Literature DB >> 24535703

A clinicopathological review of 33 patients with vulvar melanoma identifies c-KIT as a prognostic marker.

Viola A Heinzelmann-Schwarz1, Sheri Nixdorf1, Mehrnaz Valadan2, Monica Diczbalis3, Jake Olivier4, Geoff Otton5, André Fedier6, Neville F Hacker2, James P Scurry3.   

Abstract

Vulvar melanoma is the second most common vulvar cancer. Patients with vulvar melanoma usually present with the disease at a late stage and have a poor prognosis. The prognostic predictors reported in the literature are not unequivocal and the role of lichen sclerosus and c-KIT mutations in the aetiology of vulvar melanoma is unclear. Breslow staging currently seems to be the most adequate predictor of prognosis. We thus performed a clinicopathological and literature review to identify suitable predictors of prognosis and survival and investigated the expression of c-KIT (by immunohistochemistry) in patients with vulvar melanoma (n=33) from the Gynaecological Cancer Centres of the Royal Hospital for Women (Sydney, Australia) and John Hunter Hospital (Newcastle, Australia). Our series of 33 patients fitted the expected clinical profile of older women: delayed presentation, high stage, limited response to treatment and poor prognosis. We identified 3 patients (9.1%) with lichen sclerosus associated with melanoma in situ, although no lichen sclerosus was found in the areas of invasive melanoma. No patient had vulvar nevi. We identified a) Breslow's depth, b) an absence of any of the pathological risk factors, such as satellitosis, in-transit metastasis, lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI) and dermal mitosis, c) removal of inguino-femoral lymph nodes, d) lateral margin of >1 cm, and e) c-KIT expression as valuable prognostic predictors for disease-free survival. We conclude that c-KIT expression is, apart from Breslow's depth, another valuable predictor of prognosis and survival. Lichen sclerosus may be associated with vulvar melanoma.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24535703      PMCID: PMC3976128          DOI: 10.3892/ijmm.2014.1659

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Mol Med        ISSN: 1107-3756            Impact factor:   4.101


Introduction

Vulvar melanoma is the second most common vulvar cancer with an incidence of 0.1 per 100,000 individuals, presenting typically in post-menopausal women (1,2). Patients with vulvar melanoma, due to the lack of body awareness, false modesty and neglect, usually present with the disease at a late stage and have a poor overall prognosis, with reported 5-year survival rates ranging from 8 to 61% (3–10). This is unlike cutaneous melanomas where, as a result of increased public and clinical awareness, many patients are now diagnosed at an early stage. The aetiology of vulvar melanoma is poorly understood but is believed to arise de novo, that is, to develop from the malignant transformation of a single junctional melanocyte in situ (4). A genetic basis is suspected, which may explain why caucasions have a 3-fold higher incidence rate than individuals of African descent (11) and why individuals of African descent have a 2-fold shorter median survival than caucasions (12). Activating c-KIT mutations have been found in patients with vulvar melanoma (13,14). By contrast, as previously demonstrated, gene mutations for cutaneous melanomas were irrelevant in vulvar melanomas (BRAF, NRAS), indicating that these two diseases have a different origin (13,15). Lichen sclerosus (LS) is also suspected to cause vulvar melanoma, and LS has indeed been reported with vulvar melanoma in 6 cases (17–20). Whereas 5 childhood vulvar melanomas cases have been reported, only 1 among thousands of adult vulvar melanoma patients have been reported (18). The mechanisms involved, however, are not clear. LS, itself an inflammatory dermatosis of unknown origin presenting with whitening of the skin and pruritus (21), is the most common precursor of HPV-negative squamous cell carcinoma of the vulva, where the postulated pathogenesis is a ‘scar cancer’ similar to Margolin’s ulcer (22,23). The difficulty of distinguishing vulvar melanoma in the setting of LS from benign pigmented lesions of the genitals is acknowledged (24). There is no consensus regarding the adequate staging system and the treatment for vulvar melanomas. The standard FIGO staging, as used for squamous cell carcinoma, is not satisfactory. In vulvar melanomas, lesions are usually much smaller and prognosis is related to depth rather than diameter. For this reason, Breslow staging, which takes into account the depth of tumour rather than its size, seems to be most adequate and until today the best predictor of prognosis (25–29). This was also confirmed by a recent American study with 85 cases of melanomas of the female genitalia (30): a higher Breslow depth was associated with declining survival, whereas other histopathological features, such as ulcerations, increasing mitotic index and the presence of atypical melanocytic hyperplasia were not associated with a significant survival difference. Three basic histotypes (superficial spreading melanoma, mucosal lentiginous melanoma and nodular melanoma) have been described with varying incidence rates (5,6,9,31). It is an ongoing search for reliable histological features that allow the prognosis of vulvar melanoma; however, the majority of studies (small case series and retrospective reviews) have delivered inconclusive results. Thus, we performed a) a comprehensive literature review, b) a clinicopathological review of 33 vulvar melanoma cases of an Australian cohort to identify potential histopathological predictors of outcome, and c) immunohistochemistry for c-KIT expression in a respective tissue microarray.

