| Literature DB >> 1015539 |
F C Ames, E V Sugarbaker, A J Ballantyne.
Abstract
From 1958 through 1969, 357 patients were treated for melanoma of the head and neck. Of these, 166 had invasive, clinical stage I disease. All patients had wide local excision of the primary. Elective regional node dissection was performed in sixty-nine patients and in the remaining ninety-seven observation only was elected. Retrospective analysis of these 166 patients considered (1) survival and disease control, (2) sites and timing of failures, and (3) the effect of sex, site, type of biopsy, skin grafting, and regional node dissection on disease control and survival. More than 80 per cent of the local recurrences developed within the first twenty-four months. Similarly, in the patients not undergoing initial neck dissection, 80 per cent of those who subsequently had clinically positive regional nodes did so within twenty-four months. In the sixty-nine patients undergoing elective regional node dissection, the survival rate was 33.5 per cent at five and ten years in those with histologically positive nodes. Those patients with elective neck dissections having histologically negative nodes had a survival rate of 75.8 and 67.1 per cent at five and ten years, respectively.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1976 PMID: 1015539 DOI: 10.1016/0002-9610(76)90325-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Surg ISSN: 0002-9610 Impact factor: 2.565