Literature DB >> 10065812

Prognosis of thick cutaneous melanoma.

S H Kim1, C Garcia, J Rodriguez, D G Coit.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ten percent of all patients with melanoma present with thick primary tumors (> or = 4 mm or Clark level V). To determine factors associated with outcomes, we performed a retrospective analysis of 120 patients who had definitive primary treatment of their thick cutaneous melanomas at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center between January 1986 and April 1995. STUDY
DESIGN: Data were collected via chart review and patient interview. Association between factors was determined by chi-square analysis. Survival analysis was performed by the method of Kaplan and Meier. Univariate analysis by log-rank testing and multivariate analysis using the Cox regression model were used to identify factors associated with disease-free and overall survival.
RESULTS: Median age was 61 years (range 19 to 87 years). There were 80 males and 40 females. Median Breslow thickness was 6 mm (range 1.8 to 25.0 mm). Ninety-three patients (78%) underwent lymphadenectomy (52 elective and 41 therapeutic). Twenty-one percent (11 of 52) of the elective dissections were positive. Median followup was 3.8 years (5.2 years for patients no evident disease and 2.0 years for those dead of disease). Overall survival for the entire group was 62% at 5 years and 43% at 10 years. Age, gender, and anatomic site (axial versus extremity) were not factors predictive of overall survival. Increasing thickness, nodal status at presentation (American Joint Commission on Cancer stage II versus III), and the presence of ulceration were significant predictors of both disease relapse and disease-specific mortality in both univariate and multivariate analyses. There was no difference in postrelapse survival between patients suffering local, nodal, or distant relapse (p = 0.63).
CONCLUSIONS: Patients presenting with thick cutaneous melanomas are expected to have more than 50% 5-year survival, and they should not be denied the opportunity for aggressive locoregional management. Thickness, positive nodal status, and ulceration are associated with a higher mortality rate. The fact that patients with local or nodal recurrences fare as poorly as those with overt distant metastases implies that the former events are predictors of subclinical systemic disease.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10065812     DOI: 10.1016/s1072-7515(98)00296-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Surg        ISSN: 1072-7515            Impact factor:   6.113


  7 in total

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Authors:  Torsten Hinz; Hojjat Ahmadzadehfar; Anja Wierzbicki; Tobias Hoeller; Joerg Wenzel; Hans-J Biersack; Thomas Bieber; Monika-H Schmid-Wendtner
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4.  Thick primary melanoma has a heterogeneous tumor biology: an institutional series.

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6.  Serum Cytokine Profiles of Melanoma Patients and Their Association with Tumor Progression and Metastasis.

Authors:  Xu Wang; Yoel Genaro Montoyo-Pujol; Sandra Bermudez; Gonzalo Corpas; Aurelio Martin; Francisco Almazan; Teresa Cabrera; Miguel Angel López-Nevot
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7.  Prognostic factors for metastasis in cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  Ana Carolina Figueiredo Pereira Cherobin; Alberto Julius Alves Wainstein; Enrico Antônio Colosimo; Eugênio Marcos Andrade Goulart; Flávia Vasques Bittencourt
Journal:  An Bras Dermatol       Date:  2018 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.896

  7 in total

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