Patients and methods

Comprehensive literature review

The systematic literature review was performed using the online websites, PubMed, Medline and Cochrane for the key words ‘vulva melanoma’, ‘mucosal melanoma’, ‘melanoma’, ‘melanomas’, ‘vulvar’, ‘vulva’ and ‘vulvar neoplasm’. The retrieval was limited from 1990 to 2012 and included epidemiological studies, literature reviews, retrospective series, prospective series, meta-analyses and molecular analyses. Studies with <10 patients were excluded, as were individual case reports. Studies were reported as to their year of publication, the number of enrolled patients, type of study, mean age of patients, 5-year overall survival, and study results and clinicopathological predictors of outcome (Table I).
Table I

Literature review.

Author/(Refs.)YearVulvar melanoma patients (n)Melanoma locationStudy typeMean patient age (years)5-year OS (%)Results and predictors of outcome
Bradgate et al (3)199050VulvaRetrospective seriesN/A35Clinical stage, patient age, ulceration, cell type, mitotic rate
Trimble et al (32)199280VulvaRetrospective series58.560Extent of vulva surgery not relevant
Tasseron et al (33)199230VulvaRetrospective series63.856Ulceration
Piura et al (34)199218VulvaRetrospective seriesN/A28.6Positive inguinal lymph nodes not relevant
Ragnarsson-Olding et al (35)1993219Vulva and other mucosal melanomaEpidemiological study7535Decrease in age-standardized incidence in Sweden
Look et al (36)199316VulvaRetrospective series59N/ADepth >1.75 mm predicts recurrence within 24 months
Phillips et al (37)199471VulvaProspective series71–8043.9AJCC staging, Breslow’s depth
Dunton et al (38)1995N/AN/ALiterature reviewN/AN/ABreslow’s depth, lymph node dissection
Scheistroen et al (31)199575VulvaRetrospective series6746Tumour localization clitoris, DNA ploidy, positive inguinal lymph nodes
Raber et al (39)199689VulvaRetrospective series55.436.7Breslow’s depth, Clark’s level, lymph node status
Trimble (40)1996N/AN/ALiterature reviewN/AN/ABreslow’s depth
Scheistroen et al (41)199643VulvaRetrospective series6463Angioinvasion, DNA ploidy
Strauss (42)1997N/AMelanomasMolecular analysisN/AN/Ap53 mutations
Jiveskog et al (15)1998N/ACutaneous vs. mucosal melanomasMolecular analysisN/AN/ANRAS mutations not relevant
De Matos et al (43)199830VulvaRetrospective series6659Regional metastases
Ragnarsson-Olding et al (5)1999219VulvaEpidemiological studyN/A47Breslow’s depth, ulceration, amelanosis
Larsson et al (44)199919VulvaRetrospective seriesN/A23Stage
Creasman et al (45)1999569VulvaRetrospective series6662AJCC stage
Raspagliesi et al (46)200040VulvaRetrospective series5848Positive inguinal lymph nodes
Verschraegen et al (9)200151VulvaRetrospective series5427AJCC stage, Breslow’s depth
Irvin et al (8)200114VulvaRetrospective series5842Margins, inguinal lymphadenectomy
Ragnarsson-Olding et al (47)200222VulvaMolecular analysisp53 mutations
De Hullu et al (48)200233VulvaRetrospective series6952Sentinel lymphadenectomy
Finan and Barre (49)2003N/AN/ALiterature reviewN/AN/AAge, AJCC stage
Ragnarsson-Olding (2)20041,442VulvaMeta-analysisN/AN/ABreslow’s depth, ulceration, amelanosis, angioinvasion, DNA ploidy
Ragnarsson-Olding et al (7)200417VulvaMolecular analysisN/AN/Ap53 protein levels not relevant
Harting and Kim (50)200411VulvaRetrospective series5910Chemotherapy
Wechter et al (51)200421VulvaRetrospective series58N/ASentinel lymphadenectomy
Edwards et al (52)20048VulvaMolecular analysisN/AN/ABRAF mutations not relevant
Dahlgren et al (53)20057VulvaMolecular analysisN/AN/AHPV not relevant
Stang et al (54)2005102VulvaEpidemiological study70N/ANo change in incidence rate
Rouzier et al (55)2005N/AN/ALiterature reviewN/AN/AWide local excision with tumour-free margins, sentinel lymphadenectomy
Lundberg et al (56)20067VulvaMolecular analysisN/AN/AHSV not relevant
Sugiyama et al (10)2007644VulvaRetrospective series6861Age, stage, positive inguinal lymph nodes
Dhar et al (57)200726VulvaLiterature reviewN/AN/ASentinel lymphadenectomy
Giraud et al (58)20087VulvaMolecular analysisN/AN/APolyomaviruses not relevant
De Simone et al (59)200811VulvaRetrospective series5350N/A
Hu et al (11)2010324VulvaRetrospective seriesN/AN/AEthnicity
Moan et al (60)2010N/AVulvaLiterature reviewN/AN/ASun exposure not relevant
Trifiro et al (61)201012VulvaProspective study59N/ASentinel lymphadenectomy not relevant
Terlou et al (62)2010N/AN/ALiterature reviewN/AN/AABCDE and punch biopsy are useful in diagnosis
Baiocchi et al (63)201011VulvaRetrospective series64.810Sentinel lymphadenectomy not relevant
Ragnarsson-Olding (64)2011N/AN/ALiterature reviewN/AN/ASun exposure not relevant
Omholt et al (13)201123VulvaMolecular analysisN/AN/AKIT mutations, RAF/MEK/ERK and PI3K/AKT pathways activated
Tcheung et al (30)201285Genitals/vulvaRetrospective series60.550.7N/A
Schoenewolf et al (14)201216Genitals/vulvaRetrospective series/molecular analysis61.9N/Ac-KIT expression and mutations; pERK
Heinzelmann-Schwarz (this study)33VulvaLiterature review, retrospective series, molecular analysis67.5N/AAt least one of these pathological features: satellitosis, in-transit metastases, dermal mitosis, LVSI; strong c-KIT expression, lateral margin >1 cm

