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Together Against Melanoma: An Educational Symposium for Patients and Caregivers

May 14, 2026

Transcript

  • 00:00Everyone?
  • 00:02Everyone can hear okay in
  • 00:03the back?
  • 00:04Okay. Perfect. It's better than
  • 00:06a Zoom call.
  • 00:08So I just wanna thank
  • 00:10every one of you who's
  • 00:11come in the audience, many
  • 00:13of whom we all know
  • 00:14quite well.
  • 00:16And it's always wonderful when
  • 00:18people show up to support
  • 00:20each other. And many of
  • 00:21you have had very different
  • 00:23journeys
  • 00:24with us.
  • 00:25We'll have time at the
  • 00:26end for people to share,
  • 00:28ask questions as well.
  • 00:31You know, and tonight, I
  • 00:32I think a lot of
  • 00:33it is a night of
  • 00:34celebration,
  • 00:35for all of the things
  • 00:37that have changed from the
  • 00:38time that I was in
  • 00:39training.
  • 00:40I tell people all the
  • 00:41time when I first started
  • 00:43my journey,
  • 00:44you know,
  • 00:45as a family member of
  • 00:47people who passed from melanoma,
  • 00:49working on some of the
  • 00:50things that won Nobel prizes
  • 00:52and couldn't
  • 00:54couldn't give it to a
  • 00:55family member and where we've
  • 00:56come
  • 00:57in all of these years
  • 00:59and that all of you,
  • 01:01some of you who are
  • 01:01in the audience were astronauts.
  • 01:03You know, you
  • 01:05there was a crazy ideas
  • 01:07about immune therapy,
  • 01:08and you guys went along
  • 01:10for the ride. And not
  • 01:11only that, but supported, you
  • 01:13know, family members through the
  • 01:15process.
  • 01:16So on that note, thank
  • 01:18you all. Debbie, I'm gonna
  • 01:19you can
  • 01:20make some opening remarks.
  • 01:30Hello, everyone. I am Debbie
  • 01:32Chergai. I am the senior
  • 01:33education program manager at the
  • 01:35MRF.
  • 01:37We partnered today,
  • 01:39with the ELF to put
  • 01:40this symposium on for you
  • 01:41today, so thank you so
  • 01:42much for being here.
  • 01:47First, I just wanna thank
  • 01:48our sponsors.
  • 01:50They these amazing companies have
  • 01:52sponsored not only events like
  • 01:54this, but they sponsor some
  • 01:55of our other, many educational
  • 01:57opportunities and events. In fact,
  • 01:58if there's anyone here from
  • 02:00any of these companies, is
  • 02:01there, any industry reps here?
  • 02:03Please raise your hands.
  • 02:04Yes. Awesome. Take a look
  • 02:06around. Thank them. Yes.
  • 02:09Thank you so much
  • 02:11for being here and for
  • 02:12supporting events like this.
  • 02:14Without their support, we truly
  • 02:15could not do some things
  • 02:17like this.
  • 02:18First, I just wanna give
  • 02:19a few facts.
  • 02:21Some of you guys might
  • 02:22know these already. In twenty
  • 02:23twenty
  • 02:24five, over two hundred and
  • 02:26twelve thousand people. Oops. Sorry.
  • 02:31There we go. People living
  • 02:33in the United States are
  • 02:34expected to be diagnosed with
  • 02:35melanoma.
  • 02:37Nearly ninety three percent of
  • 02:38melanomas are thought to be
  • 02:39caused by exposure to UV
  • 02:41light and sunlight.
  • 02:43Melanoma is not just a
  • 02:44skin cancer, it develops anywhere
  • 02:45in the body, eyes, nails,
  • 02:47feet, mouth,
  • 02:48and the five year survival
  • 02:50rate for stage one to
  • 02:51two localized melanoma is ninety
  • 02:53seven point six percent.
  • 02:55There are over one point
  • 02:57four
  • 02:57million people living with melanoma
  • 02:59in the United States.
  • 03:02And as I'm sure all
  • 03:03of you know, melanoma is
  • 03:04the deadliest form of skin
  • 03:05cancer,
  • 03:06and skin cancer is the
  • 03:07most common form of cancer
  • 03:09in the United States.
  • 03:14The Melanoma Research Foundation is
  • 03:16the largest independent organization
  • 03:18devoted to melanoma,
  • 03:20committed to the sport of
  • 03:21medical research to develop effective
  • 03:23treatments and eventually a cure
  • 03:25for melanoma. I'm gonna give
  • 03:26you just a short overview.
  • 03:28I'll try to go quickly
  • 03:29so we can get to
  • 03:30the real amazing speakers today.
  • 03:35This is our founder, Diana
  • 03:36Ashby.
  • 03:37She,
  • 03:38MRF was founded in nineteen
  • 03:40ninety six. She was diagnosed
  • 03:41with melanoma and after a
  • 03:43three year battle,
  • 03:44found that there were no
  • 03:45options for new therapies and
  • 03:46clinical trials.
  • 03:48A lot has changed since
  • 03:49then.
  • 03:52Diana's legacy lives through the
  • 03:53MRF and all the incredible
  • 03:55work we do. The MRF,
  • 03:57we have three main, pillars,
  • 03:59education, research, and advocacy.
  • 04:01This is an example of
  • 04:03one of our many educational
  • 04:04events that we put on,
  • 04:06and I'll go over just
  • 04:07a few of the other
  • 04:08things we have as well.
  • 04:10A
  • 04:11little bit of our footprint
  • 04:12today. The MRF hosts several
  • 04:14events all over the country
  • 04:15including,
  • 04:17nineteen,
  • 04:19five k runs in different
  • 04:20cities and states, two signature
  • 04:22galas,
  • 04:24and we bring patients and
  • 04:25caregivers to DC
  • 04:27to talk with congressional leaders
  • 04:28about what is needed and
  • 04:30why more funding is required
  • 04:31for melanoma research.
  • 04:36Research really is at the
  • 04:37heart of our mission, supporting
  • 04:39scientists whose discoveries lead to
  • 04:41better treatments, improve outcomes, and
  • 04:43new hope for melanoma patients.
  • 04:46This slide highlights some of
  • 04:47the groundbreaking research that MRF
  • 04:49has funded in the past
  • 04:50three in the past years
  • 04:51and continues to support today.
  • 04:53We have awarded thirty four
  • 04:55grants,
  • 04:56in two hundred and twenty
  • 04:58five or sorry,
  • 04:59twenty twenty five,
  • 05:01and we've funded over twenty
  • 05:02eight million dollars in research
  • 05:04overall.
  • 05:06This next slide,
  • 05:09highlights some of the grants
  • 05:10that we funded for Yale.
  • 05:12So since two thousand eleven,
  • 05:13the MRF has provided over
  • 05:15nine hundred and fifty thousand
  • 05:17dollars through nine grants
  • 05:18to support the melanoma research
  • 05:20at, at Yale. Through these
  • 05:22grants, researchers
  • 05:23have produced exciting results for
  • 05:25the melanoma research community, including
  • 05:28twelve
  • 05:28scientific publications to advance the
  • 05:31understanding of melanoma and its
  • 05:32treatments.
  • 05:34The MRF supported projects have
  • 05:36also enabled Yale researchers to
  • 05:38start over over forty new
  • 05:40scientific collaborations and helped four
  • 05:42Yale researchers
  • 05:44secure additional funding from other
  • 05:45sources to support their research.
  • 05:52This is one of my
  • 05:52favorite slides.
  • 05:54Did you know that by
  • 05:55funding melanoma research, you are
  • 05:57also helping to advance
  • 05:59all cancer research?
  • 06:01Melanoma research breakthroughs have led
  • 06:03to approvals in both targeted
  • 06:04therapies for BRAF mutations
  • 06:06and immunotherapy
  • 06:08treatments
  • 06:08for many cancers.
  • 06:10Since the development of immunotherapy
  • 06:12in the last ten years,
  • 06:13distance
  • 06:14metastatic disease patient survival rates
  • 06:17increased
  • 06:18from fifteen percent
  • 06:19to over fifty percent.
  • 06:21And as you can see
  • 06:22in the slide, these are
  • 06:23all the other,
  • 06:25cancers that,
  • 06:27you help by helping to
  • 06:28fund melanoma research.
  • 06:33Another facet of our research
  • 06:34is our breakthrough consortium,
  • 06:37which accelerates melanoma translational research
  • 06:39through multi institutional collaborations and
  • 06:42fostering the growth
  • 06:44of early career scientists and
  • 06:45clinical investigations.
  • 06:47And as you can see,
  • 06:48Yale University is on there.
  • 06:52We have a variety of
  • 06:53educational opportunities,
  • 06:55not only directed at patients,
  • 06:56but caregivers, providers.
  • 06:58We have educational materials, webinars,
  • 07:01animated patient videos,
  • 07:03patient we give patient caregiver
  • 07:04symposia like this, and we
  • 07:06also have a lot of
  • 07:07materials on rare subtypes.
  • 07:11We have over thirty pieces
  • 07:13of literature available on our
  • 07:15website these are all free
  • 07:17to download or order you
  • 07:19can order bundles of them
  • 07:20so if you have an
  • 07:21educational event that you want,
  • 07:24to bring some information to,
  • 07:26I highly suggest
  • 07:27going on our website, checking
  • 07:29out our educational literature page,
  • 07:30at the very end there's
  • 07:31an order form,
  • 07:33and you can order
  • 07:34five hundred up to five
  • 07:36hundred different types of or
  • 07:37five hundred,
  • 07:38materials
  • 07:39for your events all for
  • 07:41free.
  • 07:42And you could do it
  • 07:43multiple times a year.
  • 07:49The melanoma the MRF also
  • 07:51hosts monthly ask expert webinars.
  • 07:54We have animated patient videos.
  • 07:57These are great videos that
  • 07:58are very short. They're about
  • 08:00all less than ten minutes.
  • 08:01They're a great way to
  • 08:02share with people if you
  • 08:04wanna educate them on, some
  • 08:05of the,
  • 08:06parts of melanoma,
  • 08:08and we have some new
  • 08:09ones in the
  • 08:10works. And then also,
  • 08:12if you want more education
  • 08:13on our MRF YouTube channel,
  • 08:16you can find all of
  • 08:16our past patient and caregiver
  • 08:18symposia. The one today will
  • 08:19also be posted there in
  • 08:21a week or two.
  • 08:22All of our past, ASSA
  • 08:24expert webinars, patient testimonials,
  • 08:27and tons of other other
  • 08:28things if you're looking for
  • 08:29some more education.
  • 08:32We also have an amazing
  • 08:34patient and caregiver community.
  • 08:36This, has been going on
  • 08:37for many, many years, and
  • 08:38so you can find so
  • 08:39many different topics such as
  • 08:41Till cell therapy, you know,
  • 08:43new therapies,
  • 08:44newly diagnosed patients who want
  • 08:46some questions answered, bereavement
  • 08:48support,
  • 08:49there's so many different topics
  • 08:51that you can search or
  • 08:52you can start your own
  • 08:53conversation.
  • 08:57This is our new, program
  • 08:59it's called SunAware.
  • 09:00It's a sun safety e
  • 09:02learning program for children in
  • 09:03grades k through five.
  • 09:05This curriculum promotes healthy sun
  • 09:07safe habits to help prevent
  • 09:09melanoma, skin cancer, and sun
  • 09:10related skin damage.
  • 09:12Right now, we are,
  • 09:16circulating it through schools,
  • 09:18and also youth organizations.
  • 09:20If you guys want more
  • 09:22information on it, for any
  • 09:23of your local communities, please
  • 09:25give us a contact.
  • 09:30As I mentioned before every
  • 09:31year we bring caregivers to
  • 09:33the hill patients and caregivers
  • 09:34to the hill to meet
  • 09:35with state legislators and congressional
  • 09:38leaders.
  • 09:39We work with them to
  • 09:40help increase funding for cancer
  • 09:41and specifically melanoma research.
  • 09:44If you would like to
  • 09:45attend any of our, advocacy
  • 09:47days, please contact us and
  • 09:49we'll let you we'll let
  • 09:50you know when the next
  • 09:51one is.
  • 09:54We have several prevention and
  • 09:55awareness campaigns, included our get
  • 09:57naked, I get dilated,
  • 10:00Stay,
  • 10:01Spot Stay Safe with Spot
  • 10:03campaign with for pediatric melanoma
  • 10:05awareness.
  • 10:06Our twenty twenty six spokesperson
  • 10:08is Jason Chambers. I don't
  • 10:09know if any of you
  • 10:10recognize him. He is a
  • 10:12melanoma patient, superyacht captain in
  • 10:15bravo below deck,
  • 10:18down under star, and he
  • 10:19is our new spokesperson this
  • 10:21year.
  • 10:24We also have several programs,
  • 10:26that you can find more
  • 10:27about on our website.
  • 10:31And there are several opportunities
  • 10:33if you're looking for ways
  • 10:34to get involved. We have
  • 10:35community fundraisers, galas, miles for
  • 10:37melanoma walks. There there was
  • 10:39a postcard for,
  • 10:41a local one going on
  • 10:43soon if you guys, on
  • 10:44our table, if you're interested
  • 10:46in attending.
  • 10:49And lastly, the best way
  • 10:50to learn more about anything
  • 10:51that I mentioned here, any
  • 10:52events that we have coming
  • 10:53up, or anything in the
  • 10:54future is to just follow
  • 10:56us on social media. We're
  • 10:57on on the major,
  • 10:58channels.
  • 11:02In your folders today or
  • 11:04with your folders today, we
  • 11:05also gave you a post
  • 11:06event survey.
  • 11:08There's also a QR code
  • 11:10that you can scan at
  • 11:11the MRF table. We would
  • 11:12really appreciate you filling out
  • 11:14this survey. You can fill
  • 11:15it out today as you
  • 11:16go along or you can
  • 11:17do it and hand it
  • 11:18to me as you leave
  • 11:19or you can do it
  • 11:20online later. We'll follow-up with
  • 11:21an email with a link
  • 11:22to the survey as well.
  • 11:24It's a very short survey,
  • 11:25but I promise you it's
  • 11:27really important. It lets us
  • 11:28know,
  • 11:29you know, topics that you
  • 11:31wanna hear more about, and
  • 11:32it helps us create more
  • 11:34events that are important to
  • 11:35you.
  • 11:38Lastly, I just wanna thank
  • 11:39the sponsors again,
  • 11:40for supporting events like this
  • 11:42and for being here.
  • 11:43And, of course, Yale New
  • 11:45Haven Health, thank you so
  • 11:46much for partnering with us
  • 11:48today.
  • 11:57So, before we actually start,
  • 12:01with the the physicians here
  • 12:03to give information, we actually
  • 12:05wanted to have one of
  • 12:06our patients who's had
  • 12:08really quite the incredible journey.
  • 12:11And if you wanna
  • 12:14yep.
  • 12:16Where do you want? You
  • 12:16can go wherever you want.
  • 12:18You're the star of the
  • 12:19show.
  • 12:20But come up here. Do
  • 12:21you want a microphone and
  • 12:22sit? Where'd you be comfortable?
  • 12:23Okay. Here.
  • 12:25Probably.
  • 12:26Alright.
  • 12:30And it's on. Okay. If
  • 12:31it becomes too loud,
  • 12:33just give me a signal.
  • 12:35My name is Brandy Orton.
  • 12:36I am,
  • 12:38I'm married. I'm a mother
  • 12:39of two children ages twelve
  • 12:40and thirteen.
  • 12:41My
  • 12:42I have or had melanoma.
  • 12:45Date my story dates back
  • 12:46to
  • 12:48people can't hear you? Okay.
  • 12:49Okay. Is that better? Okay.
  • 12:51Brandy Wharton,
  • 12:53married, mother of two children.
  • 12:54My melanoma story goes back
  • 12:56to twenty nineteen, twenty twenty.
  • 12:58I found a cut on
  • 12:59my wrist, and what popped
  • 13:00up a couple weeks later
  • 13:01was something that looked almost
  • 13:03like, a blister you get
  • 13:04on the back of your
  • 13:05heel. And at this point,
  • 13:06I was forty years old.
  • 13:07I'd had over thirty two
  • 13:08basal cell carcinomas and several
  • 13:10squamous cells. So I was
  • 13:11very familiar
  • 13:13with the dermatologist.
  • 13:15I asked the dermatologist about
  • 13:16that, and they said it
  • 13:17was nothing, and then COVID
  • 13:18hit. So I didn't go
  • 13:19back to the dermatologist
  • 13:21again until after the the
  • 13:23majority of COVID had passed.
  • 13:25When I did return, I'd
  • 13:26asked about the spot again
  • 13:27because it continued to grow,
  • 13:28and they again told me
  • 13:29it was nothing to worry
  • 13:30about. They tried freezing it,
  • 13:32and it grew very quickly.
  • 13:33And, eventually, I had a
  • 13:35biopsy and learned that it
  • 13:36was melanoma.
  • 13:37And in fact, I was
  • 13:38told they believed it was
  • 13:39a secondary cancer that, there
  • 13:41was another type of cancer
  • 13:42in my body. And during
  • 13:43that time, I had over
  • 13:44a month to wait for
  • 13:45scans, so I really delved
  • 13:46into a lot of I
  • 13:48grew up in a natural
  • 13:49focused household, so I dove
  • 13:50into some of the research
  • 13:52on naturopathic care and things
  • 13:53I could do at home.
  • 13:55We shifted to an organic
  • 13:56diet and started juicing and
  • 13:57taking some supplements.
  • 13:59And then I found that
  • 14:00the cancer luckily was not
  • 14:01anywhere else in my body.
