› Forums › General Melanoma Community › Test to determine likelyhood of recurrence for stage ii
- This topic has 6 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 13 years ago by JerryfromFauq.
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- December 21, 2011 at 11:42 pm
I thought this was interesting for stage ii (and perhaps iii) people who are kind of left in the "wait and see" group, even with, what I would consider, dangerously high recurrance rates.
An exerpt from the article:
I thought this was interesting for stage ii (and perhaps iii) people who are kind of left in the "wait and see" group, even with, what I would consider, dangerously high recurrance rates.
An exerpt from the article:
BRANFORD, Conn., Dec. 21, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — HistoRx recently licensed from Yale University a new clinical diagnostic assay based on AQUA® technology. This assay enables doctors treating patients with melanoma to identify a subset of those patients who, despite having no detectable cancer in their lymph nodes, have a 40% risk of recurrence of their disease. AQUA technology is an automated, quantitative IHC testing method that enables measurement of protein biomarkers in tissue as an aid to a pathologist's diagnosis. Such precise determination of first, the location within the tumor cell and second, the amount in each location is not possible with conventional testing methods, such as standard immunohistochemistry (IHC).
The prognostic assay was developed in the laboratory of David Rimm, MD, PhD, inventor of AQUA technology and Professor of Pathology, Director of Pathology Tissue Services at the Yale School of Medicine, and may be useful in guiding treatment decisions for Stage II, node-negative melanoma patients. "After surgical resection of the tumor, if the nodes are negative, we don't have much more to offer," said Dr. Rimm. "This assay allows us to measure the risk of recurrence which can be helpful to ease patient anxiety or to prompt patients to be aggressive in follow up or even consider adjuvant chemotherapy."
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/historx-licenses-melanoma-assay-from-yale-university-2011-12-21
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- December 23, 2011 at 1:07 am
Ya know, I REALLY like the thoughts of this. It was either Harvard or Yale that a couple of years ago came up with something similar about intron probabilities, but it dropped off the radar.
Remember the gold rush days when a miner would take an ore sample in for ASSAY? The assay was a predictor of the size of the strike.
This melanoma assay really makes sense to me in its' science.
Thanks for posting.
Charlie S
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- December 23, 2011 at 1:07 am
Ya know, I REALLY like the thoughts of this. It was either Harvard or Yale that a couple of years ago came up with something similar about intron probabilities, but it dropped off the radar.
Remember the gold rush days when a miner would take an ore sample in for ASSAY? The assay was a predictor of the size of the strike.
This melanoma assay really makes sense to me in its' science.
Thanks for posting.
Charlie S
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- December 23, 2011 at 1:07 am
Ya know, I REALLY like the thoughts of this. It was either Harvard or Yale that a couple of years ago came up with something similar about intron probabilities, but it dropped off the radar.
Remember the gold rush days when a miner would take an ore sample in for ASSAY? The assay was a predictor of the size of the strike.
This melanoma assay really makes sense to me in its' science.
Thanks for posting.
Charlie S
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- December 23, 2011 at 6:26 am
Thanks for the update. I had read about this being in developement. Do you know when this will actually be available to the Onologist?
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- December 23, 2011 at 6:26 am
Thanks for the update. I had read about this being in developement. Do you know when this will actually be available to the Onologist?
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- December 23, 2011 at 6:26 am
Thanks for the update. I had read about this being in developement. Do you know when this will actually be available to the Onologist?
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