OS, overall survival; N/A, information not available; LVSI, lymphovascular space invasion.

Clinicopathological review of our study cohort

Upon obtaining ethical approval and informed consent, we identified and enrolled 33 patients with vulvar melanoma at the Gynaecological Cancer Centre of the Royal Hospital for Women, Sydney (20 patients, incepted 1987) and the Gynaecological Cancer Centre of John Hunter Hospital, Newcastle (13 patients, incepted 1991). The following information was retrieved from the charts of the patients: age (diagnosis/menopause/relapse/death), duration of symptoms (months), menopausal status, family history of melanoma, location of melanoma, mode of detection, palpable groin nodes, lymph nodes removed/positive, CT scan results, Breslow’s depth, type of surgery, chemotherapy/immunotherapy/radiotherapy (number of sessions and dose), treatment side-effects, site/location of recurrence, cause of death, and relapse-free and overall survival. Characteristics which were assessed included diagnosis, pathogenic type (superficial spreading, mucosal lentiginous melanoma, other), predominant cell type (epithelioid, spindle or other), ulcerations, Breslow’s depth, tumour infiltrating lymphocytes (TILS), regression (dermal fibrosis, lymphocytic infiltrate and, in cases of pigmented melanomas, melanophages), lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI), satellitosis (discrete tumour nests >0.05 mm in diameter, separated from invasive tumour by ≥0.3 mm) and in-transit metastases (>20 mm from invasive tumour), margins (involved by in situ or invasive melanoma), adjacent abnormal melanocytic proliferation and LS.

c-KIT immunohistochemistry of tissue microarrays

An independent, blinded pathological review of all haematoxylin and eosin slides was performed by a pathologist specialised in vulvar pathology (Dr J.P. Scurry). These slides where marked for vulvar melanoma and two 1-mm cores were transferred onto a tissue microarray, using the ATA-100 Advancer Tissue Arrayer (Chemicon International, Temecula, CA, USA). Cores also included control tissues from negative inguinal lymph nodes that were surgically sampled. Immunohistochemistry was performed in the Bond™-X System (Leica Biosystems, Wetzlar, Germany) using the polyclonal rabbit Anti-human CD117 antibody (c-KIT; Dako, Carpinteria, CA, USA) at a 1:400 dilution followed by secondary detection with the Bond™ Polymer Refine Detection kit combining anti-mouse and anti-rabbit antibodies (Leica Biosystems). Prior to staining, antigen retrieval was performed at 95°C for 15 min in the PT Link (Dako) using the EnVision™ FLEX target retrieval solution, low pH (50×; Dako), followed by a water wash. Evaluation of the intensity of c-KIT cytoplasmic and membrane protein expression was performed by two researchers independently and consensus was reached. For the purpose of this analysis either cytoplasmic or membrane staining of 3+ intensity was taken as strong c-KIT expression.

Statistical analysis

The clinicopathological data were collected in an in-house research database based on ACCESS (Microsoft Windows, USA) and analysed with SAS statistical software (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA). Mean values with standard deviation and range were generated for longitudinal datasets and nominal data were presented as percentages. Potential risk factors for relapse and mortality were assessed through Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox proportional hazards models. As the number of cases was limited, the significance of each hazard ratio (HR) was primarily assessed by their effect size as p-values alone were likely to miss important results.

Results

Comprehensive literature review: predictors of outcome and molecular targets for vulvar melanoma

Our literature review revealed 46 studies with >10 patients enrolled with vulvar melanoma (Table I). These studies often combined both mucosal (including those of the vulva) and cutaneous melanomas. Out of these 46 studies, 23 were retrospective studies, with 48.9% comprising the majority of publications in vulvar melanoma research, 8 studies were literature reviews, 11 comprised analyses of molecular targets, and 1 was a meta-analysis. No Cochrane review has been performed to date. The unequivocal clinical predictors of patient outcome that were identified were inguinal lymph node status (either via sentinel or standard lymphadenectomy; 11 studies) and Breslow’s depth (9 studies). Ambiguous clinical predictors included tumour ulceration (4 studies), age at diagnosis (3 studies) and DNA ploidy (3 studies). Molecular targets suspected to be relevant in mucosal melanomas have been investigated in 11 studies. Mutations in mucosal melanomas were found in p53 (3 studies), in c-KIT (2 studies) and in key kinases of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR- (1 study) and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK-pathways (1 study). Mutations in BRAF or NRAS in mucosal melanomas were not found (1 study each) and evidence of the involvement of viral infections (HPV, HSV, polyomaviruses) in vulvar melanoma was not found either. Notably, high-throughput transcription profiling experiments on vulvar melanomas have not been performed to date.