  • 14:02I had a wide margin
  • 14:03excision, and I thought that
  • 14:04I was good to go
  • 14:06and safe. I am an
  • 14:07active duty service member, so
  • 14:08I executed orders, and we
  • 14:10moved to Tampa. And as
  • 14:11part of my follow on
  • 14:12care, we learned just a
  • 14:13few months later that the
  • 14:14cancer had, in fact, spread
  • 14:16to the lymph nodes in
  • 14:17my elbow.
  • 14:18And so I met with
  • 14:19the surgeon and with the
  • 14:21oncologist,
  • 14:22and I had a lot
  • 14:22of questions. I'd done a
  • 14:23lot of research. I had
  • 14:24two young kids. I was
  • 14:26very scared, and a lot
  • 14:27of my questions were just
  • 14:28brushed off. I felt unheard.
  • 14:30I was told, hey. If
  • 14:31you don't get treatment, you're
  • 14:32gonna die, and they never
  • 14:33answered my questions.
  • 14:34I'd asked for a printout.
  • 14:37They told me about the
  • 14:38side effects of the treatment
  • 14:39and statistics, and I was
  • 14:41given a two page handout.
  • 14:42And I left the doctor
  • 14:43feeling very
  • 14:45unfulfilled and very frustrated,
  • 14:47and I thought there had
  • 14:48to be a better way.
  • 14:49So what it followed was
  • 14:50a four year kind of
  • 14:51journey where I tried a
  • 14:52number of naturopathic things. I
  • 14:54tried hyperbaric oxygen. I tried
  • 14:55colon hydrotherapy. I tried lymphatic
  • 14:57massage. I tried a number
  • 14:59of diets and supplements, IVs,
  • 15:01infrared saunas. But, ultimately, over
  • 15:03the next four years, my
  • 15:04cancer continued to grow until
  • 15:06about September of twenty twenty
  • 15:08four.
  • 15:09I got follow on scans
  • 15:10that showed it had spread
  • 15:11to the lymph nodes in
  • 15:12my in my, armpit, the
  • 15:14axillary lobe. And I knew
  • 15:16that that was a jumping
  • 15:16off place to spread to
  • 15:17other organs. And I was
  • 15:18extremely scared because I was
  • 15:20a, you know, a mother
  • 15:22of two,
  • 15:23with a wonderful career and
  • 15:25a wonderful family, and I
  • 15:26just was scared. I didn't
  • 15:27know what to do, but
  • 15:28I had been very frustrated
  • 15:29by the interactions I'd had
  • 15:31with the doctors up to
  • 15:31that point. All of my
  • 15:33concerns seemed to be brushed
  • 15:34off,
  • 15:35and none of my questions
  • 15:36were answered. And I wasn't
  • 15:37smart enough. I knew I
  • 15:38wasn't smart enough to understand
  • 15:40the medical,
  • 15:41documents that I was reading.
  • 15:43And so I felt very
  • 15:44frustrated and kinda like I
  • 15:45had nowhere to go.
  • 15:46And, ultimately, I got a
  • 15:48referral to Yale, and I
  • 15:50met these two wonderful ladies.
  • 15:51I met doctor Olena and
  • 15:52doctor Kluger.
  • 15:53And I will tell you
  • 15:54that my experience was different
  • 15:55at the get go.
  • 15:57I got a call from
  • 15:58nurse Rachel. She spent about
  • 16:00thirty to forty five minutes
  • 16:01on the phone asking me
  • 16:02what had brought me here.
  • 16:04I'd never had that before.
  • 16:06I really felt heard, and
  • 16:07I felt hopeful.
  • 16:08And I went into the
  • 16:10interactions with the doctors with
  • 16:11a different kind of mindset
  • 16:13just based off of that
  • 16:14interaction.
  • 16:15And then I met doctor
  • 16:16Kluger, and I had a
  • 16:17number of questions. And I
  • 16:18actually warned nurse Rachel, like,
  • 16:19hey. I ask a lot
  • 16:20of questions. It's not because
  • 16:21I'm trying to be I'm
  • 16:22not trying to quiz the
  • 16:23doctors. I'm genuinely curious. My
  • 16:25life is at stake.
  • 16:27I have questions that I
  • 16:28need answered, and she welcomed
  • 16:29the questions. And doctor Kluger
  • 16:31answered every single one of
  • 16:32those questions. Because at the
  • 16:33same time as I was
  • 16:34going through all these naturopathic,
  • 16:36practices, I was still dialing
  • 16:38into the AIM melanoma foundations,
  • 16:40clinics that they would hold.
  • 16:42I was keeping track of
  • 16:43the research and trying to
  • 16:44understand the studies that were
  • 16:45coming out.
  • 16:46And doctor Kluger was phenomenal.
  • 16:48She answered every single one
  • 16:49of my questions and was
  • 16:50able to tell me why
  • 16:51a certain,
  • 16:52procedure or a certain treatment
  • 16:54was not the ideal one
  • 16:55for me or the additional
  • 16:56risk that I held. And
  • 16:57doctor Olena was wonderful. She
  • 16:59came in, and she was
  • 17:00very frank with me about
  • 17:01the surgery and the potential
  • 17:02side effects,
  • 17:04but she was also very
  • 17:04hopeful. And I left that
  • 17:06doctor's appointment for the first
  • 17:08time. I didn't cry leaving
  • 17:09a doctor's appointment because usually
  • 17:10I would I would have
  • 17:11such anxiety and have such
  • 17:12a bad experience that I'd
  • 17:14be shaky and I would
  • 17:15cry, and I left feeling
  • 17:16hopeful.
  • 17:18And that in conjunction with
  • 17:19actually getting the full pamphlet
  • 17:20of information,
  • 17:22I read through it. I
  • 17:23understood all the side effects.
  • 17:24I felt fully informed enough
  • 17:26to make a decision for
  • 17:27my treatment for the first
  • 17:28time, and that it's, you
  • 17:29know, stemmed back to when
  • 17:30I first learned I had
  • 17:31cancer in January of twenty
  • 17:33twenty one.
  • 17:34That was incredible for me.
  • 17:35That was a life changing
  • 17:36experience.
  • 17:37So I started immunotherapy.
  • 17:39I had the double dose
  • 17:40treatment.
  • 17:41It started in November. We
  • 17:42had planned a family trip
  • 17:44to, Germany because it was
  • 17:45my lifelong dream, and we
  • 17:46weren't sure how much time
  • 17:47I had because I was
  • 17:48in pretty bad shape.
  • 17:49We went to Germany. It
  • 17:50was a rough trip,
  • 17:52but I'm glad I went.
  • 17:53And about a week before
  • 17:54the second treatment,
  • 17:56I was like, hey. I
  • 17:57said to my husband, I
  • 17:57think my tumor is shrinking.
  • 17:59And he's like, yeah. Of
  • 18:00course, it's shrinking. You know?
  • 18:01He always had a positive
  • 18:02mindset. He was always trying
  • 18:03to be my cheerleader. And
  • 18:05then, actually, the kind of
  • 18:06reaffirming thing is my teenage
  • 18:07daughter said, hey, mom. I
  • 18:08think your tumor is smaller.
  • 18:09And she hadn't heard me
  • 18:10say anything, so I knew
  • 18:11that, like, something was going
  • 18:12on. And with that, no
  • 18:14matter the side effects that
  • 18:15I was experiencing, I was
  • 18:16so hopeful. I was like,
  • 18:17I can experience any side
  • 18:18effects, and I will get
  • 18:19through this because I'm seeing
  • 18:20results.
  • 18:21For the first time, I'm
  • 18:22seeing results, and I just
  • 18:24had such hope.
  • 18:25So I did three doses
  • 18:26of the double, double treatment.
  • 18:29And then the decision was
  • 18:30made by doctor Olino and
  • 18:31doctor Kluger that it was
  • 18:32time for surgery.
  • 18:34I had surgery. And then
  • 18:35a little while after my
  • 18:36surgery, I learned that I
  • 18:37had something called, I think,
  • 18:38a complete response. Correct me
  • 18:39if I'm wrong. Right? So
  • 18:41my tumor had shrunk drastically,
  • 18:43but what was what had
  • 18:44remained had been completely killed
  • 18:46by the treatments.
  • 18:47I've continued with the single
  • 18:49dose treatments,
  • 18:50for good measure and because
  • 18:51I did have some some,
  • 18:52you know, enlargement in the
  • 18:54lymph nodes up here. And,
  • 18:56today, I had my second
  • 18:57to last,
  • 18:58immunotherapy treatment, and then I
  • 19:00will be being monitored from
  • 19:02here. So I just wanna
  • 19:03say,
  • 19:05I'm I'm thankful for my
  • 19:07journey. I'm thankful for the
  • 19:08things that I did to
  • 19:09improve my overall health because
  • 19:10I think they helped, you
  • 19:11know, strengthen my immune system
  • 19:13and set me up well
  • 19:14for the surgery and the
  • 19:15treatments that followed. But I
  • 19:16am so extremely thankful for
  • 19:18doctor Kluger
  • 19:19and for doctor Olino
  • 19:21for meeting me where I
  • 19:22was at. And every patient
  • 19:23is different. We all have
  • 19:24our own journey, and we
  • 19:25all need different things.
  • 19:27I went to law school.
  • 19:29I'm in the military. I'm
  • 19:30trained to read everything to,
  • 19:31you know, think critically, advise
  • 19:33commanders on risk. So for
  • 19:34me, I needed all the
  • 19:36information to feel like I
  • 19:37could make a well informed
  • 19:38decision before I was comfortable.
  • 19:40Some patients maybe don't need
  • 19:41that. They don't wanna know
  • 19:42because maybe it'll bring down
  • 19:43their, you know, their mindset.
  • 19:44They'll get scared, and they
  • 19:45don't wanna know, and they
  • 19:46just want that. And I
  • 19:47was just so thankful that
  • 19:48I finally found doctors who
  • 19:49were able to meet me
  • 19:50where I was at and
  • 19:51make me feel comfortable enough
  • 19:53to get the treatment that
  • 19:53I needed. And I'm so
  • 19:55incredibly hopeful for now the
  • 19:57long life that I have
  • 19:57ahead of me. Whereas less
  • 19:59than six months ago, we
  • 20:00were planning a final trip
  • 20:01because we weren't sure if
  • 20:02I was gonna make it.
  • 20:03So thank you very much.
  • 20:20That that I have a
  • 20:21collection of that interaction for
  • 20:23something completely different. See,
  • 20:26I saw a lit you're
  • 20:27a lieutenant. What's your rank?
  • 20:28Walk into my office and
  • 20:30tell me what was gonna
  • 20:31happen. I didn't see an
  • 20:32anxious lady who was nervous.
  • 20:35Andy, I guess we just
  • 20:36have a different read on
  • 20:37that reality.
  • 20:38Okay.
  • 20:40That's why the surgeon got
  • 20:42along really well with the
  • 20:43military.
  • 20:48Poor doctor Levinthal now has
  • 20:50the unenviable
  • 20:53to follow with this.
  • 21:00Wow. I mean, that's really
  • 21:01an inspiring story, and, thank
  • 21:03you for sharing. And that's
  • 21:04why we love what we
  • 21:05do and being on our
  • 21:06team here. So I'm John
  • 21:08Leventhal. I'm a dermatologist at
  • 21:10Smilo. I lead the Oncoderma
  • 21:12Clinic. So I'm gonna get
  • 21:13us started by going over
  • 21:14many things that you probably
  • 21:15already know, the diagnosis, risk
  • 21:17factors, prevention, and screening of
  • 21:19melanoma.
  • 21:20You already heard a few
  • 21:21key facts earlier, but skin
  • 21:22cancer is the number one
  • 21:24cancer in the United States.
  • 21:26Melanoma is the fifth most
  • 21:27common. And while basal cell
  • 21:29and squamous account for the
  • 21:30majority, melanoma is the deadliest
  • 21:32form
  • 21:33and,
  • 21:34over a million people live
  • 21:35with it, and we see
  • 21:36it every day. So what
  • 21:37is melanoma? Melanoma is specifically
  • 21:39a tumor, a cancer of
  • 21:41the cells that give our
  • 21:42body pigment. Those are called
  • 21:43melanocytes.
  • 21:45And most cases occur on
  • 21:46the skin in areas that
  • 21:48are completely normal and then
  • 21:49just develop. Some melanomas occur
  • 21:52from an atypical birthmark or
  • 21:54a mole that changes over
  • 21:55time.
  • 21:56So who develops melanoma?
  • 21:58Anyone can develop melanoma. I
  • 22:00have patients who are young,
  • 22:02over a hundred, all genders,
  • 22:04ethnicities.
  • 22:05The majority of people statistically
  • 22:07are older white men over
  • 22:09age fifty. Under age fifty,
  • 22:11more women than men tend
  • 22:12to have melanoma probably due
  • 22:14to tanning habits, but by
  • 22:15age
  • 22:16sixty five plus, more men
  • 22:17have it than women.
  • 22:18And as you can see
  • 22:19in this chart, it's really
  • 22:21incredible. The lifetime risk in
  • 22:22the United States has dramatically
  • 22:24increased over the past decades.
  • 22:26And currently, it's probably about
  • 22:28one in,
  • 22:29probably,
  • 22:30forty has happened in two
  • 22:32thousand twenty six.
  • 22:33So let's go over melanoma.
  • 22:35So
  • 22:36what do we do to
  • 22:37diagnose it? So step one
  • 22:38and the most important step,
  • 22:39well, some of these
  • 22:41slides aren't coming out, but
  • 22:42that's okay, is identifying
  • 22:44a concerning lesion, and that's
  • 22:46really the most important step
  • 22:47here. So we have to
  • 22:48know what does melanoma
  • 22:50look like.
  • 22:52So it's very important to
  • 22:53go over the a, b,
  • 22:54c, d, e's. You're You're
  • 22:55probably familiar with it. A,
  • 22:56asymmetrical.
  • 22:58B, the border's irregular. C,
  • 23:00the color is varied.
  • 23:01D, I don't like diameter
  • 23:03pencil tip eraser because I've
  • 23:04diagnosed some teeny tiny melanomas.
  • 23:06So I prefer dark because
  • 23:08the vast majority of melanomas
  • 23:09that I find are dark.
  • 23:11Not not all of them,
  • 23:11but most of them. And
  • 23:13e is probably the most
  • 23:14important one, and that's evolution.
  • 23:16So the lesion
  • 23:17changes in any way, and
  • 23:18patients are really good at
  • 23:20coming in and saying, you
  • 23:21know, doc? Something's a little
  • 23:22bit different about this mole.
  • 23:23And trusting that patient intuition
  • 23:25is really key.
  • 23:27And so what do melanomas
  • 23:28look like? So the superficial
  • 23:30spreading, these are the most
  • 23:31common types of melanomas. They're
  • 23:33atypical pigmented lesions. You can
  • 23:35see these are some really
  • 23:36classic ones that are pretty
  • 23:37tough to miss. Right? They
  • 23:38really obey all the a,
  • 23:40b, c, d, e rules.
  • 23:41Nodular melanomas,
  • 23:43this is a kind of
  • 23:44an aggressive type. They grow
  • 23:45fast. Patients will come in
  • 23:47and say, this thing just
  • 23:48showed up a few months
  • 23:49ago. It's growing really fast.
  • 23:50These are the ones that
  • 23:52you can't just wait for
  • 23:53your yearly dermatology visit because
  • 23:55you're gonna come in with
  • 23:56a thick melanoma.
  • 23:57Lentigo maligna, we see these
  • 23:59in mostly elderly patients with
  • 24:01lots of lentigos. Those are
  • 24:02sunspots, and these melanomas arise
  • 24:04in these in these chronic
  • 24:06sun damaged areas. Now amelanotic,
  • 24:08this is always a tough
  • 24:10one. And I have a
  • 24:10lot of patients that will
  • 24:11come in and say,
  • 24:12my dermatologist,
  • 24:14you know, before seeing you
  • 24:15thought it was a pimple.
  • 24:16It was pink. It wasn't
  • 24:17dark. They thought it was
  • 24:18a basal cell. So these
  • 24:20are not the most common
  • 24:21presentations, but we see these.
  • 24:23So this is kind of
  • 24:23the rule I was mentioning
  • 24:24earlier. If there's something on
  • 24:26your skin that's changing, evolving,
  • 24:27just doesn't seem right to
  • 24:28you, a sore that's not
  • 24:29healing, you should see a
  • 24:30dermatologist.
  • 24:31And then there's the melanomas
  • 24:33that don't happen in areas
  • 24:34with sun. They happen on
  • 24:35the palms, the soles, under
  • 24:37the nails. These are called
  • 24:38aqual indigenous, and we see
  • 24:40these predominantly in patients with
  • 24:42darker skin types, but not
  • 24:43always. The nail band melanoma,
  • 24:46it it starts in the
  • 24:47nail matrix, and it grows
  • 24:49upward like a black band.
  • 24:50So many of my patients,
  • 24:52after seeing this talk, come
  • 24:53in with a little blood
  • 24:54spot under their nail and
  • 24:55say, doc, I have melanoma.
  • 24:56No. So not like a
  • 24:57little red streak of blood,
  • 24:58but a dark pigmented lesion
  • 25:00that's a band in the
  • 25:01nail fold.
  • 25:02So
  • 25:03what do we do next?
