Recent Publications Affirm the Value of Gene Expression Profile Testing in Guiding a Definitive Diagnosis and Clinical Decision-Making in Melanocytic Lesions of Uncertain Malignant Potential
Castle Biosciences announced two recent studies supporting the clinical need for its MyPath® Melanoma gene expression profile (GEP) test. The studies, published in the Journal of Cutaneous Pathology and Melanoma Management, demonstrate:
- Significant disagreement in diagnosing melanocytic lesions using pathology alone
- Variability in surgical management among dermatologists
- Risk-aligned changes and increased confidence in decisions resulting from GEP testing
Key findings include:
- 24% of suspicious lesions had differing diagnoses by nine board-certified dermatopathologists
- 84.2% of clinicians decreased recommended surgical margins with benign GEP results
- 100% of clinicians increased surgical excision recommendations with malignant GEP results
- Overall increase in patient management plan confidence with GEP results
Castle Biosciences ha annunciato due recenti studi a supporto della necessità clinica del suo test di espressione genica MyPath® Melanoma (GEP). Gli studi, pubblicati nel Journal of Cutaneous Pathology e Melanoma Management, dimostrano:
- Una significativa discrepanza nella diagnosi delle lesioni melanocitiche utilizzando esclusivamente la patologia
- Variabilità nella gestione chirurgica tra i dermatologi
- Cambiamenti allineati al rischio e maggiore confidenza nelle decisioni risultanti dai test GEP
I risultati chiave includono:
- Il 24% delle lesioni sospette ha avuto diagnosi differenti da nove dermatopatologi certificati
- Il 84,2% dei clinici ha ridotto i margini chirurgici raccomandati con risultati benigni del GEP
- Il 100% dei clinici ha aumentato le raccomandazioni per l'escissione chirurgica con risultati maligni del GEP
- Aumento generale della fiducia nel piano di gestione del paziente con i risultati del GEP
Castle Biosciences anunció dos estudios recientes que apoyan la necesidad clínica de su prueba de perfil de expresión genética MyPath® Melanoma (GEP). Los estudios, publicados en el Journal of Cutaneous Pathology y Melanoma Management, demuestran:
- Una discrepancia significativa en el diagnóstico de lesiones melanocíticas utilizando solo patología
- Variabilidad en la gestión quirúrgica entre dermatólogos
- Cambios alineados al riesgo y mayor confianza en las decisiones derivadas de las pruebas GEP
Los hallazgos clave incluyen:
- El 24% de las lesiones sospechosas tuvo diagnósticos diferentes por parte de nueve dermatopatólogos certificados
- El 84,2% de los clínicos disminuyó los márgenes quirúrgicos recomendados con resultados benignos del GEP
- El 100% de los clínicos aumentó las recomendaciones de excisión quirúrgica con resultados malignos del GEP
- Aumento general en la confianza del plan de manejo del paciente con los resultados del GEP
Castle Biosciences는 MyPath® Melanoma 유전자 발현 프로필(GEP) 테스트의 임상적 필요성을 뒷받침하는 두 가지 최근 연구를 발표했습니다. 이 연구들은 Journal of Cutaneous Pathology와 Melanoma Management에 발표되었습니다:
- 병리학만으로 멜라노사 lesion의 진단에 있어 상당한 불일치가 있음
- 피부과 의사들 간의 외과적 관리의 변동성
- GEP 테스트의 결과로 인한 위험 정렬 변화 및 결정에 대한 신뢰도 증가
주요 발견 사항은 다음과 같습니다:
- 아직 결정되지 않은 의심스러운 병변의 24%가 아홉 명의 피부병리학자로부터 다른 진단을 받음
- 84.2%의 의사가 양성 GEP 결과에 대해 추천하는 외과적 마진을 줄임
- 100%의 의사가 악성 GEP 결과에 대해 외과적 절제 권장 사항을 증가시킴
- GEP 결과로 인한 환자 관리 계획에 대한 전반적인 신뢰도 증가
Castle Biosciences a annoncé deux études récentes soutenant le besoin clinique de son test de profil d'expression génique MyPath® Melanoma (GEP). Les études, publiées dans le Journal of Cutaneous Pathology et Melanoma Management, démontrent :
- Une désaccord significatif dans le diagnostic des lésions mélanocytaires en utilisant uniquement la pathologie
- Une variabilité dans la gestion chirurgicale parmi les dermatologues