Clinicopathological and immunological characteristics of our cohort

The clinicopathological and immunological characteristics of the 33 patients of our cohort are summarized in Table II. The mean age at diagnosis was 67.5 years (range, 34–95 years) and was higher compared to that of the 47 literature review studies (62.2 years; range, 53–80 years). Patients presented with symptoms for an average of 28.2 months (range, 2–112 months) and in 72.2% of the cases detected the lesion themselves. By virtue of the advanced mean age at diagnosis almost three quarters (73.5%) of our patients were post-menopausal. The vast majority of the patients (93.8%) did not have a family history of melanoma. The most common location of vulvar melanomas was at the labia minora (31.6%) and was multifocal (26.3%).
Table II

Clinicopathological and immunohistochemical patient characteristics.

No.AgeBDULCDMSATITMLVSILNPIHC_CIHC_MStatus
15110.5YesNegNoNoNo000Alive
2741.5YesNegNoNoNo01.40.2Alive
3531.15NoNegNoNoNoN/AN/AN/AAlive
4695YesNegNoNoNo000Alive
5843.5YesPosYesNoNo02.22.75Alive
6461YesNegNoNoNo0N/AN/AAlive
7623.1YesNegNoNoNo011Alive
8604YesNegYesNoNo00.271.5Deceased
9684.2YesPosNoNoNo000Deceased
104314YesPosNoNoNo1N/AN/AAlive
11966YesPosNoNoNo02.251.89Deceased
12917.5YesPosNoNoNo02.112.11Deceased
13830NoN/ANoYesNo00.50.75Deceased
1484N/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A3N/AN/ADeceased
15446YesPosNoNoNoN/A0.90.86Deceased
1671N/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A0N/AN/ADeceased
17683.3YesNegNoNoYes01.672.13Deceased
18765.2YesNegNoYesNo000Deceased
195011YesN/ANoNoNo611.18Alive
208919.5YesPosNoYesYes0N/AN/AAlive
21731NoNegNoNoNoN/A1.52Alive
226428YesPosNoNoYes000Deceased
23687YesPosN/AN/AN/AN/A0.750Deceased
24827N/APosN/AN/AN/AN/A10Deceased
2567N/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A000Deceased
267010YesPosNoNoNoN/A11.78Alive
27803.2YesPosNoNoNoN/A1.752.38Alive
28671NoNegNoNoNoN/A10.8N/A
29941.7YesNegNoNoNoN/A1.832.17Deceased
3034N/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/AN/A1.091.36Deceased
3181N/ANoN/AN/AN/AN/A02.080.89Alive
325810YesPosYesN/ANo01.422Alive
33482YesPosNoN/ANo11.62.44Alive

No., number of patients; BD, Breslow’s depth (mm); ULC, ulceration; DM, dermal mitoses

The majority of patients presented with an advanced Breslow stage of V (56.3%) and had a mean tumour size of 21.9 mm (range, 5–50 mm), deep margin of 5.20 mm (range, 0–22 mm) and lateral margin of 3.9 mm (range, 0–12 mm). Most of our patients received radical local excision. Of the 4 patients that had received a radical vulvectomy, 3 had multifocal disease and the other was treated by an outside consultant. The majority of the patients (68.8%) underwent at least an unilateral inguino-femoral lymphadenectomy without any notable side-effects (in particular no lymphoceles or lymphoedema). For the majority of patients, this was the only adjuvant treatment received: only 25% received chemotherapy, 18.2% immunotherapy and 38.9% radiotherapy. Seventy percent of the patients relapsed, with local and distant metastases equally common: the most common local recurrence was at the vulva (30.8%). The median time to relapse was 40 months and to death 44 months. Fifty-five percent of the patients succumbed to the disease, mostly due to causes related to their disease (90%). The majority of patients presented with a clinically or pathologically detected ulceration (53.3% or 88.9%, respectively) of a large tumour nodule of spindle cell type (52.9%), with a mean of 7.3 dermal mitoses per mm2 (range, 1–40) and high TILS (58.8%). The majority of the patients did not have regression (66.5%), satellitosis (88.9%), in-transit metastases (83.3%), LVSI (88.9%), or LS (88.9%). In our cohort, 3 cases of LS with vulvar melanoma were identified (Table III). In all these patients, LS was observed with or without melanoma in situ, but always disappeared beneath the invasive melanoma. No pre-existing nevi were found, but 2 patients showed large single melanocytes at the edge of the melanoma in situ. Representative macroscopic images of a vulvar melanoma specimen and histological examples for various pathological features are presented in Figs. 1 and 2. An example of a strong c-KIT expression in an invasive melanoma of the vulva is illustrated in Fig. 3.
Table III

Studies identified in the literature documenting synchronous lichen sclerosus and vulvar melanoma.

