BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> JD v Mather [2012] EWHC 3063 (QB) (01 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/3063.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3063 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LIVERPOOL DISTRICT REGISTRY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
JD |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
DR MELANIE MATHER |
Defendant |
____________________
Andrew Kennedy (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mower) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 15-19 October 2012 (Liverpool) and 22 October 2012 (London)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Bean :
"Two portions of skin. The smaller is 0.9 x 0.7 x 0.3cm. The skin surface is irregular and contains a hyper-pigmented pigmented lesion which occupies most of the skin's surface. The other piece of skin is 1.5 x 1.0 x 0.5cm. It shows a smooth irregular hyper-pigmented lesion which covers the skin's surface."
"This is ulcerated skin containing a nodular vertical growth phase malignant melanoma. … The surface is extensively ulcerated and, whilst the exact size of ulceration is difficult to measure due to the nature of the specimen, it measures at least 12mm. The tumour shows a brisk mitotic activity (34 mitoses per 10 high power fields). There is no evidence of lymphovascular or perineural infiltration. The Breslow thickness is difficult to assess accurately due to poor orientation in place, however, in better orientated fragments it measures 5mm and the Clark Level is 4 in this specimen although no subcutaneous fat is included. There is associated (sic) with moderate active and chronic inflammatory cell response. There is no evidence of regression satellite nodules or pre-existent naevus. Due to the fragmented nature of the specimen, completeness of excision cannot be accurately commented on, but it likely to be incomplete."
"Macro: A skin ellipse measuring 65mm x 30mm x 30mm, which shows a scarred area on the surface measuring 8mm x 5mm (with focal dark pigmentation). Attached to the skin is a specimen of groin dissection measuring 105mm x 90mm x 30mm. 8 lymph nodes are present in the fat…
Micro: Sections from the skin show a focus of residual in situ and invasive malignant melanoma. The maximum horizontal extent of this focus is 5mm. The Breslow thickness in this excision is 2.8mm (Clark's level IV). (This may not be accurate due to previous excision). There is no evidence of ulceration… two out of eight lymph nodes identified contain metastatic melanoma."
The AJCC staging of melanomas
Breslow thickness
Ulceration
"The presence of ulceration, particularly when greater than 3 mm in diameter is an independent prognostic indicator associated with a diminished five-year survival rate. It should be noted that ulceration can 'downstage' the tumour thickness.
Ulceration has recently taken on an additional degree of significant importance. This follows new proposals from the New American Joint Committee on Cancer [AJCC] Staging System for Cutaneous Melanoma …... Melanoma ulceration is now regarded as the second most important prognostic variable and is independent of tumour thickness on multivariate analysis. It also enjoy a high degree of inter-observer agreement. Ulceration is defined here as the absence of intact epidermis overlying a portion of the primary melanoma, based on microscopic observation. Unfortunately, no distinction is made between biological ulceration and traumatic/exogenous ulceration. Likewise, a minimal width of ulceration is not stated."
"Melanoma ulceration is defined as the absence of an intact epidermis overlying a major portion of the primary melanoma based on microscopic examination of the histologic sections. It can easily be distinguished from artifactual or traumatic disruption of the epidermis. Traumatically induced defects are associated with haemorrhage, brightly eosinophilic fibrin exudation at the site, and an architectural defect that usually defines the agent leading to the trauma such as an insect bite or an excoriation. In fact, the interpretation of melanoma ulceration among pathologists is one of the most reproducible of all the major histopathologic features. This definition encompasses surface defects from a total absence of the epidermis overlying the tumour to an excavated area including the epidermis and a portion of the tumour. The surface may exhibit scattered debris."
"The AJCC guidelines state that ulcerations can easily be distinguished from artifactual or traumatic disruption of the epidermis. In our experience and that of others, this is incorrect. We regard this distinction possible only with regard to disruptions occurring during or after removal of the melanoma, not to previous trauma. We do not agree that "an architectural defect usually defines the agent leading to the trauma, such as an insect bite or an excoriation". In fact, we do not have experience with melanoma complicated by an insect bite; this must be an extraordinary occurrence.