- Des changements alignés sur le risque et une confiance accrue dans les décisions résultant des tests GEP
Les principales conclusions incluent :
- 24 % des lésions suspectes avaient des diagnostics différents par neuf dermatopathologistes certifiés
- 84,2 % des cliniciens ont réduit les marges chirurgicales recommandées avec des résultats GEP bénins
- 100 % des cliniciens ont augmenté les recommandations d'excision chirurgicale avec des résultats GEP malins
- Augmentation générale de la confiance dans le plan de gestion des patients avec les résultats GEP
Castle Biosciences kündigte zwei kürzlich durchgeführte Studien an, die den klinischen Bedarf an ihrem MyPath® Melanoma Genexpressionsprofil (GEP)-Test unterstützen. Die Studien, veröffentlicht im Journal of Cutaneous Pathology und Melanoma Management, zeigen:
- Eine erhebliche Uneinigkeit beim Diagnostizieren von melanozytären Läsionen allein durch Pathologie
- Variabilität im chirurgischen Management unter Dermatologen
- Risikoabgestimmte Änderungen und ein erhöhtes Vertrauen in Entscheidungen, die sich aus GEP-Tests ergeben
Wichtige Erkenntnisse umfassen:
- 24% der verdächtigen Läsionen hatten unterschiedliche Diagnosen von neun zertifizierten Dermatopathologen
- 84,2% der Kliniker reduzierten empfohlene chirurgische Margen bei benignen GEP-Ergebnissen
- 100% der Kliniker erhöhten die Empfehlungen zur chirurgischen Exzision bei malignen GEP-Ergebnissen
- Allgemeine Erhöhung des Vertrauens in den Patientenmanagementplan mit GEP-Ergebnissen
- MyPath® Melanoma GEP test aids in providing accurate diagnosis for ambiguous melanocytic lesions
- Study shows 24% of suspicious lesions had differing diagnoses, supporting the need for objective diagnostic tools
- GEP testing led to 84.2% of clinicians decreasing surgical margins for benign results
- 100% of clinicians increased surgical excision recommendations for malignant GEP results
- Increased confidence in patient management plans with GEP results (67.4% for benign, 54.9% for malignant)
- None.
Insights
This study highlights the significant impact of gene expression profile (GEP) testing in diagnosing ambiguous melanocytic lesions. Key findings include:
- 24% of suspicious lesions had differing diagnoses among dermatopathologists, underscoring the challenge in diagnosing ambiguous cases.
- GEP testing led to substantial changes in clinical decision-making:
84.2% of clinicians decreased surgical margins for benign GEP results100% increased surgical excision recommendations for malignant results- Significant adjustments in follow-up frequency based on GEP results
- Increased confidence in patient management plans:
67.4% for benign and54.9% for malignant results
These findings demonstrate the potential of Castle Biosciences' MyPath® Melanoma test to improve diagnostic accuracy and guide more appropriate treatment decisions. This could lead to better patient outcomes and potentially reduce unnecessary procedures or missed diagnoses.
Two studies published in the Journal of Cutaneous Pathology and Melanoma Management demonstrate the significant disagreement that exists in the diagnosis of melanocytic lesions using pathology alone, the variability of surgical management of lesions among treating dermatologists, and the risk-aligned changes and confidence in these decisions that can result from GEP testing1,2
“For many concerning pigmented lesions, a definitive histopathologic diagnosis is clear: a malignant melanoma or a benign nevus,” said Matthew Goldberg, M.D., board-certified dermatologist and dermatopathologist, and senior vice president, medical, of Castle Biosciences. “For a substantial subset of lesions, however, a final diagnosis can vary widely depending on which dermatopathologist reviews a biopsy sample, as our study further illustrated.”
