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This was World Cancer Day 2023!
See the recording (in French), or read more about it here.

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Second International Conference on Sexual Dimorphism in Cancer
Second International Conference on Sexual Dimorphism in Cancer

The field of Sexual Dimorphism in Cancer has seen significant advancements, with disparities in cancer incidence, survival rates, and treatment effectiveness being actively researched. The conference focuses on the impact of sex hormones and chromosomes on cancer susceptibility, with an emphasis on (epi)genetics, sex hormones, cancer cell biology, metabolism and the immune system.

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World Cancer Day 2024
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World Cancer Day 2024

The Cancer Prevention Forum took place on Sunday, February 4th, 2024, and raised awareness about different types of cancer (skin, breast and lung cancer) and ways to prevent them.

Meeting 3
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Perspectives on skin cancer prevention

08 – 11 April 2018 | Les Diablerets, Switzerland

16:00-16:15

Welcome address by G. Paolo Dotto

International Cancer Prevention Institute (ICPI), Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), USA and Université de Lausanne (UNIL), Switzerland

Session I: On human populations, genes and evolution

Chair: Gian-Paolo Dotto

16:15-17:00

Opening Keynote lecture: Mechanisms of protection by HPV vaccination

Doug Lowy   –  BOOK

National Cancer Institute, USA

17:00-17:30

Genetic and environmental contributions to cancer development: lessons from the mouse

Allan Balmain  – BOOK

University of California San Francisco, USA

17:30-18:00

Break

18:00-18:30

Race and gender differences in skin cancer susceptibility

Berna Özdemir / Xiaoying Xu

International Cancer Prevention Institute (ICPI) & Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), Switzerland / Université de Lausanne (UNIL), Switzerland

18:30-19:00

Diseases of the skin in the light of recent human evolution

Tony Capra

Vanderbilt University, USA

19:00-20:00

Welcome drinks

20:00

Dinner

Session II: At the beginning

Chair: Sabine Werner & Erwin Wagner

8:30-9:00

Cellular senescence, aging and skin cancer

Judith Campisi

Buck Institute, USA

9:00-9:15

Inhibition of mitotic kinases cdk1 or PlK1 in skin and oral epithelia triggers a squamous differentiation response ensuring genome integrity

Natalia Sanz-Gómez

Instituto de Investigación Marqués de Valdecilla (IDIVAL), Spain

9:15-9:45

Dyskeratosis congenita and telomere biology disorders as models for understanding cancer etiology

Sharon A. Savage

National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA

9:45-10:00

Driver mutations and signatures of mutational processes in two brothers suffering from nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome

Omar Hasan Ali

Department of Dermatology, Zurich University Hospital, Switzerland

10:00-10:30

Coffee break

10:30-11:00

Understanding the molecular basis of non-melanoma skin cancer

Irene Leigh

University of Dundee, Scotland

11:00-11:15

Cell of origin determines mutational signature and invasiveness of sebaceous carcinoma

Raymond Cho

University of California, San Francisco

11:15-11:20

Inorganic Nanozyme cerium oxide potentially reduces the UV induced oxidative damage in skin

Aditya Arya

Pathfinder Research and Training Foundation, India

11:20-11:25

RIPK4 maintains epidermal homeostasis and prevents skin cancer by suppressing mitogenic signaling

Giel Tanghe

VIB – University Ghent, Belgium

11:25-11:30

Notch-effector CSL promotes squamous cell carcinoma by repressing histone demethylase KDM6B

Dania Al Labban

11:30-11:45

PI3K/AKT induced differentiation is a dominant tumor suppressive mechanism that restrains clonal expansion in skin epithelium

Slobodan Beronja

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, USA

11:45-12:00

Selective transcriptional programs downstream of p63 and p73 in early stages of skin squamous cell carcinoma

Caterina Missero/Dario Antonini

University of Naples Federico II, Italy

12:00-12:30

How p53 mutant stem cells colonize the epidermis

Phil Jones

Sanger Institute, UK

12:30-16:00

Lunch and poster session I

Session III: Under the surface

Chair: Irene Leigh & Raymond Cho

16:00-16:30

Non-deletional mechanisms of cancer control

Martin Röcken

University of Tübingen, Germany

16:30-16:45

Differential role of the rasgefs sos1 and sos2 in mouse skin homeostasis and carcinogenesis

Fernando Calvo Baltanas

Centro de Investigación del Cancer-IBMCC, Spain

16:45-17:00

p53 regulated long non-coding RNA LINC00346 promotes cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma progression by regulating STAT3 and matrix metalloproteinase expression

Minna Piipponen

University of Turku, Finland

17:00-17:30

Chronic inflammation and skin disease

Erwin Wagner

Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncológicas (CNIO), Spain

17:30-18:00

Break

18:00-18:30

Factors controlling stromal functions in wound healing and skin cancer

Sabine Werner

Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich (ETH), Switzerland

18:30-18:45

Roles of the nuclear receptors PPARs in skin responses to UV and skin cancers

Liliane Michalik

University of Lausanne (UNIL), Switzerland

18:45-18:50

CSL / Notch1 control genomic stability in cancer-associated fibroblast activation and expansion