Author/(Refs.)YearAgeDepth (mm)Lymph nodesFollow-up (months)Status
Friedman et al (16)1984140.7Negative12NED
Egan et al (17)19979In situN/AN/AN/A
Egan et al (17)1997110.47N/AN/AN/A
Carlson et al (18)2002832.7Negative21NED
Hassanein et al (19)2004100.44Negative12NED
Rosamilia et al (20)2006101Positive32NED
De Simone et al (59)2008N/AN/AN/AN/AN/A
This study691Negative120DOD
This study843.5Negative12DOD
This study81Negative2NED

NED, no evidence of disease; N/A, information not available; DOD, death due to disease.

Figure 1

(A) Spindle cell melanoma (arrow) with fibrosis adjacent to the melanoma. (B) Next to the invasive melanoma, there is melanoma in situ (arrow) associated with fibrosis. (C) Further away from the melanoma, there is melanoma in situ (arrow) and lichen sclerosus with characteristic dermal hyalinisation of lichen sclerosus.

Figure 2

Scattered large atypical melanocytes without melanocytic proliferation observed at the periphery of a vulvar melanoma.

Figure 3

Strong c-KIT expression in invasive melanoma of the vulva.

Predictors of outcome for vulvar melanoma identified in our cohort

Our study confirmed the known predictive clinicopathological characteristics Breslow’s depth [relapse-free survival (RFS): HR=1.08, p=0.049] and lymphadenectomy (RFS: HR=0.376, p=0.087, Table IV and Fig. 4A). These were particularly important in relation to recurrence. No significant results for positivity of lymph nodes were found in our series, possibly due to the low numbers of positive lymph nodes. In the presence of a lateral margin of >10 mm [disease-free survival (DFS): HR=2.7, p=0.21] and a strong (intensity 3+) c-KIT expression (DFS: HR=1.8, p=0.49; RFS: HR=3.13, p=0.108; Fig. 3), Breslow’s depth becomes less important as regards the outcome (Table IV, Fig. 4B).
Table IV

Multivariable analysis of high-risk features.

A, Relapse-free survival

PredictorHR (95% CI)aHRa (95% CI)aHRb (95% CI)
Pathological characteristics5.02 (0.62–40.61)4.86 (0.58–40.81)2.89 (0.35–23.83)
Lymphadenectomy0.38 (0.12–1.15)0.15 (0.03–0.64)
Cell type0.75 (0.26–2.19)0.72 (0.23–2.22)
Lateral margin1.95 (0.53–7.22)1.86 (0.49–7.03)
c-KIT expression2.45 (0.66–9.08)3.13 (0.78–12.58)2.51 (0.61–10.36)
Breslow’s depth1.08 (1.00–1.17)1.12 (1.02–1.22)

B, Disease-free survival

PredictorHR (95% CI)aHRa (95% CI)aHRb (95% CI)

Pathological characteristics
Lymphadenectomy0.71 (0.19–2.63)0.25 (0.06–0.99)0.31 (0.04–2.44)
Cell type0.82 (0.25–2.73)0.80 (0.24–2.72)
Lateral margin2.72 (0.58–12.88)2.67 (0.56–12.76)7.32 (0.77–69.86)
c-KIT expression1.82 (0.38–8.67)1.75 (0.35–8.63)3.34 (0.42–26.29)
Breslow’s depth1.01 (0.92–1.10)0.93 (0.57–1.50)

Adjusted for Breslow’s depth;

Final multivariate model.

aHR, adjusted hazard ratio; CI, confidence interval.

Figure 4

Kaplan-Meier survival curves for relapse-free survival over a specific time frame (months) for patients (A) who had lymphadenectomy performed (x) versus the ones who had not (o); and (B) for patients whose tumours expressed strong c-KIT expression (o) versus those whose tumours did not (x).

The presence of epithelioid cells within a vulvar melanoma, even when mixed in combination with spindle or nodular cells, predicted a better prognosis for these patients (HR=0.82, p=0.75) (Table IV, Fig. 5A). Of the 3 patients, who contribute to the plateau in the non-epithelioid curve in the Kaplan-Meier plot, 2 had a spindle/epithelioid and the other had another cell type, thus supporting our findings.
Figure 5

Kaplan-Meier survival curves for disease-free survival over a specific time frame (months) for patients (A) with epithelioid or mixed epithelioid tumours (o) or other histotypes (x); and (B) which expressed at least one of the following suspicious pathological features: satellitosis, in-transit metastases, lymphovascular space invasion (LVSI) or dermal mitosis (x) versus the patients which did not (o).

Due to our cohort size and the low numbers of certain pathological characteristics, we looked in a combined approach at high-risk pathological features, such as satellitosis, in-transit metastases, LVSI and dermal mitosis. This meant that the presence of any of these 4 features within a cancer was taken for the purpose of this analysis as the presence of a high-risk pathological feature. Using this approach, we found that in the absence of at least one of these features, none of the patients died (log-rank test, p=0.088), which had a sensitivity of 100% (Fig. 5B). As regards recurrence, the presence of at least one of these pathological features increased the risk of recurrence from the disease by a factor of 5 (HR=5.02).