  • 25:04We we obtain a skin
  • 25:05biopsy. That's step two. And
  • 25:07this is really easy for
  • 25:08dermatologists to do. I could
  • 25:10do it in thirty seconds
  • 25:11probably. It just takes a
  • 25:12couple minutes. And the type
  • 25:14of biopsy is really not
  • 25:15that important. Most of the
  • 25:16time, we do a shave
  • 25:17biopsy. But the important thing
  • 25:19is having it read by
  • 25:20a good pathologist. We have
  • 25:21the best pathologist in the
  • 25:22world here at Yale, and
  • 25:24they're able to make the
  • 25:25diagnosis.
  • 25:26And the pathologist will also
  • 25:27tell you how thick the
  • 25:28melanoma tumor is, which is
  • 25:30such an important,
  • 25:31determinant
  • 25:33of how of of survival
  • 25:35prognosis.
  • 25:36Majority of melanomas are thin
  • 25:38stage one. Patients have, you
  • 25:39know, close to ninety nine
  • 25:40percent survival, good outcomes.
  • 25:43So let's keep moving. So
  • 25:44next is risk factors and
  • 25:46prevention.
  • 25:47So like any cancer,
  • 25:49melanoma has,
  • 25:50risk factors that are environmental,
  • 25:53that we can modify, and
  • 25:54has risk factors that are
  • 25:55genetic
  • 25:56and that we cannot, prevent.
  • 25:59Sorry some of these slides
  • 26:00didn't come out when, I
  • 26:01sent the email. So this
  • 26:03slide is showing you, you
  • 26:05can guess what's in the
  • 26:05middle, ultraviolet radiation from the
  • 26:07sun. So that's the number
  • 26:09one risk factor. So ultraviolet
  • 26:11radiation hits the Earth's surface.
  • 26:13Ultraviolet c is pretty much
  • 26:14blocked by the ozone, but
  • 26:16UVA and UVB penetrate the
  • 26:18Earth's surface. UVA can also
  • 26:20penetrate car glass windows. And
  • 26:22what happens is these ultraviolet
  • 26:23rays from the sun cause
  • 26:25damage in our DNA in
  • 26:26the skin, and as the
  • 26:28DNA damage mutations,
  • 26:30over time,
  • 26:32develop,
  • 26:33skin cancer
  • 26:35forms. And, unfortunately,
  • 26:36the type of ultraviolet exposure
  • 26:38that is
  • 26:40the most detrimental
  • 26:41is the type we love
  • 26:42the most. You know, sunny
  • 26:44vacations at the beach, short,
  • 26:45intense bursts of ultraviolet. And
  • 26:48the majority of melanomas are
  • 26:50attributed to to,
  • 26:51ultraviolet radiation.
  • 26:53And we know that sunburns
  • 26:54in childhood matter a lot,
  • 26:56but it's really the data
  • 26:57shows it's cumulative sunburns. I
  • 26:59have many patients that say,
  • 27:00doc, I'm probably already in
  • 27:02trouble. I burned a lot.
  • 27:03I should just live out
  • 27:04my life and enjoy myself
  • 27:05in the sun. I say,
  • 27:06yes. Your childhood sunburns hurt
  • 27:08you, but we know from
  • 27:09the data it's really cumulative
  • 27:11sun damage. So you can
  • 27:13reduce the total burden of
  • 27:14ultraviolet damage. You can reduce
  • 27:16the future risk of developing
  • 27:18melanoma.
  • 27:18We also know that tanning
  • 27:20beds are a major risk
  • 27:22factor.
  • 27:22Studies have shown that young
  • 27:24women in particular,
  • 27:26they did a study, had
  • 27:27a six fold increased risk
  • 27:28of developing melanoma. In Connecticut,
  • 27:30it's actually banned now, indoor
  • 27:31tanning for minors. Many states,
  • 27:34minors can still do indoor
  • 27:35tanning beds.
  • 27:36A question I get asked
  • 27:37a lot. What about spray
  • 27:38tan? Is that gonna cause
  • 27:40melanoma?
  • 27:40So spray tanning is okay.
  • 27:42You just don't wanna overdo
  • 27:43it and look like a
  • 27:44carrot, like Ross from Friends.
  • 27:46But spray tanning is fine.
  • 27:48So let's go over the
  • 27:49risk factors that we,
  • 27:51can change. These are these
  • 27:52are the genetic risk factors.
  • 27:53And, again, my apologies about
  • 27:55the slides, but having over
  • 27:57a hundred moles is a
  • 27:58risk factor. Having atypical moles,
  • 28:01having lots of sunspots, all
  • 28:03of these are risk factors
  • 28:04for developing melanoma.
  • 28:05And you can see the
  • 28:06difference between,
  • 28:08skin that has never seen
  • 28:09the sun
  • 28:10versus skin that has seen
  • 28:11the sun underneath, all these,
  • 28:13sunspots and formation of, these
  • 28:15these these lentigels, we call
  • 28:17them. We also know that
  • 28:18having light skin, light hair,
  • 28:20blue eyes, freckles, all of
  • 28:21that increases a risk of
  • 28:22melanoma.
  • 28:23And a lot of our
  • 28:24patients with melanoma have these
  • 28:25risk factors.
  • 28:26So if you look in
  • 28:27the mirror and if you
  • 28:28look a little bit like
  • 28:29Julianne Moore, which is a
  • 28:30great thing, you should be
  • 28:31ultra, you know, protective of
  • 28:32yourself in the sun.
  • 28:34And then there's genetics, and
  • 28:35we can change our genetics.
  • 28:37Right? But it's important to
  • 28:38know about it. If you've
  • 28:39had a skin cancer, you
  • 28:41have an increased risk of
  • 28:41getting melanoma. You have a
  • 28:43forty percent lifetime risk of
  • 28:44getting another skin cancer if
  • 28:46you've had a melanoma. If
  • 28:47you have a first degree
  • 28:48relative with melanoma,
  • 28:49it doubles your risk. And
  • 28:51we know that there's genetic
  • 28:52syndromes, and I have some
  • 28:53of these patients in my
  • 28:54practice
  • 28:55where genes get passed on
  • 28:56from generation to generation, and
  • 28:58there's a very strong family
  • 28:59history of melanoma
  • 29:00and other cancers like pancreatic
  • 29:02cancer. And so I always
  • 29:03go by the rule of
  • 29:04threes. If you've had three
  • 29:06melanomas personally
  • 29:07or if you know three
  • 29:08first degree relatives in your
  • 29:10family that had melanoma or
  • 29:11pancreatic,
  • 29:12ask your doctor about genetic
  • 29:14testing.
  • 29:17And then finally,
  • 29:18prevention.
  • 29:19So we know ultraviolet radiation
  • 29:21is the number one modifiable
  • 29:22risk factor. Right? So avoid
  • 29:24tanning, protect yourself in the
  • 29:25sun. I get asked a
  • 29:27thousand times a day, well,
  • 29:28what sunscreen should I use?
  • 29:29My patients bring in, like,
  • 29:30twenty of them, and they're
  • 29:31so concerned with which one
  • 29:32to use. They're not using
  • 29:33any of them. And I
  • 29:34say, we need to simplify
  • 29:35this. Okay?
  • 29:37The best sunscreen is the
  • 29:38one that you're gonna use.
  • 29:40SPF thirty and above, the
  • 29:41data shows that's really probably
  • 29:43the number you need. Anything
  • 29:45above that, like SPF a
  • 29:46hundred, is much more expensive
  • 29:47and probably doesn't give you
  • 29:48a whole lot more benefit.
  • 29:49But SPF thirty and above,
  • 29:51that's what you're aiming for.
  • 29:52Reapplying it every few hours
  • 29:54when you're outdoors. I mean,
  • 29:55that's really the big thing.
  • 29:56Wearing a hat, sun protective
  • 29:58clothing, and just using common
  • 30:00sense. You can still enjoy
  • 30:01your summer, but you should
  • 30:02protect your skin. Then the
  • 30:04last part of the talk
  • 30:05are what can dermatologists do,
  • 30:07and is screening important?
  • 30:10So the United States Preventative
  • 30:11Services Task Force, they say
  • 30:13that not everyone on the
  • 30:14planet needs a dermatologist
  • 30:16for skin cancer screening.
  • 30:18There's too many people. And
  • 30:19so what we do is
  • 30:21we don't recommend that everyone
  • 30:22should be screened. But if
  • 30:24you are an at risk
  • 30:25individual, then you should. If
  • 30:26you've had skin cancer before,
  • 30:28if if you have a
  • 30:28strong family history, if you
  • 30:30look in the mirror and
  • 30:31you're covered in atypical moles
  • 30:32and hundreds of moles, you're
  • 30:33someone who should see a
  • 30:34dermatologist.
  • 30:36Definitely see a dermatologist who's
  • 30:37gonna do a thorough total
  • 30:38body skin exam.
  • 30:40Does not take a long
  • 30:41time, but you can still
  • 30:42be very thorough in a
  • 30:43short amount of time. A
  • 30:44dermatologist that looks at you
  • 30:45from across the room is
  • 30:46not the one that you
  • 30:47should be seeing for a
  • 30:48skin check.
  • 30:49And youth education programs like
  • 30:52we spoke about earlier, really
  • 30:53important.
  • 30:54And so the evidence has
  • 30:56shown that dermatologists
  • 30:57find melanoma tumors that are
  • 30:59thin, thinner than the general
  • 31:00population, thinner than primary care
  • 31:02doctors, and so we know
  • 31:03the thickness is super important.
  • 31:05Picking up a thin melanoma
  • 31:07earlier on is crucial. And
  • 31:09we also know from studies
  • 31:10that patients can be taught
  • 31:11what to look for, doing
  • 31:12skin checks, looking in the
  • 31:14mirror every month or so.
  • 31:15And so I always like
  • 31:16to tell patients, look for
  • 31:18the ugly duckling sign. Look
  • 31:19for something on your skin
  • 31:20that's different
  • 31:22from other moles, changing. That's
  • 31:24something you should bring to
  • 31:25my attention. Don't wait if
  • 31:26it develops a month after
  • 31:27hour visit for our yearly
  • 31:29skin check.
  • 31:31What can we use as
  • 31:32dermatologists? So we have certain
  • 31:33tools.
  • 31:34My patients know I don't
  • 31:35I don't go anywhere without
  • 31:36my dermatoscope, my dermlight. It's
  • 31:38a magnifying lens. It allows
  • 31:40us to look at them
  • 31:40all, which should the naked
  • 31:41eye might seem okay. But
  • 31:43then with my dermlight, I
  • 31:44might see some pigment changes
  • 31:45that are abnormal, so I'll
  • 31:47take a skin biopsy. So
  • 31:48we all use dermatoscope.
  • 31:50We sometimes do digital photography.
  • 31:52I have some patients that
  • 31:53are covered in atypical moles.
  • 31:54We'll take photos and look
  • 31:55over time. I still think
  • 31:57the patient doctor interaction is
  • 31:59more important than some new
  • 32:01AI tool saying that something
  • 32:03may have changed because some
  • 32:04changes are okay.
  • 32:06And then finally, I'll end
  • 32:07by saying,
  • 32:09advocate for yourself and your
  • 32:10skin. Do do monthly or
  • 32:11every couple months skin checks
  • 32:13on yourself or your partners.
  • 32:14All you need is a
  • 32:16mirror and a handheld mirror,
  • 32:17and I have a little
  • 32:18demonstration here.
  • 32:20Let's
  • 32:23see.
  • 32:33But it's can't like it.
  • 32:45Look in the scalp,
  • 32:47try to spread the toes,
  • 32:49gotta look in the buttock,
  • 32:51look in the areas,
  • 32:53look in the sun, look
  • 32:55in the mouth to purr
  • 32:55on the back.
  • 33:00So a nice thorough skin
  • 33:01exam. So with that, I'll
  • 33:02end, and I look forward
  • 33:03to taking questions later. Thank
  • 33:05you.
  • 33:19Just a little shorter than
  • 33:20doctor Leventhal.
  • 33:23So I'm gonna talk about
  • 33:24something that's been a real
  • 33:25paradigm
  • 33:26shift pretty much in the
  • 33:27last five years and really,
  • 33:28you know, highlights,
  • 33:30the journey that that Brandy
  • 33:31spoke a little bit about,
  • 33:32and and that's the the
  • 33:33shift towards what we call
  • 33:34neoadjuvant
  • 33:35therapy.
  • 33:37So, again, historically, we talk
  • 33:39about removing the skin, removing
  • 33:42lymph nodes. Some of you
  • 33:43may have had what we
  • 33:44call a wide local excision
  • 33:45and a sentinel node biopsy
  • 33:46that are in the audience.
  • 33:49But,
  • 33:50you know, unfortunately, melanoma could
  • 33:52spread to other locations. And,
  • 33:54again, in the time before
  • 33:55we had immune therapy,
  • 33:58people sometimes had locations surgeons
  • 34:00could remove and some of
  • 34:01them did very well and
  • 34:02others didn't have that same
  • 34:04outcome.
  • 34:06And again, here, lymph nodes,
  • 34:08lots of people did pretty
  • 34:09well. Lung, not so well.
  • 34:11Other places.
  • 34:12Right? This is again where
  • 34:13we started from when we
  • 34:15had hopes and prayers and
  • 34:16surgery and not much else.
  • 34:18And then again, many of
  • 34:20you in the room may
  • 34:20have received or have now
  • 34:22heard about
  • 34:23what was
  • 34:24practice changing, Nobel Prize winning
  • 34:27work,
  • 34:29that
  • 34:30came into clinical trials. And
  • 34:32melanoma was one of the
  • 34:33first fields
  • 34:34actually to study this and
  • 34:37patients, again, some of you
  • 34:38that are even in the
  • 34:38audience today, some of the
  • 34:39first people who received this,
  • 34:41actually received it at Yale.
  • 34:45And with this, people again,
  • 34:46the old paradigm was
  • 34:48after surgery. So, again, someone
  • 34:50would show up. They'd have
  • 34:51tumors in locations. We take
  • 34:53them out, particularly if they
  • 34:54were in the lymph nodes,
  • 34:55and then we would give
  • 34:56people immune therapy. And people
  • 34:58started saying this. Is this
  • 35:00the best way to go
  • 35:01about this? You know, scientifically,
  • 35:03does this make
  • 35:04sense?
  • 35:05Right? So, you know, as
  • 35:06with everything, we want to
  • 35:07say, what are we doing?
  • 35:09This has been successful, but
  • 35:11how can we improve upon
  • 35:12it? How can we learn
  • 35:13more? How can we do
  • 35:14better?
  • 35:16So
  • 35:17again, particularly in patients who
  • 35:19had melanoma that we could
  • 35:21feel, you know, areas in
  • 35:23the the lymph nodes,
  • 35:25places that we could see,
  • 35:26areas in the skin, we
  • 35:27call those in transits.
  • 35:29And then also certain places
  • 35:30where you could remove something
  • 35:32with an operation, but maybe
  • 35:34it wasn't an emergency.
  • 35:35Sometimes a spot in the
  • 35:36lung, a spot in the
  • 35:37bowel.
  • 35:39And
  • 35:40why did we think that?
  • 35:41Again, if you kind of
  • 35:42think, you know, like a
  • 35:43scientist and a doctor, you
  • 35:45know.
  • 35:46But again, a lot of
  • 35:47common sense. If you have
  • 35:48something in place and you
  • 35:49give someone a treatment,
  • 35:51you can kind of see
  • 35:52what it's how it's working.
  • 35:53Right? It shrinks.
  • 35:54You know, Brandy had that
  • 35:56experience.
  • 35:57Sometimes, again, when it shrinks,
  • 35:58it makes your operation
  • 36:00safer to do. So if
  • 36:01it works, you know, that's
  • 36:02a good reason to do
  • 36:03this.
  • 36:04If we look at our
  • 36:05immune system,
  • 36:06again, if the target's in
  • 36:08place, there's some thought that
  • 36:09maybe we get a better
  • 36:10variety of t cells that
  • 36:12are surrounding the tumor that
  • 36:14may persist longer even after
  • 36:16the tumor is removed.
  • 36:19And, again, for learning for
  • 36:21the next patient, you know,
  • 36:22for the next trial too,
  • 36:24we learn every single time
  • 36:25that we have a response
  • 36:27or we don't have a
  • 36:28response
  • 36:29from our patients and from
  • 36:30the samples that are that
  • 36:31are garnered from that. And
  • 36:33the other thing too is,
  • 36:34you know, there's nothing worse,
  • 36:35you know, particularly being the
  • 36:36surgeon,
  • 36:37then you do a a
  • 36:39big operation.
  • 36:40You think you help someone,
  • 36:42and man, the melanoma
  • 36:44is back. Right? And you
  • 36:45say, did we miss an
  • 36:46opportunity to maybe treat that
  • 36:48person earlier with something that
  • 36:49would be more effective?
  • 36:53So again, this is just
  • 36:54a little cartoon illustration of
  • 36:56kind of a little bit
  • 36:57more of that that concept
  • 36:59of having these different t
  • 37:01cells in the area. You
  • 37:02know, if we take that
  • 37:03out first,
  • 37:04there's less for the immune
  • 37:06system to recognize. So people
  • 37:07were really saying, you know,
  • 37:10what order should we do
  • 37:11this at?
  • 37:13So,
  • 37:14again, one of the first
  • 37:15thing was kind of the
  • 37:16double therapy that that Brandy
  • 37:18had talked to a little
  • 37:19bit. And this was some
  • 37:20of the early studies trying
  • 37:21to say, okay, how do
  • 37:22we get the right combination?
  • 37:24One that we don't want
  • 37:25to be too toxic,
  • 37:27but one that we want
  • 37:28to work. Right? Because we
  • 37:29always balance. What is the
  • 37:30treatment due to the tumor
  • 37:32and what does it do
  • 37:33to our patient? Right?