Giulia Bottoni

University of Lausanne (UNIL), Switzerland & Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), USA

18:50-18:55

Targeting Activin signaling pathway in SCC

Michael Cangkrama

Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich (ETH), Switzerland

18:55-19:00

Efficient cancer control with immune checkpoint blockade requires cytokine-induced senescence

Ellen Brenner

Dermatology, Eberhard Karls University Tübingen, Germany

19:00-19:30

An important role of the vasculature in skin cancer progression

Michael Detmar

Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich (ETH), Switzerland

20:00

Dinner

Session IV: The pigment cell enigma

Chair: Martin Röcken & Liliane Michalik

08:30-09:00

Time and space trends in melanoma incidence and mortality: clues for understanding the etiology

Roberto Zanetti

International Association of Cancer Registries (IACR)

09:00-09:15

Reproductive factors, exogenous hormone use, and incidence of melanoma among women in the United States

Elizabeth Cahoon

U.S. National Cancer Institute, USA

09:15-09:45

Mechanisms underlying risk and pathogenesis of melanoma

David Fisher

Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), USA

09:45-10:00

Subpopulations of melanoma cells with distinct biological properties exhibit varying levels of ZEB proteins

Niels Vandamme

VIB – Inflammation Research Center, Belgium

10:00-10:30

Coffee break

10:30-11:00

Humanized mice: A model for melanocyte transformation and early melanoma progression

Shyam Somasundaram

The Wistar Institute, USA

11:00-11:30

Melanomas and their precursors

Boris Bastian

University of California San Francisco, USA

11:30-11:35

BRAFV600E in Primary and Recurrent Nevi and Melanomas

Nora Woltsche

Medical University of Graz, Austria

11:35-11:40

Spontaneous and therapeutic STING activation in the skin melanoma microenvironment induces an efficient antitumor immune response

Dorys Adriana Lopez Ramos

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), Switzerland

11:40-11:45

Unexpected contribution of lymphatic vessels to promotion of distant metastatic spread of melanoma

Qiaoli Ma

Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich (ETH), Switzerland

11:45-12:15

Clinical Raster Scan Optoacoustic Mesoscopy for skin imaging. Diving deep and staying focused

Juan Aguirre

Technische Universität München and Institute for Biological and Medical Imaging, Helmholtz Zentrum München, Germany

12:15-12:30

Comprehensively characterize complex tissues in spatial context with Imaging Mass Cytometry

Roberto Spada

Fluidigm

12:30-16:00

Lunch and poster session II

Session V: The interplay between immune cells and their neighbours

Chair: Maria Sibilia & Caterina Missero

16:00-16:30

Molecular changes in Actinic Keratosis and effects of treatment with photodynamic therapy

Francesca Zolezzi

GALDERMA

16:30-17:00

The impact of neutrophils in cutaneous leishmaniasis

Fabienne Tacchini-Cottier

University of Lausanne

17:00-17:30

Immune influences on early mutant keratinocyte clonal expansion

Michael Girardi

Yale School of Medicine, USA

17:30-18:00

Break

18:00-18:30

Key functional genomic events in the transformation of cutaneous T-cells

Sean Whittaker

King’s College London, UK

18:30-18:45

Epithelial damage and tissue gd T cells promote a unique tumor- protective IgE response

Jessica Strid

Imperial College London, UK

18:45-18:50

Simultaneous Multiplexed Imaging of mRNA and Proteins with Subcellular Resolution in Tissue Samples by Imaging Mass Cytometry

Daniel Schulz

Institute of Molecular Life Sciences/University of Zurich, Switzerland

18:50-19:20

Essential role of skin commensal bacteria in the wound healing response

Michel Gilliet

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois – Université de Lausanne (CHUV-UNIL), Switzerland

20:00

Dinner and drinks

Session VI: The skin ecosystem

Chair: Allan Balmain & Berna Özdemir

08:30-09:00

The influence of skin microbiota to skin inflammation

Maria Sibilia

Medical University of Vienna, Austria

09:00-09:15

UV and Cutaneous Papillomavirus Infection cooperate in Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer Development

Daniel Hasche

German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Germany

09:15-09:30

Melanoma-derived extracellular microvesicles are taken up by lymph node resident macrophages and lymphatic endothelial cells and induce lymph node remodeling

Lothar Dieterich

Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zurich (ETH), Switzerland

09:30-10:00

Role for the skin microbiota in tissue immunity and inflammation

Yasmine Belkaid

National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA

10:00-10:30

Coffee break

10:30-11:00

Role of the microenvironment in cancer invasion and therapy response

Erik Sahai

The Francis Crick Institute

11:00-11:15

Pitx1 controls a bi-stable transcriptional network that governs self-renewal and differentiation in Squamous Cell Carcinomas

Markus Schober

NYU School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology, USA

11:15-11:45

Highly multiplexed analysis of the tumor ecosystem on the single cell level by mass cytometry

Bernd Bodenmiller

Institute of Molecular Life Sciences, University of Zürich, Switzerland

11:45-12:00

Skin Cancer Prevention: meeting highlights and a look into the future

Barbara Gilchrest

Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), USA