Patient Safety Pubs, MSK on CBS, Team Ginger, and a Sunscreen Study

In honor of Patient Safety Week, here’s a compilation of recent publications by MSK authors focusing on patient safety.


Last Sunday, MSK was featured on CBS Sunday Morning in a segment about immunotherapy clinical trials. Young Ezzy Pineda is 12 years old and was diagnosed with leukemia when she was nine. After multiple failed rounds of chemotherapy, she was enrolled in a CAR-T clinical trial at MSK under Dr. Kevin Curran, a pediatric oncologist. While Ezzy is still one of the promising exceptions, found to be cancer-free six weeks after her CAR-T infusion, it gives doctors and patients with incurable cancers everywhere hope. According to the NCI’s Dr. Rosenberg, considered to be the father of immunotherapy, “If you look at all cancer patients, perhaps 10 percent can be helped by immunotherapy today…but it’s getting better every day.”


Matt Seconi has been pedaling for Team Ginger since 2014, shortly after his then girlfriend Kelly Knab was diagnosed with pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors. While she was undergoing treatment they sought ways to be involved in the cancer community. It was February 2014 when the pair participated in their first Cycle for Survival event in San Francisco, heading a team in honor of Kelly aptly named Team Ginger since Kelly was a redhead. Two months later they brought Team Ginger to ride in Times Square. Matt and Kelly were engaged in December 2014, only days before Kelly passed away on January 2, 2015. She was 28 years old. Seconi used his grief to pedal even harder, back at it for the 2015 events. Since Kelly’s passing, Seconi has participated in 17 rides across the country and raised $660,000 for cancer research.


A recent study by Dr. Steven Wang, a dermatologist at MSK who works with melanoma patients every day, looked at 20 of the best-selling sunscreen products in the United States marketed as 15 to 100 SPF and broad-spectrum. They tested the products based on critical wave length requirement in the US and the UVA protection factor test in Europe. All but one product met the US standard, however nine products failed the EU standard, including eight with an SPF of 50+. Part of the issue is that there are only 17 active ingredients are approved for use in the US, and significantly fewer long-range UVA filters available. Wang argues that the US needs to add new filters into formulation to improve protection, “We’re always looking for new ways to improve protection by adding inactive ingredients with a better film-forming technology.”