A recent study published in the Journal of Cutaneous Pathology found that in a large cohort of patients with suspicious lesions (n=3,317), approximately
Alexander Witkowski, M.D., Ph.D., dermatologist and assistant professor of dermatology at the Oregon Health & Science University in
Without GEP guidance, variation in the surgical management of each lesion was demonstrated, further supporting the need for GEP testing in lesions with ambiguous diagnoses. The study data showed that benign GEP results prompted
“GEP testing with MyPath Melanoma increases confidence and helps to guide the management decisions dermatologists and other healthcare providers make when choosing what to do with a suspicious mole, particularly when the results of a pathology report are unclear,” added Witkowski. “GEP testing provides significant value for clinicians and patients, and that’s exactly what we saw in our study. This molecular test provides an objective data point that can help improve definitive melanoma diagnosis and earlier treatment.”
About MyPath® Melanoma
MyPath Melanoma is Castle’s gene expression profile test designed to provide an accurate, objective result to aid dermatopathologists and dermatologists in characterizing difficult-to-diagnose melanocytic lesions. Of the approximately two million suspicious pigmented lesions biopsied annually in the
About Castle Biosciences
Castle Biosciences (Nasdaq: CSTL) is a leading diagnostics company improving health through innovative tests that guide patient care. The Company aims to transform disease management by keeping people first: patients, clinicians, employees and investors.
Castle’s current portfolio consists of tests for skin cancers, Barrett’s esophagus, mental health conditions and uveal melanoma. Additionally, the Company has active research and development programs for tests in other diseases with high clinical need, including its test in development to help guide systemic therapy selection for patients with moderate-to-severe atopic dermatitis, psoriasis and related conditions. To learn more, please visit www.CastleBiosciences.com and connect with us on LinkedIn, Facebook, X and Instagram.
DecisionDx-Melanoma, DecisionDx-CMSeq, i31-SLNB, i31-ROR, DecisionDx-SCC, MyPath Melanoma, DiffDx-Melanoma, TissueCypher, IDgenetix, DecisionDx-UM, DecisionDx-PRAME and DecisionDx-UMSeq are trademarks of Castle Biosciences, Inc.
Forward-Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which are subject to the “safe harbor” created by those sections. These forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements concerning: our ability to continue building the evidence supporting our portfolio of clinically actionable molecular tests and their use to improve decision-making for patients with skin cancers; and the ability of MyPath Melanoma to aid in providing an accurate diagnosis, including where pathological diagnosis is uncertain, to help ensure appropriate patient management. The words “can,” “may” and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements, although not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. We may not actually achieve the plans, intentions or expectations disclosed in our forward-looking statements, and you should not place undue reliance on our forward-looking statements. Actual results or events could differ materially from the plans, intentions and expectations disclosed in the forward-looking statements that we make. These forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements, including, without limitation: subsequent study or trial results and findings may contradict earlier study or trial results and findings, including with respect to the discussion of MyPath Melanoma in this press release; actual application of our tests may not provide the aforementioned benefits to patients; and the risks set forth under the heading “Risk Factors” in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended June 30, 2024, and in our other filings with the SEC. The forward-looking statements are applicable only as of the date on which they are made, and we do not assume any obligation to update any forward-looking statements, except as may be required by law.
- Hosler GA, Goldberg MS, Estrada SI, et al. Diagnostic discordance among histopathological reviewers of melanocytic lesions. J Cutan Pathol. 2024; 51(8): 624-633. doi:10.1111/cup.14635
- Witkowski A, Jarell AD, Ahmed KL, et al. A clinical impact study of dermatologists’ use of diagnostic gene expression profile testing to guide patient management. Melanoma Manag. 2024;11(1). doi: 10.2217/mmt-2023-0002
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241016116017/en/
Investor Contact:
Camilla Zuckero
czuckero@castlebiosciences.com
Media Contact:
amarshall@castlebiosciences.com
Source: Castle Biosciences Inc.
FAQ
What is the purpose of Castle Biosciences' MyPath® Melanoma gene expression profile (GEP) test?
How did the recent studies demonstrate the need for GEP testing in melanocytic lesions?
What percentage of clinicians changed their surgical recommendations based on GEP test results for CSTL's MyPath® Melanoma?