Muir Torre Syndrome: The Role Of IHC And Genotyping In Sebaceous Neoplasia To Facilitate Prevention Strategies In Colorectal And Endometrial Cancer
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$396,786.00
Summary
Sebaceous neoplasia (SN), may be an early warning sign for Lynch syndrome (LS), an inherited cancer predisposition caused by mutations in a group of genes. There are high lifetime risks of bowel and uterine cancer, for which there are effective risk management plans if the risk is known. Clinicians are challenged by the role of SN in identifying LS. At present, it is hard to differentiate. We aim to determine features to improve the diagnosis of LS carriers.
A Prospective Single Arm Trial Of Involved-field Radiotherapy For Stage I-II Low Grade Nongastric Marginal Zone Lymphoma
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$363,869.00
Summary
This is an international, multicentre study that will, for the first time, prospectively measure the curative potential of radiotherapy in localised marginal zone lymphoma (MZL). Most MZL arises in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT), either in the stomach or in a range of other organs such as salivary glands, the tissues around the eye or the thyroid. Many stomach MALT lymphomas are caused by infection with Helicobacter Pylori. This infection can also be associated with non-gastric MALT ly ....This is an international, multicentre study that will, for the first time, prospectively measure the curative potential of radiotherapy in localised marginal zone lymphoma (MZL). Most MZL arises in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT), either in the stomach or in a range of other organs such as salivary glands, the tissues around the eye or the thyroid. Many stomach MALT lymphomas are caused by infection with Helicobacter Pylori. This infection can also be associated with non-gastric MALT lymphomas, but the association has never been prospectively studied. Chlamydia Psittaci infection can cause MALT lymphoma in the orbit. The management of localised MZL outside the stomach is controversial and there have been no large prospective studies of any of the commonly-used treatments (radiotherapy, chemotherapy, surgery). No prospective studies have looked at the role of infection with Helicobacter pylori or the role of autoantibodies in these diseases. Radiotherapy is the best-characterised therapy in the literature and appears to have a high cure rate with low toxicity. The disease seems exquisitely radiosensitive. Management of localised MZL in Australia can be ad hoc and we have often seen patients who have undergone unnecessary mutilating surgery or ineffective chemotherapy. It has been reported that localised non-gastric MZL (stage I and II) can be cured with radiotherapy in a high percentage of patients (usually >70%) in retrospective studies from large centres such as Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto. Workers from that centre will participate in this study. This study will: Prospectively report efficacy and toxicity for radiotherapy in MZL for the first time Definitively document Helicobacter Pylori status in all cases and Chlamydia status in orbital cases Provide a gold standard against which to compare new therapies This study won the award for the most highly supported study in its year at the TROG annual scientific meeting.Read moreRead less
Adult non-Hodgkin?s lymphoma (NHL) is one of the most rapidly increasing cancers of recent times. The rise has occurred worldwide in men and women of all ages. The reason for most of the rise is unknown. It has recently been proposed that part of the upsurge may be due to increases in sun exposure which have occurred during the same period. There is some indirect evidence to support this hypothesis. For example, the rate of occurrence of NHL is higher closer to the equator in Australia than it i ....Adult non-Hodgkin?s lymphoma (NHL) is one of the most rapidly increasing cancers of recent times. The rise has occurred worldwide in men and women of all ages. The reason for most of the rise is unknown. It has recently been proposed that part of the upsurge may be due to increases in sun exposure which have occurred during the same period. There is some indirect evidence to support this hypothesis. For example, the rate of occurrence of NHL is higher closer to the equator in Australia than it is in England and Wales, and NHL is diagnosed more frequently among British migrants to Victoria than it is in their homeland. The sunlight hypothesis will be tested by comparing the pattern of sun exposure in Tasmanians diagnosed with NHL during the years 1998-2001 and in a sample of Tasmanians without the disease. tasmania has been chosen because levels of ultraviolet (UV) radiation are low there in all but the summer months, when it approaches the levels of Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne. There is therefore a greater difference in UV exposure between the most exposed and the least exposed in Tasmania, making it an ideal location to test the hypothesis. The link between NHL and a measure of melanin pigmentation in the skin will also be studied. The incidence of NHL is higher in lighter-skinned ethnic groups than it is in darker-skinned people living at the same latitude, but it is not known whether risk varies within Caucasian populations. A new measure of melanin in the skin, developed at the Menzies Centre for Population Health Research in Hobart, will better allow the effects of skin colour to be studied.Read moreRead less