| Literature DB >> 26910282 |
Anna A Brożyna1,2, Wojciech Jóźwicki1,2, Krzysztof Roszkowski3, Jan Filipiak4, Andrzej T Slominski5,6.
Abstract
Melanin possess radioprotective and scavenging properties, and its presence can affect the behavior of melanoma cells, its surrounding environment and susceptibility to the therapy, as showed in vitro experiments. To determine whether melanin presence in melanoma affects the efficiency of radiotherapy (RTH) we evaluated the survival time after RTH treatment in metastatic melanoma patients (n = 57). In another cohort of melanoma patients (n = 84), the relationship between melanin level and pT and pN status was determined. A significantly longer survival time was found in patients with amelanotic metastatic melanomas in comparison to the melanotic ones, who were treated with either RTH or chemotherapy (CHTH) and RTH. These differences were more significant in a group of melanoma patients treated only with RTH. A detailed analysis of primary melanomas revealed that melanin levels were significantly higher in melanoma cells invading reticular dermis than the papillary dermis. A significant reduction of melanin pigmentation in pT3 and pT4 melanomas in comparison to pT1 and T2 tumors was observed. However, melanin levels measured in pT3-pT4 melanomas developing metastases (pN1-3, pM1) were higher than in pN0 and pM0 cases. The presence of melanin in metastatic melanoma cells decreases the outcome of radiotherapy, and melanin synthesis is related to higher disease advancement. Based on our previous cell-based and clinical research and present research we also suggest that inhibition of melanogenesis can improve radiotherapy modalities. The mechanism of relationship between melanogenesis and efficacy of RTH requires additional studies, including larger melanoma patients population and orthotopic, imageable mouse models of metastatic melanoma.Entities:
Keywords: melanin; melanoma; radiotherapy; survival
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26910282 PMCID: PMC4951254 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.7528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Survival time after radiotherapy (RTH) of all melanoma patients included into this study (A), n = 57; χ2= 4.62, p = 0.03) and melanoma patients received only RTH treatment (B), n = 33; χ2= 4.33, p = 0.04) subgrouped according melanin level in melanoma metastases. Representative lymph node melanoma metastases evaluated as amelanotic (C), two cases separated with dotted line) and pigmented (D) two cases separated with dotted line).
Survival after radiotherapy and overall survival in melanoma patients included in cohort A
| Treatment | Melanization [ | Survival after RTH* (median/mean) [months] | OS (median/mean) [months] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RTH alone | Amelanotic [ | 21.4/30.9 | 0.031 | 23.6/51.8 | 0.003 |
| Pigmented [ | 6.6/14.6 | 13.4/23.0 | |||
| RTH and CHTH | Amelanotic [ | 15.7/24.8 | 0.043 | 37.0/48.1 | 0.004 |
| Pigmented [ | 9.6/14.8 | 18.8/26.1 |
CTHT-chemotherapy; RTH-radiotherapy; OS-overall survival time from primary diagnosis to the end of observation or death of patient, *survival time from the end of radiotherapy treatment to the end of observation or death of patient.
Figure 2Mean melanin level in primary melanomas in relation to pT status (A) n = 84), localization of melanoma cells in the skin (B) n = 84) and pN status in pT3-pT4 melanomas (C). Melanin level in melanoma cells localized within papillary (D) and reticular dermis (E) of non-metastasizing (pN0) and metastasizing (pN1-3) pT3-4 melanomas (n = 45). Melanin level in metastases developed in pT2-3 and pT4 melanomas (F). Representative pT1 (G) and pT4 (H) melanoma cases. The p values represent statistical significance in Mann-Whitney test.
Clinico-pathological characterization of the melanoma patients treated with radiotherapy
| Features | Cohort A | Cohort B |
|---|---|---|
| Age (yrs) | 56.0 (25.7–83.6) | 59.0 (22–100) |
| Gender | ||
| F | 22 | 41 |
| M | 35 | 43 |
| Therapy | ||
| Only surgery | 0 | 53 |
| Only CHTH | 0 | 9 |
| Only RTH | 33 | 11 |
| RTH and CHTH | 24 | 11 |
| Melanization | Metastatic melanomas | Primary/metastatic melanomas |
| Amelanotic | 34 | 35/15 |
| Melanin level 0 | 25 | 20/15 |
| Melanin level 1f | 9 | 15/0 |
| Pigmented | 23 | 49/18 |
| Melanin level 1d | 3 | 5/4 |
| Melanin level 2 | 5 | 15/3 |
| Melanin level 3 | 4 | 14/2 |
| Melanin level 4 | 2 | 14/4 |
| Melanin level 5 | 9 | 1/5 |
| pT | ||
| pT1 | – | 29 |
| pT2 | – | 10 |
| pT3 | – | 13 |
| pT4 | – | 32 |
| pN | ||
| pN0 | – | 57 |
| pN1 | – | 11 |
| pN2 | – | 11 |
| pN3 | – | 5 |
CTHT-chemotherapy; RTH-radiotherapy; 1f - melanin content defined as 1 but with focal distribution; 1d - melanin content defined as 1 but with dispersed distribution
the data related to pT and pN status of patients in cohort A qualified for RTH treatment are incomplete since 68% of primary lesions were diagnosed in other hospitals and histopathological examination reports were not accessible
number of metastases includes both melanoma metastases resected at the time of primary diagnosis (n = 27) and during the follow-up (n = 6).
Figure 3Representative melanoma cases evaluated as amelanotic (A), melanin 1 (B), 2 (C), 3 (D), 4 (E) and 5 (F) two cases separated with dotted line).