  • 37:34Both are important.
  • 37:38So this was kind of
  • 37:39the the winner that then
  • 37:40went through to the next
  • 37:41round of trials.
  • 37:44And we also said too,
  • 37:45again, could we just do
  • 37:46a single? Right. So this
  • 37:48is what this was what
  • 37:49we call the swab trial.
  • 37:50That was the organization that
  • 37:51did that did this across
  • 37:53patients. This is just with
  • 37:54a single type of immune
  • 37:55therapy.
  • 37:56Seeing a difference between in
  • 37:58blue, the people who got
  • 37:59immune therapy before surgery, the
  • 38:01red are people who had
  • 38:03surgery and then had the
  • 38:04immune therapy,
  • 38:05and seeing some responses.
  • 38:08We think probably the doublet,
  • 38:10you know, maybe a little
  • 38:11bit stronger,
  • 38:12but it's also got more
  • 38:14side effects. But again, this
  • 38:15is a big trial that
  • 38:16was done called the Nadina
  • 38:18trial. And it also said,
  • 38:20why don't we learn
  • 38:21from what the tumor does?
  • 38:23Do we need to do
  • 38:25you know, what kind of
  • 38:26an operation do we need
  • 38:27to do? Do we need
  • 38:28to give people more treatment
  • 38:30after? Right? So, you know,
  • 38:32in in in our best
  • 38:33circumstances, you know, if we
  • 38:34give someone a therapy
  • 38:36and
  • 38:37the pathologist
  • 38:38examines it and says all
  • 38:39the melanoma's dead and been
  • 38:40replaced,
  • 38:41do they need to get
  • 38:42more treatment? Right? So these
  • 38:43are all of the things
  • 38:44because, again, the treatments can
  • 38:46have side effects. We don't
  • 38:47know when they'll come. Some
  • 38:48people will never get them.
  • 38:49Sometimes they'll get them late.
  • 38:51Right? So everything we say,
  • 38:52okay. How can we be
  • 38:53smarter about what we're doing?
  • 38:56So again, in this again
  • 38:57again in blue, the people
  • 38:58who got the doublet
  • 39:00immune therapy first. Right? That's
  • 39:02the blue line. The red
  • 39:04line under there. And when
  • 39:05we look at, you know,
  • 39:07did something happen?
  • 39:08Was there an event that
  • 39:09a tumor come back or
  • 39:11not? You know, you see,
  • 39:12you know, lasting, you know,
  • 39:14almost to about three years,
  • 39:16you know, there were people
  • 39:17who had really, really good
  • 39:18responses.
  • 39:19And the thing that becomes
  • 39:20actually the most important is
  • 39:22when we break it down
  • 39:23by
  • 39:24in people who
  • 39:25when the pathologist examined it
  • 39:27and they had what we
  • 39:28called a major pathologic response.
  • 39:30Right? They examined. They said,
  • 39:31man, this immune therapy took
  • 39:33care of the tumor.
  • 39:35The number of people that
  • 39:36the melanoma then came back
  • 39:37later
  • 39:38was actually a rarer event.
  • 39:40And again, this is kind
  • 39:41of what we we talk
  • 39:42about, you know, evolving, cutting
  • 39:45edge. You know, it's taken
  • 39:46many years to get there
  • 39:48since the first trials.
  • 39:50And we, again, we do
  • 39:51worry. Right? We do worry
  • 39:53if someone gets a a
  • 39:54side effect as well. And,
  • 39:56you know, even though we're
  • 39:57we're intending to shrink the
  • 39:59tumor and maybe having a
  • 40:00good response,
  • 40:01but, again, not everyone
  • 40:03is gonna have a great
  • 40:04response.
  • 40:06And we're finding that out
  • 40:07earlier too, so we can
  • 40:08start thinking about what's the
  • 40:10next thing. Okay. And that
  • 40:11also becomes important and valuable.
  • 40:16So just to to conclude,
  • 40:18you know, there's other
  • 40:19types of recipes that are
  • 40:21being investigated.
  • 40:22Right. So there's another type
  • 40:24that some people here may
  • 40:25have been exposed to something
  • 40:27called lag three. There's a
  • 40:28couple of different companies with
  • 40:30different versions
  • 40:31that's ongoing to see is
  • 40:33that a better balance between
  • 40:34getting a good response and
  • 40:36less side effect.
  • 40:38There's gonna be a big
  • 40:39study that changed even how
  • 40:41we manage people's lymph nodes.
  • 40:43And now in the setting
  • 40:44of people who have lymph
  • 40:45nodes that we can feel,
  • 40:46they get therapy.
  • 40:48As a surgeon, do I
  • 40:49have to take them all
  • 40:49out?
  • 40:50Am I are you gonna
  • 40:51live longer and live better
  • 40:53if I do that?
  • 40:54Or
  • 40:55maybe if you started with
  • 40:56one or two, do I
  • 40:57just take the ones that
  • 40:58we know and we leave
  • 40:59the rest of the lymph
  • 40:59nodes? Almost what I do
  • 41:01when I do a central
  • 41:02node biopsy on folks.
  • 41:04There's other blood markers again
  • 41:05that people may be hearing
  • 41:07a little bit about. I
  • 41:08don't know if doctor Tran
  • 41:09or doctor Ishizuko mentioned that
  • 41:11things like circulating tumor DNA,
  • 41:13complementary
  • 41:14blood tests that may help
  • 41:15us detect things and to
  • 41:17say, well, if we see
  • 41:18this combination,
  • 41:19maybe we should continue to
  • 41:21give people treatment, things that
  • 41:22we learn, things that we
  • 41:24adapt to by the knowledge
  • 41:25that we garner.
  • 41:26Probably the most important thing
  • 41:28is the people who are
  • 41:29not responding.
  • 41:30What should we do for
  • 41:31them? Right. So that's why
  • 41:33when we're all done working
  • 41:34in clinic, all of us
  • 41:35go to the lab and
  • 41:36we say, what what's the
  • 41:38next thing that we can
  • 41:39do and why we at
  • 41:40our meetings that everyone's working
  • 41:41hard to think about? What
  • 41:42do we do for the
  • 41:43people we can't help right
  • 41:44now?
  • 41:45Should we do it in
  • 41:46people who have bad melanomas
  • 41:48that don't go to lymph
  • 41:50nodes that start in the
  • 41:51skin that are just big
  • 41:52and aggressive and we're worried
  • 41:54about them?
  • 41:55That's some of the things
  • 41:56that are being studied.
  • 41:57And again, with everything we
  • 41:59wanna figure out as the
  • 42:00earliest point
  • 42:02whether things are responding.
  • 42:04Right? Because those are the
  • 42:05people we wanna continue. And
  • 42:06again, if we can figure
  • 42:07that out, we wanna stop
  • 42:09a therapy that's not helping.
  • 42:10Right? Because then we're only
  • 42:11causing potential harm and not
  • 42:14good.
  • 42:15So
  • 42:17with that, I will leave
  • 42:18you with my favorite cartoon.
  • 42:28Alright.
  • 42:29As usual, I speak fast.
  • 42:31So doctor Tran
  • 42:38Kinda wish I had cartoons
  • 42:40and
  • 42:41pet videos now that again
  • 42:43so I'm gonna kinda dovetail
  • 42:45along to what doctor Alino
  • 42:47had already started. We're gonna
  • 42:48be talking about systemic therapies
  • 42:50and how we think about
  • 42:51treating advanced melanomas.
  • 42:53I think one of the
  • 42:54main takeaways that I want
  • 42:56to familiarize everyone with tonight
  • 42:58is a lot of these
  • 42:59drugs that you may have
  • 43:00heard about on the news
  • 43:02or in clinic from your
  • 43:03doctors, kinda recognizing
  • 43:05exactly how they work, what
  • 43:07kind of class of drugs
  • 43:09they are, when we determine
  • 43:11using one versus another because
  • 43:13there are differences when one
  • 43:14is actually more potent,
  • 43:16more effective, less toxic versus
  • 43:18another. And then how we
  • 43:20also think about sequencing therapies
  • 43:22too to carry on what
  • 43:23doctor Lina had spoken about.
  • 43:25And so melanoma, you know,
  • 43:27we stage melanomas to try
  • 43:28to figure out what we
  • 43:29need to do after the
  • 43:30fact. Right? How do we
  • 43:31keep it at bay? How
  • 43:32do we prevent it from
  • 43:33coming back?
  • 43:34So for stage one melanomas,
  • 43:36you know, the overall survival
  • 43:38is pretty good.
  • 43:40Ninety nine percent of five
  • 43:42years, ninety eight percent of
  • 43:43people are alive without having,
  • 43:45succumb to their melanoma
  • 43:47for early stage one a's.
  • 43:49And you can see oftentimes
  • 43:51as the stage increases, meaning
  • 43:54stage two melanomas being thicker,
  • 43:55stage three melanomas
  • 43:57involving those lymph nodes, stage
  • 43:59four melanomas become metastatic
  • 44:01that unfortunately
  • 44:02those survival outcomes do drop
  • 44:05off.
  • 44:06So how can we intervene?
  • 44:09So again, upfront early stage
  • 44:11melanomas, they go directly to
  • 44:12my surgical colleagues, doctor Alina,
  • 44:14doctor Westlake.
  • 44:15They just get cut out,
  • 44:17you know, hopefully,
  • 44:19you know, we can figure
  • 44:20out, we can get get
  • 44:21control over that. There are
  • 44:23specific nomograms that are actually
  • 44:24publicly available. We just plug
  • 44:26in the thickness,
  • 44:28some risk factors associated with
  • 44:30the pathology and figure out
  • 44:31exactly what the risk is
  • 44:33for that limp that melanoma
  • 44:34to travel into the lymph
  • 44:36node to then just make
  • 44:37a very personalized decision
  • 44:39about whether or not a
  • 44:40lymph node biopsy is needed.
  • 44:42Because we wanna we don't
  • 44:43necessarily want to recommend more
  • 44:45surgery. That's not gonna change
  • 44:47the clinical outcome.
  • 44:49Thicker melanomas,
  • 44:50again, those get excisions
  • 44:52plus or minus the sentinel
  • 44:53lymph node biopsy.
  • 44:55And then right now we're
  • 44:56trying to figure out, okay,
  • 44:58after that stage two melanoma
  • 45:00comes out, do we offer
  • 45:01additional treatments
  • 45:03due to help minimize the
  • 45:04risk of recurrence?
  • 45:06For stage three melanoma, certainly,
  • 45:08that was the the paradigm.
  • 45:11Now as we're learning more
  • 45:12about how to treat these
  • 45:14upfront,
  • 45:15maybe a little bit of
  • 45:16systemic therapy followed by surgery
  • 45:19to help minimize the long
  • 45:20term need for any additional
  • 45:21therapy would actually be beneficial.
  • 45:23And then we'll also talk
  • 45:25about stage four disease or
  • 45:26basically distant metastatic
  • 45:28disease. So, basically, the melanoma
  • 45:30has now traveled to other
  • 45:31sites in the body.
  • 45:34So when we think about
  • 45:35melanoma specific survival,
  • 45:37again, we're thankfully
  • 45:39not focused on those individuals
  • 45:41who saw doctor Leventhal had
  • 45:43their early stage melanoma that
  • 45:45was very thick or sorry,
  • 45:47very thin excised.
  • 45:48We're kind of focusing on
  • 45:50where we can move the
  • 45:52field, where we can make
  • 45:53changes to help improve patient
  • 45:56outcomes
  • 45:56long term.
  • 45:58And so,
  • 45:59yeah, past studies have shown
  • 46:01sometimes earlier interventions, not waiting
  • 46:04necessarily until the diseases come
  • 46:05back, but actually prophylactically
  • 46:08just starting some form of
  • 46:09treatment
  • 46:10for these higher risk melanomas
  • 46:12may actually be beneficial in
  • 46:14decreasing the risk for recurrence.
  • 46:16And so it's always,
  • 46:19counterbalanced
  • 46:19by toxicity
  • 46:21too. Everything that we prescribe
  • 46:22has certain side effects.
  • 46:24And so does that make
  • 46:25sense to the individual in
  • 46:27front of us? Do those
  • 46:28side effects
  • 46:29outweigh the potential benefits,
  • 46:32verse,
  • 46:33vice versa.
  • 46:35And I'm sorry again, they're
  • 46:36like Doctor. Levinthal, there's a
  • 46:38little bit of a disconnect,
  • 46:39when the slides were compiled
  • 46:41here.
  • 46:42When we, we also then
  • 46:44do consider new adjuvant treatment
  • 46:46because these drugs can work
  • 46:47very well in the metastatic
  • 46:49setting. We're trying to see
  • 46:51if they can work even
  • 46:52better in the stage three
  • 46:54setting
  • 46:55or even moving them up
  • 46:56front, giving a little bit
  • 46:57of treatment followed by
  • 46:59surgery. And then deciding based
  • 47:01on the pathology, whether or
  • 47:03not additional treatment is needed.
  • 47:05Now we always hark about
  • 47:07tumor profiling and these more
  • 47:09advanced melanomas. You know, we
  • 47:11gotta wait for the tumor
  • 47:12profiling to come back before
  • 47:14we can make a treatment
  • 47:15recommendation.
  • 47:16That's because about in half
  • 47:18of skin related UV exposed
  • 47:20melanomas,
  • 47:22people can have a BRAF
  • 47:23mutation
  • 47:24and that can be a
  • 47:25game changer when we talk
  • 47:26about adjuvant treatment or treatment
  • 47:28after surgery to help minimize
  • 47:29the risk of recurrence.
  • 47:32BRAF mutations are unfortunately exclusive
  • 47:35to NRAS mutations. So you
  • 47:36have one or the other
  • 47:37upfront.
  • 47:38You know, sometimes we have
  • 47:40individuals who
  • 47:42develop,
  • 47:43nodal metal melanoma,
  • 47:45and we don't really know
  • 47:46where the primary site is.
  • 47:48So sometimes these mutations
  • 47:50also help us to decipher
  • 47:51where that melanoma originated from.
  • 47:54Sometimes melanomas can regress automatically,
  • 47:57with a with an,
  • 47:59immune response upfront.
  • 48:02Acral melanomas tend to have
  • 48:03kit mutations.
  • 48:05Mucosal melanomas can oftentimes have
  • 48:07kit mutations, and then uveal
  • 48:09melanoma is its own separate
  • 48:10thing. It generally has a
  • 48:12distinct,
  • 48:13mutational profile unique to that.
  • 48:17The other thing aside from
  • 48:19tumor mutational status, that BRAF
  • 48:21mutation
  • 48:23is tumor mutational burden too.
  • 48:25So as you can imagine
  • 48:27over that chronic lifetime of
  • 48:28unfortunate sun exposure,
  • 48:31mutations
  • 48:32add up and so that
  • 48:33what that translates to is,
  • 48:35the increase in number of
  • 48:36mutations per megabase of DNA.
  • 48:39The higher you have basically
  • 48:42the more mutations that you
  • 48:43have that can increase your
  • 48:45chances of actually responding to
  • 48:48immune therapy, it's a catch
  • 48:49twenty two.
  • 48:51This actually led to the
  • 48:52first tumor agnostic approval for
  • 48:55an anti cancer treatment.
  • 48:57So this led to the
  • 48:58approval of immune therapy, regardless
  • 49:01of the cancer type. If
  • 49:02you had a high enough
  • 49:03tumor mutational burden,
  • 49:05melanomas
  • 49:06given that sun exposure is,
  • 49:07has one of the highest
  • 49:09mutational burdens.
  • 49:12So immunotherapy,
  • 49:14you know, we, we hear
  • 49:15a lot about different types
  • 49:16of immune therapy, but there's
  • 49:18actually a number of different
  • 49:19flavors of immune therapy.
  • 49:21There's what we consider those
  • 49:23immune checkpoint inhibitors, those monoclonal
  • 49:26antibodies that we give Ivy
  • 49:27every few weeks.
  • 49:29There's also cytokine therapies,
  • 49:31which is kind of the
  • 49:32old version of immune therapy
  • 49:34that's now resurfacing and having
  • 49:36a renewed life in terms
  • 49:38of the emerging clinical trials.
  • 49:40There is now approvals
  • 49:42in adopted cell transfer
  • 49:44to so t cell based
  • 49:46therapies,
  • 49:46till therapies.
  • 49:48There's cancer vaccines that are
  • 49:50in clinical trials
  • 49:52there's also oncolytic virus
  • 49:54all of these different mechanisms
  • 49:57basically help to augment your
  • 49:59own body's ability to fight
  • 50:01off the cancer
  • 50:03So there was a dearth
  • 50:05of
  • 50:05systemic therapy options thirty years
  • 50:08ago. It was chemotherapy
  • 50:10and stage four melanomas
  • 50:12were inevitably
  • 50:13fatal.
  • 50:15Since then though, thankfully with
  • 50:17the advent of immune therapy,
  • 50:18immune checkpoint inhibitors, we've had
  • 50:20this resurgence
  • 50:22of in our research interest
  • 50:24in how do we
  • 50:26utilize the immune system,
  • 50:28leverage it to our advantage,
  • 50:29to attack and directly destroy
  • 50:31melanoma cells. So thankfully in
  • 50:33the past fifteen years, we've
  • 50:35seen a lot of new
  • 50:36developments,
  • 50:37drug developments, small molecule inhibitors,
  • 50:40that will help to combat
  • 50:42melanoma.
  • 50:43So,
  • 50:45you know, ongoing research as
  • 50:46evidenced by the ellipsis here.
