Study Confirms
‘Intermediate’ Disease Stage Between Benign Moles and Malignancy
Newswise, November 13, 2015 — An international team of
scientists led by UC San Francisco researchers has mapped out the genetic
trajectories taken by melanoma as it evolves from early skin lesions, known as
precursors, to malignant skin cancer, which can be lethal when it invades other
tissues in the body.
By tracing the genetic changes that take place over time in
the development of the disease, the research reaffirms the role of sun exposure
in the emergence of precursor lesions, such as the common moles known as nevi,
but also suggests that continued ultraviolet radiation (UV) damage to benign
precursor lesions may push them on a path toward malignancy.
More significantly, the study provides new evidence that
genetic and cellular characteristics of skin lesions that are neither clearly
benign moles nor malignant melanoma place them in a distinctive intermediate
category, the existence of which has been hotly debated among dermatologists
and pathologists.
“What happens to patients now is totally unstandardized,” said
Boris Bastian, MD, PhD, the Gerson and Barbara Bass Bakar Distinguished
Professor of Cancer Research at the UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive
Cancer Center (HDFCCC), and senior author of the new study. “Some doctors
consider these ‘intermediate’ types of lesions to be entirely benign, or shave
off only part of the lesion and leave some behind. But others treat it as an
early melanoma. This work should open the door to understanding how risky these
lesions are and when they should be completely removed.”
When a melanoma is diagnosed, its precursor lesion is sometimes
still present on the skin adjacent to the cancer. As reported in the November
12, 2015 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, the research team took
advantage of this unique feature of the disease to identify the genetic
differences between precursors and melanoma.
Led by A. Hunter Shain, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the
Bastian laboratory and HDFCCC member, the scientists gathered skin samples
containing both precursor lesions and melanoma that had been obtained from 37
patients, and they then sequenced 293 cancer-causing genes in 150 distinct
areas micro-dissected from those samples.
In a clever study design, to determine how genetic analysis
would align with standard techniques used in melanoma diagnosis, each of these
150 areas was independently examined through microscopes by eight pathologists
specializing in skin disease.
The pathologists assigned each area to four main
categories ranging from “benign” to “invasive melanoma” based on their
judgments of how far the cells in each area had progressed toward malignancy.
Intriguingly, in all of the 13 areas that were unanimously
assessed as benign by the pathologists, the researchers found only a single
pathogenic mutation, one called BRAF V600E, which has long been associated with
melanoma. Based on these data, this single alteration in the BRAF gene appears
to be sufficient for the formation of a nevus, the term for a common mole that
can sometimes progress to melanoma.
Likewise, there was quite good agreement among the
pathologists regarding invasive melanomas, which on genetic analysis were found
to contain a large number of point mutations—alterations of a single genetic
“letter”—affecting many genes, as well as a significant number of copy-number
alterations, in which sizeable segments of the genome containing genes are
either deleted or duplicated.
As expected, most disagreement among the pathologists was seen
in their assessments of non-invasive melanomas (known as “in situ” melanomas)
and so-called intermediate lesions, which were sub-classified as “probably
benign” or “probably malignant.”
But the genetics of these lesions presented a clearer picture:
in most cases, BRAF mutations, most often the V600E mutation seen in the benign
lesions, were accompanied by additional pathogenic mutations, but not the full
set observed in invasive melanoma.
In particular, many BRAF mutations in the
intermediate lesions were accompanied by mutations in a gene known as TERT. The
TERT gene helps to set the limits of cell division, and the gene has been implicated
in a number of types of cancer.
Moreover, while the researchers found more point mutations in
intermediate lesions than in benign moles, there were far fewer point mutations
in intermediate lesions than in invasive melanomas, and copy-number alterations
were rare.
“There’s good agreement between the pathologists’ assessments
at the extremes of the spectrum, but less so with intermediate lesions,” said
Shain.
“On a genetic level, however, this work clearly shows that there are
intermediate lesions. These things really exist—it’s not a binary situation.”
Mutations caused by UV damage have a distinctive genetic
“signature,” and in another significant finding, the researchers observed this
signature in cancer-causing genes at every stage of melanoma progression.
“A lot of melanomas have been sequenced at this point, and
while it’s clear they carry UV-induced mutations, no one knew when they
occurred,” Bastian said.
“This study shows that they occur in benign moles, in
the melanoma that arises from these moles, and in intermediate lesions. UV both
initiates and causes the progression of melanoma, so exposing even benign moles
to the sun is dangerous.”
According to Shain, the new study’s findings on UV-induced
mutations provides additional grounding to well-documented aspects of melanoma
epidemiology.
“Kids who are in the sunlight more tend to have a greater
number of benign moles, and if they continue to stay in the sunlight, those
moles are more likely to progress to melanoma,” Shain said.
“This study shows that
UV-radiation-induced mutations start to accumulate before a benign mole forms,
and that UV-radiation-induced mutations continue to drive the progression of
some benign and intermediate lesions towards melanoma. So exposing even benign
moles to UV is not without risk.”
In addition to Bastian and Shain, UCSF researchers
participating in the study included Iwei Yeh, MD, PhD, assistant professor of
dermatology; Eric Talevich, PhD, programmer and analyst in the department of
pathology; Alexander Gagnon, BA, a former research assistant in the Department
of Pathology and Department of Dermatology, now at Genia Technologies in
Oakland, Calif.; Jeffrey North, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and
pathology; Laura Pincus, MD, assistant professor of dermatology and pathology;
and Beth Ruben, MD, professor of clinical dermatology and pathology.
They were
joined by colleagues from the Cleveland Clinic, in Ohio; Orlando Health, in
Florida; University Hospital of Zurich, in Switzerland; Dorset County Hospital,
in Dorchester, England; and St. John’s Institute of Dermatology, in London,
England.
The work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Gerson and Barbara Bass Bakar Distinguished Professorship in Cancer Research.
UC San Francisco (UCSF) is a leading university dedicated to
promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level
education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in
patient care.
It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine,
nursing and pharmacy, a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in
basic, biomedical, translational and population sciences, as well as a
preeminent biomedical research enterprise and two top-ranked hospitals, UCSF
Medical Center and UCSF Benioff Children’s Hospital San Francisco.
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