those samples, the distribution of melanoma suggested that
they might be true in vivo, and all of that was validated.
So, discovery
does not necessarily need human samples to proceed. So, that is
just a point I would like to make.
The other
question I wondered if you guys talked about, and we were hoping
to get out of the committee is, one of the issues with regard
to new target discoveries is, which of the technologies that are
presently available are likely to be fruitful and which are the
best applicable. Did you guys talk about that? Do you think that
profiling is actually going to generate targets? Is high throughput
sequencing something we should continue to pursue as a melanoma
specific endeavor?
DR. BAR-ELI:
First of all, Frank, this is exactly what we would like to change.
Not cell lines, let's do it on the real specimens in real life.
Let's face
it, all these discoveries in the cell lines, where did it get
us right now? This is exactly what we would like to change. So,
this is one comment.
The other
thing is, we are not dismissing any technical new tools. If it
would become available, we would like to use every one. We would
like to start with CGH and expression profiling, but proteomics
and protein protein interactions will be very useful and important,
too.
DR. MORTON:
I have a comment about animal models, B16 in particular. When
I first went to the NCI in 1960, the research was being done on
B16. I think, 43 years later, we are still working on B16.
I am reminded
of something that Sir Peter Medawar said. When the surgeons showed
you could transplant organs, and he had said, organ transplantation
would never be successful. He said, we live under the tyranny
of the skin graft, because they could not successfully bridge
the transplantation barrier of skin grafts.
Well, B16
is very, very similar. Any similarity to true melanoma is purely
coincidental. I really believe that our basic scientists should
go back to the lab, generate new melanomas and ask the question,
do newly induced, syngeneic melanomas behave the same way as B16.
I would be
very surprised if there are not differences. So, I would throw
a challenge out to the basic scientists.
I bet you
still 90 percent of the animal tumor research is done with B16
melanoma. I used to say, when I was doing tumor immunotherapy
experiments in animals is, if it has got a name, it is too far
down the line to study tumor specific antigens. I just throw that
challenge out.
MEENHARD:
Just a quick comment. There are now at least three models in the
mouse for melanoma, which could potentially be used for any drug
screening and validation studies.
I think, Frank,
we all agree that cell lines are a wonderful tool, but we would
need fresh tissue for validation of whatever targets we are looking
at. So, we cannot get around it and Menasche made the same point.
DR. SCHUCHTER:
I mean, you can do these sort of in parallel, if we had fresh
tissue and we do have paraffin specimens. We can do CGH and expression
profiling, but the proteomics was not ready for prime time. Thank
you.
TOP