  • 50:48So more to come,
  • 50:49recently there's optula, which is
  • 50:51combination anti PD one anti
  • 50:54lag three there's to benefit
  • 50:55us that got approved for
  • 50:57uveal melanomas.
  • 50:59And then finally,
  • 51:00lip Aliso, which is till
  • 51:02therapy.
  • 51:04So, as I said, there's
  • 51:05different treatment buckets and a
  • 51:06lot of people come to
  • 51:08me and say, oh, my
  • 51:09insurance labeled the immune therapy
  • 51:11as chemotherapy. I'm confused. What
  • 51:13am I getting exactly?
  • 51:15So chemotherapy,
  • 51:16we talk about it only
  • 51:18in the setting where
  • 51:20all else fails, just because
  • 51:21we know
  • 51:23a lot of these treatments,
  • 51:24carbotaxel,
  • 51:25carbazine,
  • 51:27temozolomide
  • 51:28temodar
  • 51:29really have limited efficacy
  • 51:31they're not really seen as
  • 51:32curative
  • 51:33and so they're also toxic
  • 51:35so we kind of reserve
  • 51:36them kind of as a
  • 51:38last resort it's really not
  • 51:40a viable option
  • 51:41Then we have targeted therapies.
  • 51:43So it's targeted
  • 51:45specifically towards a mutation.
  • 51:47So this is very personalized
  • 51:49medicine here. So if you
  • 51:51have these mutations then potentially
  • 51:54there
  • 51:54is a pill that can
  • 51:56target that mutation.
  • 51:57So the most common one
  • 51:58that we see in melanoma
  • 52:00are B RAF mutations. So
  • 52:01we have B RAF and
  • 52:03MEC inhibitors targeting that again,
  • 52:05there are kit inhibitors that
  • 52:06are NTRK inhibitors that are
  • 52:08Ross inhibitors as well.
  • 52:10Then there's what we traditionally
  • 52:12think of as immune therapy.
  • 52:14So drugs like ipinivo,
  • 52:16up dual lag, which is
  • 52:18nivo rella,
  • 52:19and then the single agent
  • 52:20anti PD ones, nivo or
  • 52:22Keytruda pembrolizumab,
  • 52:24and then kind of our
  • 52:25old standard,
  • 52:26cytokine therapy. So like high
  • 52:28dose IL two, for example.
  • 52:30And then finally,
  • 52:31The next advent is cell
  • 52:33therapy. So this is till
  • 52:34this is tumor infiltrating leukocyte
  • 52:37therapy. It's where we actually
  • 52:39harvest,
  • 52:40tumor, grow out the t
  • 52:41cells,
  • 52:42and reinfuse them into patients.
  • 52:45It's a one time treatment,
  • 52:46but it is quite,
  • 52:48an involved,
  • 52:49process.
  • 52:51So immune therapy back in
  • 52:52the day when I was,
  • 52:54a medical student, we were
  • 52:56giving high dose IL two.
  • 52:57That was kind of the
  • 52:59standard treatment
  • 53:00for metastatic melanoma.
  • 53:03As you can see, the
  • 53:04overall survival
  • 53:06probability for these patients, it
  • 53:08wasn't great. It was also
  • 53:09really toxic, very difficult for
  • 53:11patients to get through lots
  • 53:13lots of issues with blood
  • 53:14pressure support,
  • 53:17edema, etcetera.
  • 53:18So since then, kind of
  • 53:20the central,
  • 53:22study looking at immune therapy
  • 53:25evaluated a combination of ipi
  • 53:27and evo. And there's a
  • 53:28central idea that the more
  • 53:29different types of immune therapies
  • 53:31you combine,
  • 53:32the higher the response rate.
  • 53:34The trade off is the
  • 53:35higher the toxicity too.
  • 53:36And so for every individual,
  • 53:38we make a very personalized
  • 53:40judgment call about what their
  • 53:42ultimate goals are and tailor
  • 53:44the treatment based on how
  • 53:45much disease they have, where
  • 53:47that diseases
  • 53:48have, so that we can
  • 53:49hopefully reap the benefits of
  • 53:50potential response without too much
  • 53:52added toxicity.
  • 53:54And so again, this is
  • 53:56where the field has moved
  • 53:57in,
  • 53:58and it's generated a revolution
  • 53:59not only in melanoma treatment,
  • 54:01but also has trickled down
  • 54:02to other cancer types as
  • 54:04well.
  • 54:05So this is just a
  • 54:06simple,
  • 54:07table of the various systemic
  • 54:09treatment options,
  • 54:11you know, on the left
  • 54:12there,
  • 54:12immune therapy,
  • 54:14as well as the response
  • 54:15rates and their mechanisms
  • 54:17of action,
  • 54:18on the right targeted therapy.
  • 54:20So these are your BRAF
  • 54:21and MEC inhibitors,
  • 54:23and you can say, Oh,
  • 54:24wait a minute.
  • 54:25The objective response rate, the
  • 54:27chances of responding to these
  • 54:29small molecule inhibitors is actually
  • 54:31higher than immune therapy.
  • 54:33Why are we recommending immune
  • 54:34therapy as the upfront treatment
  • 54:36for, metastatic melanoma?
  • 54:38The issue is actually
  • 54:40you get a much more
  • 54:42durable response, meaning the chances
  • 54:44of actual cure
  • 54:46are much higher if we
  • 54:48go with immune therapy
  • 54:50the response rates are high
  • 54:51yes there are potential
  • 54:53permanent side effects
  • 54:55like endocrine
  • 54:56issues
  • 54:57but
  • 54:58the response
  • 54:59can be long lasting.
  • 55:00We can potentially actually cure
  • 55:02people and put them into
  • 55:04long term remission with immune
  • 55:05therapy
  • 55:06as opposed to targeted therapy.
  • 55:09So that's why we favor
  • 55:10immune therapy upfront, and this
  • 55:12has been actually evaluated
  • 55:13in a dream seek trial.
  • 55:16And then also as a
  • 55:17second line option
  • 55:19t cell therapy lifolucil as
  • 55:21well is available.
  • 55:23Lifolucil,
  • 55:25made the headlines just because
  • 55:26it was the first
  • 55:28t cell based therapy
  • 55:30that was approved for a
  • 55:31solid tumor
  • 55:32and again it's not a
  • 55:33walk in the park
  • 55:35which is why we don't
  • 55:36start with till therapy up
  • 55:38front
  • 55:39again there's a chance that
  • 55:40we could potentially cure people
  • 55:41with immune check point inhibitors,
  • 55:43those in, systemic immune therapies.
  • 55:45So we really reserve till
  • 55:47therapy for those people who
  • 55:48are refractory to prior treatments.
  • 55:51So till therapy is quite
  • 55:53involved.
  • 55:55Patients have to undergo rigorous
  • 55:56evaluation
  • 55:57for cardiac function, pulmonary function.
  • 56:00They have to have relatively
  • 56:02slow growing tumor. They're not
  • 56:04gonna blossom out of control
  • 56:06within the next, two months
  • 56:08because one, you have to
  • 56:09get them to surgery. Doctor
  • 56:11Alino has to remove those
  • 56:13those tumors. We have to
  • 56:14send it to the company.
  • 56:15The company has to dissect
  • 56:17the tumor out, make a
  • 56:19single cell suspension, grow those
  • 56:21t cells out, hit them
  • 56:22with cytokines,
  • 56:24basically make billions of copies
  • 56:25of those T cells.
  • 56:27Once those cells are ready,
  • 56:28we have to get the
  • 56:29patient back in, give them
  • 56:30some low doses of chemotherapy
  • 56:33to basically suppress
  • 56:38t cells to come back
  • 56:38in.
  • 56:40Those t cells then get
  • 56:41reinfused
  • 56:42while the patient's in the
  • 56:43hospital, and then they subsequently
  • 56:45get low doses of IL
  • 56:46two to help
  • 56:48cells to survive now that
  • 56:50they're back in you.
  • 56:51So it's a quite a
  • 56:53process. Patients have issues with
  • 56:55low blood cell counts for
  • 56:57the first month. They oftentimes
  • 56:59need transfusion
  • 57:00support.
  • 57:01It is a very expensive
  • 57:04treatment.
  • 57:05It's a very costly in
  • 57:07terms of time treatment, time
  • 57:08commitment too.
  • 57:10And so after that, then
  • 57:12the patient gets discharged. They
  • 57:13recover.
  • 57:14And then it's kind of
  • 57:15a waiting game to see
  • 57:16if those T cells respond.
  • 57:19Now immune checkpoint inhibitors. Whenever
  • 57:22we counsel patients on, on
  • 57:24potentially considering this treatment,
  • 57:26again, it's not without side
  • 57:28effects. So there are a
  • 57:29lot of autoimmune
  • 57:30related side effects that could
  • 57:32incur,
  • 57:33as as a result of
  • 57:35immune checkpoint inhibitors. And, basically,
  • 57:37it's bottom line is inflammation.
  • 57:39It can happen anywhere. It
  • 57:41can happen anytime
  • 57:43so where that occurs
  • 57:45kind of translates to the
  • 57:46side effects so most common
  • 57:47things are fatigue rash
  • 57:50depending on the regimen
  • 57:51sometimes diarrhea
  • 57:53joint arthritis
  • 57:55it can result in some,
  • 57:57permanent side effects like type
  • 57:59one diabetes,
  • 58:01permanent loss of your thyroid
  • 58:03function, pituitary
  • 58:04adrenal function.
  • 58:07Some things are we can
  • 58:08replace with,
  • 58:10medications like thyroid medications,
  • 58:13low doses of steroids.
  • 58:14Some a lot of these,
  • 58:16side effects,
  • 58:18are treatable, though. There are
  • 58:20some very high risk side
  • 58:21effects that we oftentimes have
  • 58:23to counsel patients about
  • 58:25because it can lead to
  • 58:26lung inflammation, heart inflammation,
  • 58:28inflammation of the nerves called
  • 58:30myasthenia,
  • 58:31gravis. And so,
  • 58:33it is not without its
  • 58:35risks.
  • 58:36Now,
  • 58:37you know, back in the
  • 58:38day when these drugs were
  • 58:39under clinical trial development, we
  • 58:40were afraid to give it
  • 58:42to people who had existing
  • 58:43autoimmune issues.
  • 58:45Thankfully, what we've discovered
  • 58:47through the course of having
  • 58:48these drugs available and trying
  • 58:50to push the field to
  • 58:51make them available for for
  • 58:53more people is that a
  • 58:55lot of these side effects,
  • 58:56they don't necessarily
  • 58:58flare in people who have
  • 58:59autoimmune disease.
  • 59:01Some things like PMR will,
  • 59:03but other things like lupus,
  • 59:05we can actually give these
  • 59:07patients,
  • 59:08with existing lupus, these immune
  • 59:10checkpoint inhibitors.
  • 59:11And oftentimes, we can we
  • 59:13can get by, and they
  • 59:14have a fantastic response.
  • 59:16And so again it's not
  • 59:18an absolute no that if
  • 59:20you have an autoimmune disease
  • 59:22that these therapies will not
  • 59:24work for you or not
  • 59:25safe for you.
  • 59:26And so again this is
  • 59:27where a clinical
  • 59:29judgment
  • 59:30kind of weighing the risk
  • 59:31and benefits come into hand.
  • 59:33So kind of just the
  • 59:34lay of the land in
  • 59:35terms of how we think
  • 59:37about metastatic,
  • 59:39melanoma treatment. So kind of
  • 59:41up top on the far
  • 59:42right here, you know, I
  • 59:43kinda listed the drugs,
  • 59:45in terms of efficacy.
  • 59:47Again, the more efficacious, the
  • 59:49potentially
  • 59:50the higher the side effects.
  • 59:51So we have ipinivo,
  • 59:53that's kind of our tried
  • 59:54and true regimen. If you
  • 59:55have lots of disease,
  • 59:57critical sites of disease, like
  • 59:59brain metastases,
  • 01:00:00That's one that we will
  • 01:00:01oftentimes try upfront
  • 01:00:03if we can think you
  • 01:00:05can tolerate the side effects.
  • 01:00:07Because, again, we don't wanna
  • 01:00:08harm people,
  • 01:00:10have a detriment to their
  • 01:00:11quality of life with these
  • 01:00:12treatments.
  • 01:00:13Next is Zopdulilag.
  • 01:00:15So people who have low
  • 01:00:16volume disease will oftentimes try
  • 01:00:18this first. And again, if
  • 01:00:20there are side effects, we
  • 01:00:21can deescalate
  • 01:00:23to single agent Nivo or
  • 01:00:25pembro.
  • 01:00:26And if they don't have
  • 01:00:27the response that we like,
  • 01:00:28we can always escalate to
  • 01:00:30ipinivo too.
  • 01:00:31There's targeted therapies.
  • 01:00:33And, again, there those come
  • 01:00:35also in different flavors,
  • 01:00:37and then cell therapy.
  • 01:00:40So just a few,
  • 01:00:41comments about some specific locations.
  • 01:00:44So brain metastases.
  • 01:00:46Doctor Kluger, you know, has
  • 01:00:47a lot of clinical trials,
  • 01:00:49a lot of investigation, and
  • 01:00:50how do we improve responses
  • 01:00:52for individuals with brain metastases.
  • 01:00:55You know, melanoma,
  • 01:00:56for whatever reason,
  • 01:00:58probably from the neuroactogen
  • 01:01:00merle origin of these cells,
  • 01:01:02has a tendency to go
  • 01:01:04to the brain.
  • 01:01:06These lesions are not benign,
  • 01:01:07obviously. They can bleed. They
  • 01:01:09can cause seizures, they can
  • 01:01:11cause edema, brain swelling,
  • 01:01:13neurologic,
  • 01:01:15loss of function.
  • 01:01:16And so we actually do
  • 01:01:18have better treatments now, more
  • 01:01:19effective therapies that actually penetrate
  • 01:01:22into the brain. We have
  • 01:01:23radiation therapy that we can
  • 01:01:25combine
  • 01:01:26with these systemic therapies,
  • 01:01:29but we still need ongoing
  • 01:01:31research in radiation necrosis.
  • 01:01:33That's where there's a lot
  • 01:01:35of,
  • 01:01:35cyclical inflammation in the brain
  • 01:01:37that can lead to swelling
  • 01:01:38too.
  • 01:01:40You know, oftentimes,
  • 01:01:41individuals ask me, okay.
  • 01:01:44How do I know the
  • 01:01:44treatment's working?
  • 01:01:46We have to wait,
  • 01:01:48you know, usually at least
  • 01:01:50six weeks, if not three
  • 01:01:51months, in order to figure
  • 01:01:52this out.
  • 01:01:53Because the issue is if
  • 01:01:54we scan too soon,
  • 01:01:56there is a phenomenon called
  • 01:01:58pseudo progression.
  • 01:01:59Those immune cells are activated
  • 01:02:01from these systemic therapies.
  • 01:02:02They can infiltrate into the
  • 01:02:04tumor,
  • 01:02:05cause a little bit of
  • 01:02:06swelling, if you will, in
  • 01:02:07that tumor whereby that tumor
  • 01:02:09looks bigger on the scans,
  • 01:02:10but it's actually because those
  • 01:02:12immune cells are trying to
  • 01:02:13get in there to do
  • 01:02:14their job. And if you
  • 01:02:15just wait a little bit
  • 01:02:16longer, have a little patience,
  • 01:02:18hopefully a little faith, and
  • 01:02:20a few more prayers,
  • 01:02:21then
  • 01:02:22subsequently we see tumor shrinkage.
  • 01:02:24And so that's why, unfortunately,
  • 01:02:26we can't scan too soon.
  • 01:02:27We have to,
  • 01:02:29put our faith in these
  • 01:02:30medications sometimes early on. And
  • 01:02:32particularly if you're doing well,
  • 01:02:34and symptoms are not any
  • 01:02:35worse,
  • 01:02:36oftentimes that's a sign of
  • 01:02:38pseudo progression rather than true
  • 01:02:40progression.
  • 01:02:42Alright. So adjuvant treatment paradigms.
  • 01:02:46So we talked about moving
  • 01:02:48a lot of these effective,
  • 01:02:50medications
  • 01:02:51in the stage four setting
  • 01:02:52early on to see if
  • 01:02:53we can reduce recurrence risk.
  • 01:02:56And so in stage three,
  • 01:02:58you know, anti PD one
  • 01:02:59drugs, so these are things
  • 01:03:00like nivolumab,
  • 01:03:02pembrolizumab,
  • 01:03:03they do recur reduce recurrence
  • 01:03:06risk by about fifty percent.
  • 01:03:08However, they don't really improve
  • 01:03:10survival.
  • 01:03:11So what's our endgame? What's
  • 01:03:12our target here? We need
  • 01:03:14patients to live longer. We
  • 01:03:15need them to do well
  • 01:03:17longer.
  • 01:03:18And so sometimes for for
  • 01:03:20individuals, again, and this is
  • 01:03:21where personal
  • 01:03:22decision kind of priorities come
  • 01:03:24into play. Maybe those side
  • 01:03:26effects
  • 01:03:26don't bode well if you're
  • 01:03:28already kinda struggling and have
  • 01:03:30other health issues.
  • 01:03:31And so in those particular
  • 01:03:33settings, if you do not
  • 01:03:34have a BRAF mutation,
  • 01:03:35sometimes a watch and wait
  • 01:03:37approach,
  • 01:03:38is actually makes more sense.
  • 01:03:41If you do have a
  • 01:03:41BRAF mutation,
  • 01:03:43they these medications for stage
  • 01:03:45three patients actually reduce recurrence
  • 01:03:47risk by half, but they
  • 01:03:48have also are starting to
  • 01:03:50show improvements in survival too.