Independent predictors of outcome and c-KIT expression

We modelled the identified predictors of prognosis with each other in order to identify the degree of correlation between the predictive parameters. In all models, the strongest predictors for outcome, both in respect of relapse and survival, was the absence of any of the pathological high-risk characteristics, such as satellitosis, in-transit metastases, LVSI or dermal mitosis. In combination with the pathological high-risk characteristics, the strongest predictors for earlier relapse were c-KIT expression [adjusted HR (aHR)=2.51, Table IVA] and Breslow’s depth (aHR=1.12, Table IVA). With the increasing depth of the melanoma, lymphadenectomy presents with a HR of 6.86 (p=0.011) and Breslow’s depth remains statistically significant (HR=1.13, p=0.0079). Breslow’s depth, in the presence of some of the other factors, seems to be more important for recurrence than DFS. None of the classical adjuvant treatment options, including immunotherapy showed any benefit in our study. When modelled together, the strongest predictors of earlier death were pathologically high-risk characteristics, followed by lateral margin (>10 mm, aHR=7.32, Table IVB), a strong c-KIT expression (aHR=3.34, Table IVB) and lymphadenectomy (aHR=0.3, Table IVB). For DFS, Breslow’s depth loses its strong predictive value when compared to a lateral margin of >10 mm and a strong c-KIT expression. The comparison of the lateral margin to strong c-KIT expression identified the lateral margin as more important for survival. The combined multivariable model for the prediction of DFS consisted of a) lymphadenectomy, b) absence of any of the pathological high-risk characteristics, c) strong c-KIT expression, and d) Breslow’s depth, and was highly statistically significant (p=0.0004).

Discussion

Whilst in recent years great achievements in disease awareness, in early diagnosis, and in the treatment of cutaneous melanomas with subsequent benefits in morbidity and mortality have been made, no similar development exists for vulvar melanomas. Patients with vulvar melanomas usually present with the disease at a late stage and have a poor prognosis. Its aetiology is poorly understood and the prognostic predictors reported in the literature are not fully conclusive. Research into vulvar melanoma is also limited due to the low incidence of cases per centre and low numbers of international collaborative studies or meta-analyses. Our comprehensive literature review of 46 studies published from 1990 until 2012 identified Breslow’s depth and the inguinal lymph node status as unequivocal and tumour ulceration, age at diagnosis, and DNA ploidy as less clear or ambiguous clinical predictors of outcome. On the molecular/genetic level, mutations in p53, c-KIT and kinases of the PI3K/AKT/mTOR- and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK-pathways have been reported in association with vulvar melanoma. p53 is a tumour suppressor gene (65), c-KIT is a receptor tyrosine kinase, mutations of which are integral for tumour growth and progression (66), and PI3K/AKT/mTOR- and RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK-pathways regulate growth and proliferation (67,68). By contrast, neither mutations in BRAF or NRAS nor an involvement of viral infection were found. These data may not be conclusive and high-throughput transcription profiling experiments on vulvar melanomas are likely to identify additional genes, the mutations of which are associated with vulvar melanoma. In our cohort of 33 adult patients, 3 cases (9.1%) of vulvar melanoma with LS (Table III) were identified, suggesting an association. This is noteworthy, as to date, reported cases of LS associated with vulvar melanomas were mainly limited to juvenile cases (16–20) (Table III). In our 3 cases, the LS was present in melanoma in situ, but disappeared in the invasive melanoma, where dermal hyalinisation was replaced by desmoplasia. The limited number of reports on the association of LS with adult vulvar melanoma may be due to under-reporting and lack of recognition. In our cohort, we also found an increased c-KIT protein expression in approximately half of the patients, suggesting a role of c-KIT in vulvar melanoma. In fact, c-KIT mutations have been shown to be more common in vulvar than cutaneous melanomas (13,14). c-KIT is a receptor tyrosine kinase regulating a variety of biological responses, such as chemotaxis, cell proliferation, apoptosis and adhesion in many cell types, including melanocytes, and activating KIT mutations are integral for tumour growth and progression (69); however, their role in vulvar melanoma is yet not known. Over the years, a number of histopatological features have been shown to correlate with adverse prognosis. These include Breslow’s depth, ulceration, epithelioid cell type, microsatellitosis, regression, angiolymphatic involvement, high mitotic rate, amelanosis and association with an existing nevus (3,5,35,51). An American study demonstrated that increasing Breslow depth was associated with declining survival, whereas other histopathological features, such as ulceration, increasing mitotic index, and the presence of atypical melanocytic hyperplasia were not associated with a significant difference in survival (30). A recent Chinese study revealed that macroscopic tumour growth and treatment method were independent prognostic factors for overall survival (70). Our study confirmed Breslow’s depth and lymphadenectomy as strong predictors for recurrence and poorer DFS. Our study also identified other predictive features. Among those was the absence of any of the pathological high-risk characteristics (satellitosis, in-transit metastases, LVSI or dermal mitosis) identified in a subset of patients with vulvar melanoma. These patients survived disease with a prediction of 100% sensitivity, making the absence of these characteristics strong predictors for outcome, both in terms of relapse and survival. This group of patients may qualify for follow-up after surgery, particularly when an optimal adjuvant therapy is not available. An increased c-KIT expression was also identified as a strong negative predictor of DFS and a strong positive predictor of earlier relapse. By contrast, no significant results for positivity of lymph nodes were observed in our study, possibly due to the low numbers of positive lymph nodes. The identification of mutated genes, such as c-KIT and p53 or increased levels of c-KIT in vulvar melanomas seems consistent with the current consensus that vulvar melanomas arise de novo from the malignant transformation of a single junctional melanocyte in situ (4). Indeed, we found single large junctional melanocytes adjacent to melanoma in situ, which has, to our knowledge, not been reported previously. Mucosal melanomas arise from an epithelium normally devoid of melanocytes; the significance of melanocytes in a location where they are not normally present therefore requires further investigation. The treatment of vulvar melanomas has thus far been largely restricted to surgical options, with little prospective data and no randomised studies available. Following on the trend from cutaneous melanomas, the surgical approach for vulvar melanomas has changed from extensive to more limited procedures due to the recognition that no improvement in overall survival can be achieved with aggressive surgery despite increasing patient morbidity (32,71), and no benefit is found from pelvic lymphadenectomies in the absence of groin node metastases (72,73), similar to squamous cell carcinomas of the vulva. In the absence of adequate randomized controlled trials, adjuvant treatments included radiotherapy, chemotherapy, immunotherapy, and in one case targeted therapy. Immunotherapy using interferon α2b has shown significantly improved DFS in randomized controlled trials, but there is significant morbidity (74–76). The role of adjuvant radiotherapy is unknown and may only be used in the case of close surgical margins, whilst recurrent cancer in the absence of metastatic disease is best managed surgically. An important development is the evidence that mucosal (vulvar melanomas are classified as mucosal) and cutaneous melanomas are distinct genetic entities and should be studied and treated as such (13,15,77). Gene mutations for cutaneous melanomas did not prove to be of relevance in vulvar melanomas (BRAF, NRAS) whilst p53 and c-KIT mutations were identified and may enable therapeutic options in the future. Pathological classifiers, such as satellitosis, in-transit metastases, LVSI and dermal mitosis can stratify patients who would profit from the investigation into c-KIT expression and the subsequent imatinib treatment. Imatinib is a targeted oral therapeutic agent against cutaneous melanomas. An Australian study has shown some efficacy with the treatment of imatinib in mucosal melanomas, including vulvar melanomas (78). More studies into the genetic background, making use of high-throughput transcription profiling technology increasingly becoming available, are required to develop targeted treatment options, particularly in high-risk groups. International trials with imatinib or any other therapeutic option available in the future in high-risk vulvar melanomas will be beneficial, but will face all the difficulties associated with targeting very rare tumours. The centralization of care for patients with vulvar melanoma is inevitable. Whilst the surgical part of their treatment is best performed in a gynaecological cancer centre, ongoing care should best be shared within a multi-disciplinary approach, involving both gynaecological oncologists and melanoma centres.
  78 in total

