Wednesday, March 14, 2012

From Moffitt: Interesting. A brief history of melanoma

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22395415


Melanoma Res. 2012 Apr;22(2):114-22.

A brief history of melanoma: from mummies to mutations.

Source

aDepartment of Molecular Oncology bThe Comprehensive Melanoma Research Center cDepartment of Cutaneous Oncology, The Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, Florida, USA.

Abstract

In recent years, melanoma research has undergone a renaissance. What was once viewed, at least in the metastatic setting, as an intractable and untreatable disease is now revealing its molecular weaknesses. 2011 was a landmark year formelanoma therapy, with two new agents, the anti-CTLA4 antibody ipilimumab and the BRAF inhibitor vemurafenib, shown to confer a survival benefit in randomized phase III clinical trials. Overlooked in the recent flurry of interest that has accompanied the development of these drugs, melanoma is in fact an ancient disease that has long frustrated attempts at therapeutic interventions. In this article, we trace the history of melanoma: from the earliest known cases of melanoma in pre-Colombian South America, through the explorations of the Victorian anatomists right up to the molecular biology revolution of the 20th century that allowed for the identification of the key driving events required for melanomagenesis. We further outline how observations about melanoma heterogeneity, first made over 190 years ago, continue to drive our efforts to reduce melanomato the level of a chronic, manageable disease and ultimately to cure it entirely.

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