  • 01:03:52So that's where waiting for
  • 01:03:54that tumor mutational status to
  • 01:03:56come back from the tumor
  • 01:03:57resection
  • 01:03:58actually does really impact how
  • 01:04:00we think about treating individuals
  • 01:04:02too. For stage two patients,
  • 01:04:05anti PD one has been
  • 01:04:06FDA approved, so nivolumab,
  • 01:04:09pembrolizumab.
  • 01:04:10However,
  • 01:04:11the response, the benefit is
  • 01:04:13a little bit less than
  • 01:04:14stage three patients, and, again,
  • 01:04:15there's no overall survival benefit.
  • 01:04:20Alright. So neoadjuvant,
  • 01:04:22I think doctor Alino has
  • 01:04:23covered that very well, so
  • 01:04:25we'll kinda skip over this.
  • 01:04:28But really kind of, just
  • 01:04:30and, again, just to kinda
  • 01:04:31we we like to go
  • 01:04:32over a case case reports.
  • 01:04:35Okay?
  • 01:04:36We're we're gonna pretend you
  • 01:04:37guys are all medical trainees
  • 01:04:39now that you've been you've
  • 01:04:40lived the experience.
  • 01:04:43So for example, let's think
  • 01:04:44about, you know, a patient
  • 01:04:45who had a right,
  • 01:04:47abdomen melanoma.
  • 01:04:49Stage three b,
  • 01:04:51it was ulcer
  • 01:04:53nonulcerated,
  • 01:04:54but it had microsatellite.
  • 01:04:55So there are little,
  • 01:04:57areas of tumor
  • 01:04:58adjacent to the primary site.
  • 01:05:02BRAF,
  • 01:05:03mutation status was positive, meaning
  • 01:05:05the patient had a BRAF
  • 01:05:06mutation.
  • 01:05:08There was a clinically palpable
  • 01:05:10lymph node, and so the
  • 01:05:11decision was, as one of
  • 01:05:13doctor Alina's paradigms,
  • 01:05:15to treat with anti PD
  • 01:05:16one therapy upfront.
  • 01:05:18We gave two doses and
  • 01:05:20actually the patient developed myocarditis,
  • 01:05:22which is one of the
  • 01:05:23most concerning side effects.
  • 01:05:25And again, this kind of
  • 01:05:26highlights that sometimes high risk
  • 01:05:28sometimes comes with high reward
  • 01:05:30too because what happened is
  • 01:05:32that the tumor shrank.
  • 01:05:35We did take a while
  • 01:05:36for us to treat the
  • 01:05:38myocarditis,
  • 01:05:39get it under control to
  • 01:05:40get the patient safely to
  • 01:05:41surgery.
  • 01:05:43However,
  • 01:05:44so when that lymph node
  • 01:05:45came out, there was still
  • 01:05:46some viable melanoma. A lot
  • 01:05:48of it was necrotic.
  • 01:05:50The patient, because of that
  • 01:05:52BRAF status, ended up getting
  • 01:05:53an additional year of BRAF
  • 01:05:54MEK inhibitors and remains disease
  • 01:05:57free to this day. Myocarditis
  • 01:05:59treated
  • 01:06:00doing well.
  • 01:06:02And so again, kind of
  • 01:06:03leading into
  • 01:06:04my colleague, Doctor. Ishizuka, who's
  • 01:06:06gonna talk to you about
  • 01:06:07about where the field is
  • 01:06:08moving.
  • 01:06:10We're gonna talk about where
  • 01:06:12we can,
  • 01:06:13move in terms of
  • 01:06:15cancer vaccines,
  • 01:06:16cytokine therapies,
  • 01:06:18and adoptive cell therapies to
  • 01:06:20try to push this forward.
  • 01:06:22Thank you.
  • 01:06:38Great. Well, thank you so
  • 01:06:40much for the opportunity to
  • 01:06:41be here today and to
  • 01:06:42tell you a little bit
  • 01:06:43about clinical trials here at
  • 01:06:45Yale and Melanoma.
  • 01:06:47So a couple of things
  • 01:06:48I want to impart in
  • 01:06:50the course of of our
  • 01:06:51conversation tonight.
  • 01:06:52One is just to know
  • 01:06:54that that trials are are
  • 01:06:56strong treatment options
  • 01:06:57that going into the selection
  • 01:06:59for a trial to be
  • 01:07:00even considered at Yale, we
  • 01:07:02meet together as a group.
  • 01:07:04We discuss the merits. We
  • 01:07:05make sure that there's a
  • 01:07:06that we see a benefit
  • 01:07:08for our patients to even
  • 01:07:09put it on the roster
  • 01:07:10of things we consider.
  • 01:07:13That leads into number two,
  • 01:07:15which is that
  • 01:07:17whenever we suggest a clinical
  • 01:07:19trial as a consideration,
  • 01:07:20it's because we think that
  • 01:07:22it is potentially,
  • 01:07:24a thing that could offer
  • 01:07:25offer benefit and the most
  • 01:07:26benefit
  • 01:07:27to our patients.
  • 01:07:29The third thing is that
  • 01:07:30our clinical trial portfolio
  • 01:07:32is always evolving,
  • 01:07:34that
  • 01:07:35you know, I'll talk about
  • 01:07:36some of the trials that
  • 01:07:37are available tonight, but at
  • 01:07:39any given day, I won't
  • 01:07:40try and cover every single
  • 01:07:41trial. And at any given
  • 01:07:43day, that trial portfolio
  • 01:07:45may continue to evolve. So
  • 01:07:47it's always worth a conversation
  • 01:07:48with us at any stage
  • 01:07:50of care. Sometimes we have
  • 01:07:51trials for earlier stage disease,
  • 01:07:53sometimes for later stage disease.
  • 01:07:55So it's always worth that
  • 01:07:56conversation.
  • 01:07:59Many of you will know
  • 01:08:00this. Some of you will
  • 01:08:01have participated in clinical trials,
  • 01:08:02but clinical trials are are
  • 01:08:04carefully designed studies. They're carefully
  • 01:08:06designed treatments that start with
  • 01:08:08a strong scientific rationale,
  • 01:08:10usually
  • 01:08:11years of of studies and
  • 01:08:13and all sorts of experimental
  • 01:08:14models,
  • 01:08:16as well as kind of
  • 01:08:17safety testing and and,
  • 01:08:19you know, prior to ever
  • 01:08:20becoming a clinical trial.
  • 01:08:22There's a whole infrastructure of
  • 01:08:24oversight for safety here at
  • 01:08:26Yale and for the clinical
  • 01:08:27trials that are run nationally.
  • 01:08:31And that in many cases,
  • 01:08:32clinical trials mean more frequent
  • 01:08:34points of contact, right, for
  • 01:08:36safety monitoring and so that
  • 01:08:37we can observe,
  • 01:08:38what's happening with the trial,
  • 01:08:40in in you.
  • 01:08:43Our fundamental motivation
  • 01:08:45is twofold. Right?
  • 01:08:47One thing is that we
  • 01:08:48want to move the field
  • 01:08:49forward.
  • 01:08:50This is a group of
  • 01:08:51people that go to bed
  • 01:08:52thinking about these things. They
  • 01:08:53get up thinking about these
  • 01:08:54things.
  • 01:08:55Every patient that we can't
  • 01:08:57help stays with us. And
  • 01:08:59so more than anything, we
  • 01:09:00wanna put ourselves out of
  • 01:09:01business. We wanna create new
  • 01:09:02treatment options.
  • 01:09:04And so there is a
  • 01:09:05strong motivation to move the
  • 01:09:06field forward scientifically.
  • 01:09:08But the other thing we're
  • 01:09:09looking for is to give
  • 01:09:10the best options and give
  • 01:09:11a greater array of options
  • 01:09:12today.
  • 01:09:14And so, you know, when
  • 01:09:16we're thinking about trials, we're
  • 01:09:17also doing that. We're thinking
  • 01:09:18about how do we create
  • 01:09:19a portfolio of options at
  • 01:09:20as many stages of care
  • 01:09:22as we can,
  • 01:09:23and how do we pick
  • 01:09:24the things and and look
  • 01:09:26for the best opportunities
  • 01:09:27that we think have, the
  • 01:09:29greatest chance of benefit.
  • 01:09:32So this is the guiding
  • 01:09:34principle. What is best for
  • 01:09:35the patient in front of
  • 01:09:36me? Anytime we're having a
  • 01:09:38trial conversation,
  • 01:09:39that's what that's what we're
  • 01:09:40thinking about. If we think
  • 01:09:42that standard therapies are the
  • 01:09:43best option for you, we
  • 01:09:45will tell you in a
  • 01:09:46very straightforward way.
  • 01:09:49A question that sometimes comes
  • 01:09:51up, people say, and I've
  • 01:09:52heard my patients say to
  • 01:09:53me, I don't wanna be
  • 01:09:54a guinea pig. I don't
  • 01:09:55wanna be I don't wanna
  • 01:09:56be experimented on.
  • 01:09:58And I think there's a
  • 01:09:59couple things to think through
  • 01:10:00in response to that question.
  • 01:10:01Right? Some of them I've
  • 01:10:03already kind of laid out
  • 01:10:05that this trial never made
  • 01:10:06it here unless we had
  • 01:10:07thought it had a chance
  • 01:10:08of benefit. And then fundamentally,
  • 01:10:11we wouldn't be suggesting it
  • 01:10:13if we didn't think it
  • 01:10:14was as good or better
  • 01:10:16than the standard of care
  • 01:10:17options that we can offer
  • 01:10:19at that time.
  • 01:10:20And so, you know, there's
  • 01:10:22a lot that goes into
  • 01:10:23the process depending on the
  • 01:10:24phase of the trial, but
  • 01:10:25there's always a tremendous amount
  • 01:10:27of of oversight,
  • 01:10:29both within the clinic here
  • 01:10:30and actually a whole staff
  • 01:10:31of people outside of the
  • 01:10:33clinic,
  • 01:10:33many of which you get
  • 01:10:34to know if you participate
  • 01:10:36in, well, they'll come into
  • 01:10:37the clinic as well in
  • 01:10:38a clinical trial.
  • 01:10:40So
  • 01:10:41I wanna think through a
  • 01:10:43couple of the the types
  • 01:10:45of trials
  • 01:10:46that are
  • 01:10:47going on here at Yale
  • 01:10:48now. I won't spend a
  • 01:10:50long time on them. You
  • 01:10:51could spend an hour talking
  • 01:10:53about each of them, and
  • 01:10:53I I think you guys
  • 01:10:54wouldn't like that that much.
  • 01:10:55But,
  • 01:10:57you know, I'll talk about
  • 01:10:58a couple of different lanes
  • 01:10:59of of therapy.
  • 01:11:00Right? A frontline study for,
  • 01:11:03you know, if you haven't
  • 01:11:04started treatment and actually some
  • 01:11:06studies that are available
  • 01:11:08even if if you've gone
  • 01:11:09through and progressed through a
  • 01:11:11prior treatment. Right? In some
  • 01:11:13cases, while studies even earlier
  • 01:11:14phase than these as well.
  • 01:11:17And, you know, as a
  • 01:11:18as a kind of framework
  • 01:11:20for how we're thinking about
  • 01:11:21this, doctor Tran laid out,
  • 01:11:23as well as the targeted
  • 01:11:24therapies, the great benefits that
  • 01:11:26have come with the development
  • 01:11:27of the immunotherapies.
  • 01:11:28And so a lot of
  • 01:11:29the things you'll hear me
  • 01:11:30talk about, the ideas that
  • 01:11:31are being tested in the
  • 01:11:32clinic, focus on the, this,
  • 01:11:34this general concept of how
  • 01:11:36do we make the immune
  • 01:11:37system work better against cancers.
  • 01:11:39Right? You'll hear a lot
  • 01:11:40of that.
  • 01:11:41Okay.
  • 01:11:42So
  • 01:11:44just briefly,
  • 01:11:45this is, the the first
  • 01:11:47trial is one for patients
  • 01:11:48who have not yet started
  • 01:11:50therapy. It is a a
  • 01:11:51frontline trial.
  • 01:11:53It uses
  • 01:11:54two agents, p d one
  • 01:11:56and and LAG three that,
  • 01:11:58doctor Tran described.
  • 01:11:59In this case, it's testing
  • 01:12:01a different type of PD
  • 01:12:02one and LAG three, different
  • 01:12:03types of drugs that target,
  • 01:12:05at target these checkpoints
  • 01:12:07and at different doses. And
  • 01:12:09and, you know, part of,
  • 01:12:10I guess, the learning there
  • 01:12:11is it's it's potentially,
  • 01:12:14we we do see, although
  • 01:12:15many of these drugs target
  • 01:12:17the same fundamental immune targets,
  • 01:12:20that they can work in
  • 01:12:20slightly different ways, that the
  • 01:12:22the way you make the
  • 01:12:23molecules, the way that you
  • 01:12:25dose the molecules
  • 01:12:26can have an effect on
  • 01:12:27the overall immune response. And
  • 01:12:29so, you know, the hypothesis
  • 01:12:31here is that even though
  • 01:12:32these two arms are targeting
  • 01:12:34the same two sets of
  • 01:12:35immune checkpoints,
  • 01:12:37that,
  • 01:12:37by using a different drug
  • 01:12:39that is tuned differently and
  • 01:12:40at different doses, that you
  • 01:12:41may be able to get
  • 01:12:42a better response.
  • 01:12:45The the other trials I'll
  • 01:12:47talk about are for later
  • 01:12:48lines of care, so patients
  • 01:12:50who have have progressed through
  • 01:12:51some prior therapy.
  • 01:12:53And, this is this is
  • 01:12:54an oral medication
  • 01:12:56called a PTPN
  • 01:12:57two inhibitor. We won't quiz
  • 01:12:59you on the the acronyms
  • 01:13:00at the end.
  • 01:13:02But the idea here is
  • 01:13:03that you're doing a couple
  • 01:13:04of separate things that are
  • 01:13:06are different to improve the
  • 01:13:07immune system. One is that
  • 01:13:09you're helping,
  • 01:13:10some of your immune active
  • 01:13:12your active immune cells called
  • 01:13:13t cells to function better.
  • 01:13:15And the other is that
  • 01:13:16you're targeting the tumors to
  • 01:13:18become more responsive to some
  • 01:13:20of the signals that are
  • 01:13:21made by the t cells.
  • 01:13:24Our our next trial that
  • 01:13:26I'll mention
  • 01:13:27is a way of doing
  • 01:13:28two of the things that
  • 01:13:29doctor Tran mentioned. She mentioned
  • 01:13:31kind of cutting the brakes
  • 01:13:32on the immune system with
  • 01:13:33immune checkpoint inhibitors, but also
  • 01:13:36kind of giving cytokines,
  • 01:13:38that can sort of feed
  • 01:13:40the the immune cells to
  • 01:13:41help them grow and function.
  • 01:13:43So in this trial, you're
  • 01:13:44trying to combine those two
  • 01:13:45ideas. And if you remember,
  • 01:13:47doctor Tran mentioned that one
  • 01:13:49of the problems with some
  • 01:13:50of the cytokines is that
  • 01:13:51they can have toxicities
  • 01:13:53when given systemically, problems with
  • 01:13:54blood pressure or other issues.
  • 01:13:56And so in this case,
  • 01:13:57you're trying to deliver
  • 01:13:59this immune,
  • 01:14:00cytokine just to the cells
  • 01:14:02that need it. Right? And
  • 01:14:03so that's that's one idea.
  • 01:14:06Another variant of this idea
  • 01:14:08that works along a similar
  • 01:14:10line but using a different
  • 01:14:11type of immune stimulatory
  • 01:14:13signal is is this trial
  • 01:14:14by Asher Bio using a,
  • 01:14:17an agent that targets an
  • 01:14:18immune cells called CD eight
  • 01:14:20t cells and delivers to
  • 01:14:22them this immune activating cytokine
  • 01:14:24called IL twenty one.
  • 01:14:26And so, you know, the
  • 01:14:28idea here,
  • 01:14:29it may work out to
  • 01:14:30be that different patients will
  • 01:14:31benefit from different things, and
  • 01:14:33that's part of what we're
  • 01:14:33trying to learn here as
  • 01:14:34well.
  • 01:14:37Finally,
  • 01:14:39there's there's a trial that
  • 01:14:40tries to take the to
  • 01:14:42to try to tries to
  • 01:14:43take out a negative,
  • 01:14:46sponge that blocks an immune
  • 01:14:48activating cytokine from working. So,
  • 01:14:50again, this is an antibody
  • 01:14:51therapy, but one that will
  • 01:14:52actually,
  • 01:14:53block the inhibitor.
  • 01:14:55And a lot of the
  • 01:14:56the fundamental science for for
  • 01:14:57tumor immunology for this pathway
  • 01:14:59was worked out here at
  • 01:15:01Yale.
  • 01:15:02But the hope is that
  • 01:15:03this, this type of approach
  • 01:15:06will take an important break
  • 01:15:08off of the immune system
  • 01:15:09and make it work better.
  • 01:15:13You know, doctor Tran kind
  • 01:15:15of weighed caught risks and
  • 01:15:16benefits. You have to think
  • 01:15:18about that with clinical trials
  • 01:15:19as well.
  • 01:15:21You know, in terms
  • 01:15:22of cost, cost to to
  • 01:15:24the patient,
  • 01:15:25standard of care portions of
  • 01:15:27the visit are generally covered
  • 01:15:28by insurance, and then the
  • 01:15:30study drug and study specific
  • 01:15:31tests are usually paid for
  • 01:15:33by the trial sponsor, but
  • 01:15:35it doesn't mean that there
  • 01:15:36cannot be any extra burden
  • 01:15:38of travel and of time.