In accordance with Spatz and colleagues, we consider ulceration to be present in any situation where there is a full-thickness defect of the epidermis covering the melanoma, the defect is covered by fibrin and cell debris with neutrophils and there is associated reactive change (thinning, effacement or reactive hyperplasia) of the immediately adjacent epidermis. These features distinguish true ulceration from artifactual damage during or after surgical removal and assessment of presence of ulceration based on this description was much improved when compared to its assessment according to the less precise AJCC guidelines."
Conclusion on ulceration
Had the cancer spread to the lymph nodes by March 2006?
"Melanomas which are 3-4mm thick and ulcerated have about a 30% risk of developing involvement of the regional lymph nodes. This may be detected by sentinel lymph node biopsy if the nodes are clinically normal, or by clinical examination if the nodes are palpable. We do not know that [Mr D's] lymph nodes were clinically normal in March 2006 since they were not examined. However, we do know that the regional lymph nodes were clinically abnormal and histologically positive for melanoma in October 2006. the probability of developing palpable regional lymph node involvement in a population of patients with at least 5.0 mm thick ulcerated melanomas is about 45%. However, [Mr D's] risk of developing regional lymph node involvement in March 2006 when the melanoma was 3.0 mm thick was not simply 30%, as he has since been found to be one of the 45% who were destined to become positive. For the risk in March 2006, one needs to work back from the fact that we know the lymph node was involved 7 months later, and therefore the risk was not simply that of the general population at 30%. Evidence indicates that to arrive at a realistic figure the 30% should be adjusted to reflect the position actually found in October 2006. Therefore his actual risk when the melanoma was 3-4 mm thick was a value between population risk, ie 30%, and 30% divided by 45%, or 66%.
The average interval between diagnosis of primary melanoma and first clinically detectable relapse is 2 years. The interval between the first opportunity for diagnosis of [Mr D's] primary melanoma and his first relapse was 7-8 months. Consequently, in March 2006, whether or not the nodes were clinically enlarged, they were very likely, on the balance of probabilities, to have been involved. My opinion is that in March 2006 [Mr D's] melanoma was T3b/T4b N1-2a M0 (stage IIIB melanoma) or T3b/T4b N1b M0, (stage IIIC melanoma). This means that in March 2006 he had an ulcerated primary melanoma and either 1 or 2 involved but not enlarged, sub-clinical lymph nodes, or an ulcerated primary melanoma and 1 enlarged lymph node."
Result in terms of the AJCC staging
Conclusion on the Claimant's original case
The alternative case
"In my view the Claimant would in these circumstances have had primary resection with either sentinel node biopsy, careful follow-up or entry into a clinical trial. Assuming a sentinel node biopsy were performed and microscopic melanoma were detected, the Claimant would have proceeded to lymph node dissection; assuming follow up rather than sentinel node biopsy, clinical regional nodes would have been detected at some point. In my opinion the net result of earlier treatment would have been extended life expectancy, depending on the impact of surgery on the "dormancy" of the metastatic deposits……In my opinion the extended life expectancy would have been of the order of a year."
"The defendant is liable for any extra pain, suffering, loss of amenity, financial loss and loss of expectation of life which may have resulted from the delay. If, without the delay, the claimant would have achieved a longer gap before more radical treatment became necessary, then he should be entitled to damages to reflect the acceleration in his suffering. If the pain and suffering he would have suffered anyway was made worse by the anguish of knowing that his disease could have been detected earlier, then he should be compensated for that. There is also the distinct possibility that the delay reduced his life expectancy in the following sense. It is possible that had he been treated when he should have been treated, his median life expectancy then would have been x years, whereas given the delay in treatment his median life expectancy from then is x minus y. This argument requires that the assessment of loss of life expectancy be based on median survival rates: i e those to be expected of half the relevant population at the particular time. If half the men with Mr Gregg's condition would have survived for x years or over with prompt treatment, and half would have survived for less than x years, then x is the median life expectancy of the group. If the same calculation of life expectancy from when he should have been treated is done in the light of the delay in treatment, the median life expectancy may have fallen. There might therefore be a modest claim in respect of the 'lost years'."
Conclusion