Review 1.  Driver mutations in melanoma: lessons learned from bench-to-bedside studies.

Authors:  Janice M Mehnert; Harriet M Kluger
Journal:  Curr Oncol Rep       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 5.075

2.  Malignant melanoma of the vulva: A report of 44 cases.

Authors:  A F Chung; J M Woodruff; J L Lewis
Journal:  Obstet Gynecol       Date:  1975-06       Impact factor: 7.661

3.  High-dose interferon alfa-2b does not diminish antibody response to GM2 vaccination in patients with resected melanoma: results of the Multicenter Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Phase II Trial E2696.

Authors:  J M Kirkwood; J Ibrahim; D H Lawson; M B Atkins; S S Agarwala; K Collins; R Mascari; D M Morrissey; P B Chapman
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2001-03-01       Impact factor: 44.544

4.  Thickness, cross-sectional areas and depth of invasion in the prognosis of cutaneous melanoma.

Authors:  A Breslow
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1970-11       Impact factor: 12.969

5.  KIT pathway alterations in mucosal melanomas of the vulva and other sites.

Authors:  Katarina Omholt; Eva Grafström; Lena Kanter-Lewensohn; Johan Hansson; Boel K Ragnarsson-Olding
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2011-06-15       Impact factor: 12.531

Review 6.  Therapeutic implications of KIT in melanoma.

Authors:  Michael A Postow; Richard D Carvajal
Journal:  Cancer J       Date:  2012 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 3.360

7.  Sinonasal, genital and acrolentiginous melanomas show distinct characteristics of KIT expression and mutations.

Authors:  Nicola L Schoenewolf; Christian Bull; Benedetta Belloni; David Holzmann; Sabina Tonolla; Roland Lang; Daniela Mihic-Probst; Christian Andres; Reinhard Dummer
Journal:  Eur J Cancer       Date:  2012-03-28       Impact factor: 9.162

8.  Population-based incidence rates of malignant melanoma of the vulva in Germany.

Authors:  A Stang; B Streller; B Eisinger; K H Jöckel
Journal:  Gynecol Oncol       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 5.482

9.  Malignant melanoma of the vulva treated by radical hemivulvectomy. A prospective study of the Gynecologic Oncology Group.

Authors:  G L Phillips; B N Bundy; T Okagaki; P R Kucera; F B Stehman
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  1994-05-15       Impact factor: 6.860

Review 10.  Vulvar melanoma: a report of 10 cases and review of the literature.