  • 01:15:40In many cases, you're talking
  • 01:15:42about further visits with us.
  • 01:15:45And so that means, you
  • 01:15:46know, getting you here to
  • 01:15:47the clinic or at some
  • 01:15:48in some cases, we can
  • 01:15:50offer trials at our satellites
  • 01:15:51sites as well. So it's
  • 01:15:52not always here, but in
  • 01:15:54many cases, the trials are
  • 01:15:55centralized here.
  • 01:15:57And then, of course, there's
  • 01:15:58the time component.
  • 01:16:00This added oversight for safety
  • 01:16:02often means a a greater
  • 01:16:04amount of time spent, you
  • 01:16:05know, coming to clinic and
  • 01:16:06and being with us in
  • 01:16:07clinic.
  • 01:16:10I just wanna leave you
  • 01:16:11with, you know, the this
  • 01:16:12idea again that,
  • 01:16:15it's less about any particular
  • 01:16:17trial that I I kind
  • 01:16:18of talked very briefly about
  • 01:16:19today and more about this
  • 01:16:21overall framework,
  • 01:16:22that,
  • 01:16:23you know, these are are
  • 01:16:25options that are reasonable to
  • 01:16:26consider and that this is
  • 01:16:27a conversation that we'd welcome
  • 01:16:29having with with any of
  • 01:16:31you or anyone,
  • 01:16:32at any point.
  • 01:16:34With that, I'll wrap up,
  • 01:16:35and thank you.
  • 01:16:43Have our our panels to
  • 01:16:45come up to the front.
  • 01:16:57But you guys have listened
  • 01:16:58to us
  • 01:16:59talk,
  • 01:17:00And you haven't left yet,
  • 01:17:01so that's always a good
  • 01:17:02sign.
  • 01:17:03But,
  • 01:17:05you know, this is an
  • 01:17:06opportunity we want all of
  • 01:17:07you guys to
  • 01:17:08ask us questions, anything that's
  • 01:17:10come up during the talks,
  • 01:17:12anything at all, and doctor
  • 01:17:14Kluger will will moderate that.
  • 01:17:16Excellent
  • 01:17:17job. Yes. Let's do that,
  • 01:17:19please. Let's start off with
  • 01:17:20doctor Westwick, if you wouldn't
  • 01:17:22mind. Thank you. Thank you.
  • 01:17:25Yeah. I'm.
  • 01:17:26I'm a plastic surgeon, and
  • 01:17:28I work with the melanoma
  • 01:17:29team together with doctor Alina.
  • 01:17:32And Carlos, the PA who
  • 01:17:33keeps me straight.
  • 01:17:36Pretty much, you know, my
  • 01:17:37job is
  • 01:17:38to try to help
  • 01:17:40any patient to get rid
  • 01:17:41of their melanoma from a
  • 01:17:42surgical standpoint.
  • 01:17:44And being a plastic surgeon,
  • 01:17:46when someone,
  • 01:17:47including myself, makes a hole,
  • 01:17:49I need to fix it.
  • 01:17:50So that's my job.
  • 01:17:54My name is Carla Becerra.
  • 01:17:56I'm a surgical PA. I
  • 01:17:57work with, doctor Westwick, doctor
  • 01:17:59Lino, and doctor Khan sometimes
  • 01:18:01as well.
  • 01:18:03I've been a surgical PA
  • 01:18:04here at Yale for almost
  • 01:18:06nine years, and I've been
  • 01:18:07in the melanoma field for
  • 01:18:09thirteen.
  • 01:18:11So I work with an
  • 01:18:12incredible team, and I'm very
  • 01:18:13happy to answer questions today.
  • 01:18:16John Levinthal, we met earlier.
  • 01:18:18Nice to see many familiar
  • 01:18:19faces in the crowd.
  • 01:18:22I'm Saj Khan. I'm one
  • 01:18:23of the surgical oncologists. I'm
  • 01:18:24fortunate to be doctor Aluno's
  • 01:18:26partner,
  • 01:18:27and I've been at Yale
  • 01:18:28for about thirteen years now.
  • 01:18:31Hi there. My name is
  • 01:18:32David Schonfeld. I'm one of
  • 01:18:33the medical oncologists here. So
  • 01:18:35I I treat people with
  • 01:18:36some of the the systemic
  • 01:18:37therapies and clinical trials you
  • 01:18:38just heard about, and I
  • 01:18:39also see patients for follow-up
  • 01:18:40and surveillance, and happy to
  • 01:18:42take some questions.
  • 01:18:45Thank you. So who's gonna
  • 01:18:46brave it and ask a
  • 01:18:47question?
  • 01:18:48Anybody?
  • 01:18:52Yes. Thank you. Doctor Tran's
  • 01:18:54presentation, which was very interesting,
  • 01:18:57and the the one slide
  • 01:18:58in talking points around
  • 01:19:01the current treatment paradigms,
  • 01:19:05ipionivo,
  • 01:19:05is that only a suggested
  • 01:19:07course of action for stage
  • 01:19:08four and not stage three
  • 01:19:11patients now?
  • 01:19:13Okay. I'm gonna let doctor
  • 01:19:14I don't want to ask
  • 01:19:14you. Take that one. So,
  • 01:19:16so ipionivo is one of
  • 01:19:18our standard
  • 01:19:19go tos. You know, we
  • 01:19:20we use it very commonly
  • 01:19:21as Doctor. Tran mentioned for
  • 01:19:23stage four patients.
  • 01:19:24There's a couple flavors of
  • 01:19:26giving it. We don't it's
  • 01:19:28not the only option. There
  • 01:19:29are other immunotherapies,
  • 01:19:30especially another combo,
  • 01:19:32that that
  • 01:19:33comes with a little less
  • 01:19:35efficacy, but a fewer side
  • 01:19:37effects. So we we weigh
  • 01:19:38always the, you know, the
  • 01:19:39the patient's disease and and
  • 01:19:40the specific,
  • 01:19:41you know, medical history and
  • 01:19:43other factors that go into
  • 01:19:44it. But it is one
  • 01:19:45of the more common one
  • 01:19:45we use for stage four,
  • 01:19:47and we are starting to
  • 01:19:48use variations of it for
  • 01:19:50earlier stage and and what
  • 01:19:51doctor Tran and doctor Alino
  • 01:19:53mentioned for what's called the
  • 01:19:54neoadjuvant paradigm. So patients who
  • 01:19:56need a little therapy before
  • 01:19:58going to surgery, let's say
  • 01:19:59because there's a palpable lymph
  • 01:20:00node and we wanna give
  • 01:20:01them something beforehand,
  • 01:20:03doing a couple cycles of
  • 01:20:05ipi nivo in a in
  • 01:20:06a particular way way of
  • 01:20:08dosing it is is one
  • 01:20:09of the standard things we
  • 01:20:10do now or or consider
  • 01:20:11at least. But can I
  • 01:20:13just add in there was
  • 01:20:14a big trial where they
  • 01:20:15compared they took state they
  • 01:20:17took stage three melanomas out
  • 01:20:19and then gave AP and
  • 01:20:21Nivo, like, the two drugs
  • 01:20:22versus the one drug, and,
  • 01:20:23actually, there was a better
  • 01:20:25outcome with one drug than
  • 01:20:26with two?
  • 01:20:27So it has been studied.
  • 01:20:28It's just not beneficial.
  • 01:20:31Good thing. So, I mean,
  • 01:20:32I I'm a no longer
  • 01:20:33surprised myself. So as a
  • 01:20:34stage three patient,
  • 01:20:36ipi and nivo is no
  • 01:20:37longer a course of recommended
  • 01:20:39action.
  • 01:20:40Subjected. Stage three patients. That's
  • 01:20:42been taken out. If it's
  • 01:20:43already been taken out, yeah,
  • 01:20:44we don't we don't generally
  • 01:20:45use it there. But if
  • 01:20:46it hasn't been taken out?
  • 01:20:48Sometimes. Yeah. Yeah. It is
  • 01:20:49a consideration. Yeah. If it's
  • 01:20:51if if you're a stage
  • 01:20:51three patient and there's some
  • 01:20:53some disease we could feel,
  • 01:20:56you know, it's something we
  • 01:20:57would talk about and consider,
  • 01:20:58yeah, for the right person.
  • 01:20:59Yeah.
  • 01:21:01Yes.
  • 01:21:02Give us a brief definition
  • 01:21:04of adjuvant and neoadjuvant.
  • 01:21:07Okay. I'm gonna give that
  • 01:21:09one to doctor Schonfeld again.
  • 01:21:11Okay. I was gonna I
  • 01:21:11was gonna hand it off
  • 01:21:12to one of the surgeons.
  • 01:21:13So so yeah. So,
  • 01:21:15adjuvant,
  • 01:21:16means after a more definitive
  • 01:21:18thing, like a surgery typically.
  • 01:21:20So adjuvant is after surgery,
  • 01:21:22and then,
  • 01:21:23neoadjuvant, and it can be
  • 01:21:25any therapy. So adjuvant radiation,
  • 01:21:26adjuvant systemic therapy, so an
  • 01:21:28IV drug or a pill,
  • 01:21:30And then neoadjuvant means before
  • 01:21:31that more definitive therapy like
  • 01:21:33a surgery. So that would
  • 01:21:34be do that intervention like
  • 01:21:36the, ipinivo, the immunotherapy
  • 01:21:39first, and then go for
  • 01:21:40the surgery. So it's either
  • 01:21:42before or after the more
  • 01:21:43definitive option, which is usually
  • 01:21:45surgery.
  • 01:21:46That's great feedback. Next time,
  • 01:21:48we'll start with defining that.
  • 01:21:50Okay. Thank you.
  • 01:21:53Any other questions? I don't
  • 01:21:55understand. What would be the
  • 01:21:56surgery for a stage three
  • 01:21:57patient
  • 01:21:58with melanoma?
  • 01:22:00Right.
  • 01:22:01So so are you talking
  • 01:22:02about specifically if they get
  • 01:22:03what that that treatment beforehand
  • 01:22:05and then they are you
  • 01:22:06know, if you get the
  • 01:22:07ipi nivo beforehand?
  • 01:22:09If you're a stage three
  • 01:22:10patient,
  • 01:22:11what what would be a
  • 01:22:12definition of a type of
  • 01:22:13surgery that would be
  • 01:22:15recommended?
  • 01:22:16Maybe I'll hand that off
  • 01:22:17to doctor Khan or doctor
  • 01:22:18Westlake to
  • 01:22:20And to be clear, sir,
  • 01:22:21you're asking about lymph node
  • 01:22:23positive disease.
  • 01:22:24So,
  • 01:22:25the surgery would generally be,
  • 01:22:26you know, removing the primary
  • 01:22:28tumor where it started from.
  • 01:22:29So wide margin resection. So
  • 01:22:30one centimeter for some tumors,
  • 01:22:33two centimeters for additional tumors
  • 01:22:34depending on the depth. And
  • 01:22:36then, formal lymphadenectomy
  • 01:22:37is what we'll often do,
  • 01:22:39you know, particularly for axillary
  • 01:22:41lymph node disease.
  • 01:22:43You know, for,
  • 01:22:44groin disease and pelvic diseases,
  • 01:22:46things have changed and shifted
  • 01:22:47a little bit, and there's
  • 01:22:48less surgery that's being performed,
  • 01:22:49but, an at lymphadenectomy.
  • 01:22:52Which is sorry. Removing the
  • 01:22:54lymph removing the lymph nodes
  • 01:22:55from that basin. All of
  • 01:22:56the lymph nodes.
  • 01:22:58Yeah. We're probably becoming I'd
  • 01:23:00love to see what doctor
  • 01:23:00Alina says, but we're probably
  • 01:23:02doing a little bit there
  • 01:23:03was a time where we
  • 01:23:04so there's different three levels
  • 01:23:06of lymph nodes,
  • 01:23:08level one, two, and three,
  • 01:23:10and it's it's pretty aggressive.
  • 01:23:12But,
  • 01:23:13with immune therapy, we're probably
  • 01:23:14not necessarily removing level three
  • 01:23:16lymph nodes anymore. So,
  • 01:23:18maybe let doctor Alino answer
  • 01:23:19that. Yeah. So, you know,
  • 01:23:22you can be in the
  • 01:23:23same stage three bucket,
  • 01:23:25and I can take out
  • 01:23:26your melanoma.
  • 01:23:28We do that sentinel node.
  • 01:23:29We only find microscopic
  • 01:23:30disease, and we learned that
  • 01:23:32by taking out more lymph
  • 01:23:33nodes, all we do is
  • 01:23:35increase risk of swelling, and
  • 01:23:36we actually don't make anybody
  • 01:23:38live any longer. So in
  • 01:23:40people who are still stage
  • 01:23:41three, where you were diagnosed
  • 01:23:43but it was microscopic, I
  • 01:23:44told you I couldn't see
  • 01:23:45it. The pathologist would have
  • 01:23:46to tell us in a
  • 01:23:47couple of days. You guys
  • 01:23:48have heard my spiel. Okay?
  • 01:23:50That's different than someone who
  • 01:23:52comes into the clinic
  • 01:23:54the first time that we
  • 01:23:55meet
  • 01:23:56them and we say,
  • 01:23:58you have another spot, not
  • 01:24:00just where the melanoma was.
  • 01:24:01We feel something or something
  • 01:24:03causes us to say, I'm
  • 01:24:05really worried about your melanoma.
  • 01:24:06Let's get a scan now.
  • 01:24:08That's not microscopic
  • 01:24:09disease anymore, and that's when
  • 01:24:11we're talking about giving people
  • 01:24:13some either an upfront therapy
  • 01:24:15with a single or a
  • 01:24:16double agent. Now that's very
  • 01:24:18different than
  • 01:24:19you come in.
  • 01:24:21It's microscopic disease.
  • 01:24:23We don't know if you'll
  • 01:24:24be only
  • 01:24:25the one in five person
  • 01:24:27where you'll have more disease
  • 01:24:28in the lymph nodes. That's
  • 01:24:29why we don't take them
  • 01:24:30all out. And that's when
  • 01:24:32you meet with one of
  • 01:24:33the colleagues, and they say,
  • 01:24:34let's do the testing. You
  • 01:24:36know? We don't have ev
  • 01:24:37any evidence that there's any
  • 01:24:38disease we can see on
  • 01:24:39scans when we get the
  • 01:24:40CAT scans or PET scans
  • 01:24:42or the MRIs, and then
  • 01:24:43we're we're trying to make
  • 01:24:45that judgment.
  • 01:24:46Do you need more? Are
  • 01:24:47you gonna be the ones
  • 01:24:48who are gonna be okay?
  • 01:24:49And, again, that's one of
  • 01:24:50the things that's really important
  • 01:24:51that we all struggle with.
  • 01:24:52Right? Because if we knew
  • 01:24:53your melanoma was gonna come
  • 01:24:54back, we'd have a different
  • 01:24:56conversation.
  • 01:24:56If we knew you're gonna
  • 01:24:57have a toxicity,
  • 01:24:59we'd have a different conversation.
  • 01:25:00If we knew we could
  • 01:25:01wait three years,
  • 01:25:03then your melanoma would come
  • 01:25:04back. You'd have three great
  • 01:25:05years. You'd come and have
  • 01:25:07to see us, but you
  • 01:25:08know, and then it would
  • 01:25:09come back, but you knew
  • 01:25:10you had three good years
  • 01:25:11where you didn't have to
  • 01:25:12be exposed to any of
  • 01:25:13the treatments. When every single
  • 01:25:14one of you guys is
  • 01:25:15coming in,
  • 01:25:17and I encourage, you know,
  • 01:25:18if if your doctors aren't
  • 01:25:19speaking to you like that,
  • 01:25:21that's when we're talking about.
  • 01:25:22What are the pluses? What
  • 01:25:23are the minuses?
  • 01:25:25What are our theoretical risks?
  • 01:25:27What are the fixed risks?
  • 01:25:29And putting that all together.
  • 01:25:31Right, that's what takes us
  • 01:25:32an hour in the clinic.
  • 01:25:33Right?
  • 01:25:35That answer your question?
  • 01:25:37Uh-uh. Not really. Yeah. Didn't
  • 01:25:39it? Is a problem. Confused.
  • 01:25:41I mean, if I have
  • 01:25:41if it if if the
  • 01:25:42melanomas reach my lymph nodes,
  • 01:25:45is the course of action
  • 01:25:46to take out all my
  • 01:25:46lymph nodes or to put
  • 01:25:48me on ipi or nebo?
  • 01:25:50So should I I mean,
  • 01:25:52to try to answer that.
  • 01:25:53Okay. Yeah. So
  • 01:25:54it first of all, things
  • 01:25:56change
  • 01:25:57over the period of our
  • 01:25:58careers or the what the
  • 01:26:00years that we've been doing
  • 01:26:00that and more and more
  • 01:26:01data become available. So what
  • 01:26:03we did ten years ago
  • 01:26:04is not what we did
  • 01:26:04five years ago. What we
  • 01:26:05do now is not exactly
  • 01:26:06what we did five years
  • 01:26:07ago either.
  • 01:26:09So, you know, we have
  • 01:26:10to take all of that
  • 01:26:11into account. Now if the
  • 01:26:13melon if the if there's
  • 01:26:15nothing palpable,
  • 01:26:17as doctor Lino says, if
  • 01:26:18if this is microscope
  • 01:26:32you start weighing the risks
  • 01:26:33and the benefits. There is
  • 01:26:34a ten percent or twenty
  • 01:26:36percent depending on how big
  • 01:26:37a person is and how
  • 01:26:38many,
  • 01:26:38and where where exactly the
  • 01:26:40the lymph node basin is.
  • 01:26:42But there's a risk for
  • 01:26:43lymphedema
  • 01:26:44long term.
  • 01:26:45We always say, well, if
  • 01:26:47we were going if the
  • 01:26:48risk is high enough to
  • 01:26:49justify giving adjuvant therapy that
  • 01:26:51we just discussed, if we're
  • 01:26:53going to give adjuvant therapy
  • 01:26:54anyway, doing the surgery doesn't
  • 01:26:56really add anything. So we
  • 01:26:58may not go in and
  • 01:26:59do the entire lymph node
  • 01:27:00dissection. If we say we're
  • 01:27:01not going in there to
  • 01:27:03do adjuvant therapy for any
  • 01:27:05reason, someone's got somebody's got
  • 01:27:07an underlying disease, they we
  • 01:27:08don't feel they can or
  • 01:27:10should handle the immunotherapy,
  • 01:27:12then maybe we would consider
  • 01:27:13doing the nodal dissection. But
  • 01:27:15what we know from at
  • 01:27:16least three or maybe four
  • 01:27:17surgical trials, correct me if
  • 01:27:18I'm wrong, that in microscopic
  • 01:27:21disease, just finding it in
  • 01:27:22the central node and not
  • 01:27:24doing a full nodal dissection,
  • 01:27:25there's no difference in long
  • 01:27:26term survival compared with monitoring
  • 01:27:29it and if it does
  • 01:27:30come back taking it out
  • 01:27:31then.
  • 01:27:32So
  • 01:27:33early early lymph node dissection
  • 01:27:35complete lymph node dissection versus
  • 01:27:37late complete lymph node dissection
  • 01:27:38does not impact survival.
  • 01:27:40And particularly, if we're gonna
  • 01:27:42be giving adjuvant therapy because
  • 01:27:43then we're interfering with any
  • 01:27:44potential cells that are there.
  • 01:27:46Yeah. And if it's not
  • 01:27:47microscopic I mean, I guess
  • 01:27:48it sounds like the evolution
  • 01:27:49is ipi and nivo is
  • 01:27:50not a preferred path anymore.
  • 01:27:53Ipi and nivo, we give
  • 01:27:54if it's not microscopic and
  • 01:27:56we can feel it Yep.
  • 01:27:57And we don't wanna do
  • 01:27:58a big surgery, we'll say,
  • 01:27:59let's give a couple of
  • 01:28:00cycles of ipi and nivo.
  • 01:28:01No. That actually is what
  • 01:28:02we've been doing in the
  • 01:28:03last year. Okay. For stage
  • 01:28:04three. For for big stage
  • 01:28:06three, for bulky stage three
  • 01:28:07that we can clearly feel
  • 01:28:09and very high risk and
  • 01:28:10a robust a robust patient.
  • 01:28:13But we weren't doing that
  • 01:28:14two or three years ago.
  • 01:28:15That's a more recent development,
  • 01:28:17the ipinivo.
  • 01:28:19Taking it out and then
  • 01:28:20doing epinevo, we don't do
  • 01:28:21anymore. We tried, and it
  • 01:28:22didn't didn't it didn't help.
  • 01:28:24Yeah.
  • 01:28:26Is that answer right now?
  • 01:28:27That's a long answer. Okay.
  • 01:28:29I'm happy to talk to
  • 01:28:30you afterwards if you're like.
  • 01:28:31Yeah. Go ahead. Yes. We
  • 01:28:33have a question at the
  • 01:28:34back there.
  • 01:28:37Genius. And over the course
  • 01:28:38of that period,
  • 01:28:40the the the environment has
  • 01:28:41really changed. Just watching this
  • 01:28:43presentation
  • 01:28:44was really amazing how much
  • 01:28:45is happening.
  • 01:28:47And my question as someone
  • 01:28:49who's not in the medical
  • 01:28:50scientific community, I read a
  • 01:28:52lot of headlines.
  • 01:28:54You know, the
  • 01:28:55the current administration
  • 01:28:57nationally that we're under is
  • 01:28:58really cutting back funding in
  • 01:29:01in research and science and
  • 01:29:03cancer research specifically.
  • 01:29:05Listening to Brandy talk about
  • 01:29:07how amazing
  • 01:29:09the hope and the the
  • 01:29:10feeling of optimism she got
  • 01:29:12coming here and being treated,
  • 01:29:14I'm really curious.
  • 01:29:15Thank you, Brandy.
  • 01:29:17I'm really curious how what's
  • 01:29:19happening in the political scene
  • 01:29:21impacts the way you approach
  • 01:29:23your job and and the
  • 01:29:25research that's being done here,
  • 01:29:26and if you're looking ahead
  • 01:29:27and feeling hopeful.
  • 01:29:30Yeah. So thank you for
  • 01:29:31asking that question. That's a
  • 01:29:32really charged one. And,
  • 01:29:35if okay with everyone, I'm
  • 01:29:36just gonna take a stab
  • 01:29:37at answering it because you
  • 01:29:39may you may get different
  • 01:29:40answers from different people.
  • 01:29:42We are worried. There's no
  • 01:29:44question that we're worried about
  • 01:29:45where the funding environment is
  • 01:29:47going.
  • 01:29:48We have had grants
  • 01:29:50that were reviewed at the
  • 01:29:51NIH that got top scores
  • 01:29:53and and were not selected
  • 01:29:55for funding
  • 01:29:56in the last year for
  • 01:29:57reasons that we we don't
  • 01:29:59re they actually don't tell
  • 01:30:00us, but things that wouldn't
  • 01:30:01have happened two years ago
  • 01:30:02or three years ago. However,
  • 01:30:05with all of that, we
  • 01:30:06have a really strong group
  • 01:30:07here.
  • 01:30:08And
  • 01:30:10collectively, we actually still have
  • 01:30:12a fair amount of funding,
  • 01:30:13and we're very proud of
  • 01:30:14that and grateful for that.
  • 01:30:16Some of the funding comes
  • 01:30:17from foundations like the MRA.
  • 01:30:19We wanna thank them. The
  • 01:30:20MRF is a different Melanoma
  • 01:30:21Research Foundation, Melanoma Research Alliance.
  • 01:30:24The Department of Defense has
  • 01:30:26funded many of us, and,
  • 01:30:27actually, doctor Ishizuka just got
  • 01:30:29something from the NIH as
  • 01:30:30well just a few weeks
  • 01:30:31ago.
  • 01:30:32So it we are we
  • 01:30:34are seeing some funding coming
  • 01:30:35in, and but we're still
  • 01:30:36funded from older projects. So
  • 01:30:38things that were submitted three
  • 01:30:39years ago typically get funded
  • 01:30:40for five years. We're still
  • 01:30:41okay.
  • 01:30:42The other beauty or advantage
  • 01:30:44that we have here is
  • 01:30:45that we work for Yale
  • 01:30:46University,
  • 01:30:47and we're very, very grateful,
  • 01:30:50for that because there is
  • 01:30:51a fair amount of of
  • 01:30:53money within the system. And
  • 01:30:54we have some,
  • 01:30:55donors who've helped us a
  • 01:30:57lot,
  • 01:30:58in the last year. And
  • 01:30:59now more than ever, we
  • 01:31:00actually really are dependent on
  • 01:31:02philanthropic
  • 01:31:03donations.
  • 01:31:04What we're hoping for is
  • 01:31:05to ride out the wave
  • 01:31:06until the NIH changes
  • 01:31:09and things go back to
  • 01:31:10where they are. But if
  • 01:31:11anyone here wants to vote
  • 01:31:13with their feet, please do
  • 01:31:14so.
  • 01:31:16We you know, but but
  • 01:31:17the the the government does
  • 01:31:19sometimes care about what people
  • 01:31:20think. And the irony is
  • 01:31:22that the sent the the
  • 01:31:23house and the senate didn't
  • 01:31:25actually cut the budget for
  • 01:31:27NIH funding this year. They're
  • 01:31:28just not dispersing the money.
  • 01:31:29We don't know what they're
  • 01:31:30doing with it, but it
  • 01:31:31hasn't come into
  • 01:31:33it hasn't come into this
  • 01:31:34institution. So thank you so
  • 01:31:35much for that question. I
  • 01:31:36don't know if anyone wants
  • 01:31:37to add to that. Maybe
  • 01:31:38doctor Schonfeldt is someone who's
  • 01:31:40also dependent on all of
  • 01:31:41this.
  • 01:31:42Thanks for including me.
  • 01:31:45I don't know. No. I
  • 01:31:47mean, I I I think
  • 01:31:48you said it well, you
  • 01:31:49know, doctor Kluger. I think
  • 01:31:50it's concerning, and I think
  • 01:31:51we're all worried because just
  • 01:31:53the there's a lot about
  • 01:31:54people to say the least.
  • 01:31:55Yeah. I think that, you
  • 01:31:55know, at least for the
  • 01:31:56time being, things are very
  • 01:31:57different than the way they
  • 01:31:58used to be. And I
  • 01:31:59think for the melanoma community,
  • 01:32:01you know, there's still a
  • 01:32:02lot to be done, but
  • 01:32:03a lot of success. And
  • 01:32:04we wanna continue on that
  • 01:32:05track, and you can go
  • 01:32:06even further and take it
  • 01:32:07to the next level, and
  • 01:32:08that's what we're all working
  • 01:32:09on. So we're we're hopeful,
  • 01:32:10and I think there's some
  • 01:32:12many good things going on
  • 01:32:13research wise. And funding wise,
  • 01:32:15there's other sources like doctor
  • 01:32:16Kluger mentioned between the foundations
  • 01:32:18and philanthropy and still still
  • 01:32:20some government funds, but I
  • 01:32:21think we are worried and
  • 01:32:22and just worried where things
  • 01:32:23are heading overall. So
  • 01:32:27Thank you for the question.
  • 01:32:29Actual
  • 01:32:30clinical trial?
  • 01:32:34There are some
  • 01:32:36so the neoadjuvant
  • 01:32:37studies that doctor Olino talked
  • 01:32:39about actually mostly came out
  • 01:32:40of Australia and Europe.
  • 01:32:43We do we do participate
  • 01:32:45in them when we can.
  • 01:32:47We may see more coming
  • 01:32:48out of Europe because of,
  • 01:32:50you know, because of funding
  • 01:32:51cuts over here.
  • 01:32:57Yes. Thank you.
  • 01:32:59Slide on the four buckets
  • 01:33:01for somebody who's not in
  • 01:33:02the medical field. That was
  • 01:33:03that helps kinda,
  • 01:33:05separate the the, different,
  • 01:33:07therapies.
  • 01:33:09Did I understand right that
  • 01:33:10you said, when you spoke
  • 01:33:11about the immunotherapy
  • 01:33:13that it has,
  • 01:33:14more permanent response? It's more
  • 01:33:16likely than that.
  • 01:33:17And but yet more permanent
  • 01:33:19side effects that would stay
  • 01:33:21with could stay with the
  • 01:33:22person.
  • 01:33:23You know? I see. You
  • 01:33:25know,
  • 01:33:26diabetes
  • 01:33:27and thyroid disease, etcetera, etcetera.
  • 01:33:29So is that
  • 01:33:31still of the four buckets,
  • 01:33:32is that the number one
  • 01:33:34place you go first? Or
  • 01:33:36if you are BRAF positive,
  • 01:33:38then you would go with
  • 01:33:39targeted and then your secondary
  • 01:33:41would be immune.
  • 01:33:42So it was on doctor
  • 01:33:44Chen's slide, the answer to
  • 01:33:45your question. I'm gonna let
  • 01:33:46her answer it though.
  • 01:33:48Well, there was a lot
  • 01:33:49there. We're not saying we're
  • 01:33:50not having a standard.
  • 01:33:53Wait. Wait. We we didn't
  • 01:33:54cover this in clinic already?
  • 01:33:58Just a few hours ago.
  • 01:34:02So, really, it depends on
  • 01:34:04the context.
  • 01:34:05Right? If you have metastatic
  • 01:34:07disease,
  • 01:34:08then the chance of having
  • 01:34:09a long term benefit and
  • 01:34:11response
  • 01:34:12and potentially even one day
  • 01:34:14coming off of treatment entirely,
  • 01:34:16if you have a complete
  • 01:34:17response, meaning all the disease
  • 01:34:19disappears on your scans, is
  • 01:34:21higher with immune therapy.
  • 01:34:23And so in those settings,
  • 01:34:24sometimes a little risk outweighs
  • 01:34:27or sorry. The
  • 01:34:28the the benefits outweigh the
  • 01:34:30risks in that scenario.
  • 01:34:33With the targeted therapies, they
  • 01:34:35work in the metastatic setting
  • 01:34:38well for only so long,
  • 01:34:40and then people relapse.
  • 01:34:42It stops working. Resistance
  • 01:34:44builds up, and then we
  • 01:34:45start having to pivot again,
  • 01:34:47talk about different therapies.
  • 01:34:49When you're talking about stage
  • 01:34:51three, though,
  • 01:34:53they both have the same
  • 01:34:54response
  • 01:34:55in terms of decreasing
  • 01:34:57relapse rates,
  • 01:34:58but
  • 01:34:59there is chance of a
  • 01:35:01permanent side effect with the
  • 01:35:03immune therapy that is not
  • 01:35:05there with the targeted therapy.
  • 01:35:07The targeted therapy also increases
  • 01:35:10survival.
  • 01:35:11So that's why in that
  • 01:35:12stage three setting when we
  • 01:35:14don't really know. Right? Are
  • 01:35:16we doing you more harm
  • 01:35:17or
  • 01:35:18actually not providing any benefit
  • 01:35:20with additional treatment? Technically, the
  • 01:35:22tumor is out. The lymph
  • 01:35:23nodes are out. There's no
  • 01:35:25evidence of disease on the
  • 01:35:26scans.
  • 01:35:27And so to commit to
  • 01:35:29something that could provide a
  • 01:35:31permanent side effect,
  • 01:35:33like type one diabetes,
  • 01:35:35would be extremely detrimental because
  • 01:35:37you maybe never needed that
  • 01:35:38therapy at all.
  • 01:35:40And so
  • 01:35:41it depends on the stage.
  • 01:35:43It depends on
  • 01:35:45kind of personal decisions about
  • 01:35:47the patient. This is why
  • 01:35:48not everyone fits into the
  • 01:35:50same mold. There's other variables.
  • 01:35:52There's other lifestyle factors that
  • 01:35:54we have to take into
  • 01:35:55account
  • 01:35:56to make sure that we
  • 01:35:57personalize that decision and make
  • 01:36:00the right decision
  • 01:36:01as a group. You know,
  • 01:36:02it's not what I recommend
  • 01:36:04necessarily.
  • 01:36:05It's what, like, the the
  • 01:36:07where the values align in
  • 01:36:09terms of improving long term
  • 01:36:10patient outcomes
  • 01:36:12and minimizing long term toxicity.
  • 01:36:14Does that make
  • 01:36:15sense? Okay.
  • 01:36:18Okay. Necessarily, go for it
  • 01:36:20first. Yeah. Just
  • 01:36:22Thank you. So it's very
  • 01:36:24interesting. In the past when
  • 01:36:25we've had these symposia,
  • 01:36:26all the questions were for
  • 01:36:27the dermatologist,
  • 01:36:30dermatologist, and he's just sitting
  • 01:36:31there. So does anyone have
  • 01:36:32a question for him going,
  • 01:36:33going, going? Okay. Question is
  • 01:36:35very good one. I mean,
  • 01:36:35as in having had immunotherapy
  • 01:36:38and the I
  • 01:36:39personally haven't had any long
  • 01:36:40term
  • 01:36:41side effects. And not gonna
  • 01:36:43move, but I think the
  • 01:36:44cancer is out of me.
  • 01:36:45And it was a lifesaver
  • 01:36:46for me. But now it
  • 01:36:47sounds like that's not as
  • 01:36:49quick to be recommended course
  • 01:36:50of action right now. Did
  • 01:36:51I? And I is fascinating.
  • 01:36:53One thing that was on
  • 01:36:54doctor Tran's slide,
  • 01:36:56and I think there was
  • 01:36:57such an open question until
  • 01:36:59four or five years ago
  • 01:37:00for stage four, which is
  • 01:37:02the same thing as metastatic
  • 01:37:03disease, so a little different
  • 01:37:04than than stage three, but
  • 01:37:05whether one is better or
  • 01:37:06not for these very issues.
  • 01:37:07And so there was a
  • 01:37:09specific trial that that doctor
  • 01:37:10Tran mentioned that really
  • 01:37:12was directly addressing that question
  • 01:37:14in stage four patients, and
  • 01:37:15there was such a wide
  • 01:37:16gap in how patients did
  • 01:37:18when they got immunotherapy first.
  • 01:37:19So it really is what
  • 01:37:21we go to if we
  • 01:37:21can in in the stage
  • 01:37:22four setting to where we
  • 01:37:24think it really does make
  • 01:37:25a difference if a patient
  • 01:37:26can get immunotherapy.
  • 01:37:27Yeah. And that trial was
  • 01:37:29stopped early because they felt
  • 01:37:30it was unethical to continue
  • 01:37:32to give
  • 01:37:33the targeted therapies first in
  • 01:37:35stage four because the difference
  • 01:37:36was so big.
  • 01:37:41Any well, thank you all
  • 01:37:43for coming. This was lovely
  • 01:37:44and for the excellent questions.