Authors:  Paola De Simone; Vitaliano Silipo; Pierluigi Buccini; Giustino Mariani; Samantha Marenda; Laura Eibenschutz; Angela Ferrari; Caterina Catricalà
Journal:  Melanoma Res       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 3.599

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  10 in total

Review 1.  Primary malignant melanomas of the female lower genital tract: clinicopathological characteristics and management.

Authors:  Dongying Wang; Tianmin Xu; He Zhu; Junxue Dong; Li Fu
Journal:  Am J Cancer Res       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 6.166

2.  Urethral involvement is associated with higher mortality and local recurrence in vulvar melanoma: a single institutional experience.

Authors:  Mitul B Modi; Phyllis A Gimotty; Michael E Ming; Neha Jariwala; Rosalie Elenitsas; Chris Miller; Emily Y Chu; Hanna Lindner; Ata S Moshiri; Lauren E Schwartz; Priti Lal; Maria C Reyes; David E Elder; Xiaowei Xu
Journal:  Hum Pathol       Date:  2020-07-20       Impact factor: 3.466

3.  Female genitourinary tract melanoma: mutation analysis with clinicopathologic correlation: a single-institution experience.

Authors:  Ozlen Saglam; Syeda M H Naqvi; Yonghong Zhang; Tania Mesa; Jamie K Teer; Sean Yoder; Jae Lee; Jane Messina
Journal:  Melanoma Res       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 3.599

4.  The European Society of Gynaecological Oncology (ESGO), the International Society for the Study of Vulvovaginal Disease (ISSVD), the European College for the Study of Vulval Disease (ECSVD) and the European Federation for Colposcopy (EFC) Consensus Statements on Pre-invasive Vulvar Lesions.

Authors:  Mario Preti; Elmar Joura; Pedro Vieira-Baptista; Marc Van Beurden; Federica Bevilacqua; Maaike C G Bleeker; Jacob Bornstein; Xavier Carcopino; Cyrus Chargari; Margaret E Cruickshank; Bilal Emre Erzeneoglu; Niccolò Gallio; Debra Heller; Vesna Kesic; Olaf Reich; Colleen K Stockdale; Bilal Esat Temiz; Linn Woelber; François Planchamp; Jana Zodzika; Denis Querleu; Murat Gultekin
Journal:  J Low Genit Tract Dis       Date:  2022-06-21       Impact factor: 3.842

Review 5.  Nonoverlapping Clinical and Mutational Patterns in Melanomas from the Female Genital Tract and Atypical Genital Nevi.

Authors:  Oriol Yélamos; Emily A Merkel; Lauren Meldi Sholl; Bin Zhang; Sapna M Amin; Christina Y Lee; Gerta E Guitart; Jingyi Yang; Alexander T Wenzel; Christopher G Bunick; Pedram Yazdan; Jaehyuk Choi; Pedram Gerami
Journal:  J Invest Dermatol       Date:  2016-05-21       Impact factor: 8.551

6.  Clinical and Prognostic Significances of Cytokeratin 19 and KIT Expression in Surgically Resectable Pancreatic Neuroendocrine Tumors.

Authors:  Eun-Mi Son; Joo Young Kim; Soyeon An; Ki-Byung Song; Song Cheol Kim; Eunsil Yu; Seung-Mo Hong
Journal:  J Pathol Transl Med       Date:  2015-01-15

Review 7.  Cutaneous and Mucosal Melanomas of Uncommon Sites: Where Do We Stand Now?

Authors:  Emi Dika; Martina Lambertini; Cristina Pellegrini; Giulia Veronesi; Barbara Melotti; Mattia Riefolo; Francesca Sperandi; Annalisa Patrizi; Costantino Ricci; Martina Mussi; Maria Concetta Fargnoli
Journal:  J Clin Med       Date:  2021-01-28       Impact factor: 4.241

Review 8.  Vulvar and Vaginal Melanomas-The Darker Shades of Gynecological Cancers.

Authors:  Elena-Codruța Dobrică; Cristina Vâjâitu; Carmen Elena Condrat; Dragoș Crețoiu; Ileana Popa; Bogdan Severus Gaspar; Nicolae Suciu; Sanda Maria Crețoiu; Valentin Nicolae Varlas
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2021-06-30

Review 9.  Anorectal and Genital Mucosal Melanoma: Diagnostic Challenges, Current Knowledge and Therapeutic Opportunities of Rare Melanomas.

Authors:  Margaret Ottaviano; Emilio Francesco Giunta; Laura Marandino; Marianna Tortora; Laura Attademo; Davide Bosso; Cinzia Cardalesi; Antonietta Fabbrocini; Mario Rosanova; Antonia Silvestri; Liliana Montella; Pasquale Tammaro; Ester Marra; Claudia Trojaniello; Maria Grazia Vitale; Ester Simeone; Teresa Troiani; Bruno Daniele; Paolo Antonio Ascierto
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2022-01-11

Review 10.  Vulvar Melanoma: Molecular Characteristics, Diagnosis, Surgical Management, and Medical Treatment.

Authors:  Christoph Wohlmuth; Iris Wohlmuth-Wieser
Journal:  Am J Clin Dermatol       Date:  2021-06-14       Impact factor: 7.403

  10 in total

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