| Literature DB >> 32664998 |
Alexandra Hendrickx1, Antonio Cozzio2, Ludwig Plasswilm1,3, Cédric M Panje4.
Abstract
Lentigo maligna (LM) is the most common subtype of in situ melanoma und occurs frequently in the sun-exposed head and neck region in elderly patients. The therapeutic "gold standard" is surgical excision, as there is the risk of progression to invasive (lentigo maligna) melanoma (LMM). However, surgery is not feasible in certain patients due to age, comorbidities or patient preference. Radiotherapy using Grenz rays or superficial X-rays has been established as non-invasive alternative for the treatment of LM and LMM. We performed a systematic literature search of MEDLINE and Embase databases in September 2019 and identified 14 patient series using radiotherapy for LM or LMM. No prospective trials were found. The 14 studies reported a total of 1243 lesions (1075 LM and 168 LMM) treated with radiotherapy. Local recurrence rates ranged from 0 to 31% and were comparable to surgical series in most of the reports on radiotherapy. Superficial radiotherapy was prescribed in 5-23 fractions with a total dose of 35-57 Gy. Grenz ray therapy was prescribed in 42-160 Gy in 3-13 fractions with single doses up to 20 Gy. Cosmetic results were reported as "good" to "excellent" for the majority of patients.In conclusion, the available low-level evidence suggests that radiotherapy may be a safe and effective treatment for LM and LMM. Data from prospective trials such as the phase 3 RADICAL trial are needed to confirm these promising findings and to compare radiotherapy to other non-surgical therapies and to surgery.Entities:
Keywords: Grenz ray; Lentigo maligna; Lentigo maligna melanoma; Radiotherapy; Superficial X-ray
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32664998 PMCID: PMC7362499 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-020-01615-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Systematic literature search flow diagram
Outcome of retrospective studies on radiotherapy for lentigo maligna and lentigo maligna melanoma
| First author | Year | Center | Period | Sample size | Local recurrence rate | Complete response rate | Follow-up duration | Cosmetic results | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Zurich, Switzerland | 2009–2014 | 27 LM, 18 M | 15% (LM), 17% (M) | n.a. | 51 months (mean) | «good» | periocular lesions, 44% of melanoma patients with immunosuppression, 11% LM | |
| 2018 | Bordeaux, France | 2007–2017 | 42 LM, 6 LMM, 13 LMM with previous surgery | 10% (overall), 7% (only LM) | n.a. | 22 months (mean), range 3–70 months | 9.8% hypopigmentation, 8.1% teleangiectasia, no fibrosis | Conference abstract only | |
| 2012 | Stockholm, Sweden | 1990–2009 | 593 LM or early LMM; 59% primary RT; 12% after partial excision, 29% adjuvant RT after complete excision | Overall 12% (17% primary RT, 9% RT after partial excision, 3% RT after complete excision) | 88% (primary RT); 90% (RT after partial excision); 97% (RT after complete excision) | 425 patients for at least 24 months, 241 for more than 60 months | «excellent» (15% hypopigmentation, 20% hyperpigmentation, «some» teleangiectasia) | 86% facial localization | |
| 2011 | London, Ontario, Canada | 1991–2005 | 31 LM | 29% (LM) | n.a. | 46.3 months (median) | 19.4% teleangiectasia, 6.5% hypopigmentation | 89.3% head and neck region | |
| 2003 | Graz, Austria | 1990–2000 | 15 LM | 13% (LM) | n.a. | 5-year recurrence rate reported | n.a. | All lesions in head and neck region | |
| 2002 | Zurich, Switzerland | 1950–2000 | 93 LM, 54 LMM, 3 LM and LMM (more than one lesion in 4%) | 7% overall, (for 101 patients with a follow-up of at least 2 years) | n.a. | 8 years (mean) | «acceptable» | 90% facial localization | |
| 2000 | Munich, Germany | 1987–1998 | 42 LM, 22 LMM | 0% (LM), 9% (LMM) | n.a. | 15 months (median, range 1–96) | “good or excellent”, no ulcers or fibrosis | 98% head and neck region | |
| 1996 | Westmead, Australia | 1989–1995 | 5 LM | 0% (LM) | 100% (LM) | 16 months (median, range 8–37 months | «favourable», teleangiectasia in 2 patients | All lesions in head and neck region | |
| 1994 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | 1968–1988 | 36 LM | 11% (LM) | n.a. | 72 months (median) | «acceptable», «poor» in 11% (skin pallor, atrophy, teleangiectasia) | 18 patients already included in previous publication [ | |
| 1983 | Toronto, Ontario, Canada | 1958–1982 | 23 LM, 28 LMM | 10% (LM), 8% (LMM) | n.a. | LM: (26 months (median, range 5–96 months); LMM: 24 months (median, range 6–96 months) | n.a. | 96% head and neck region | |
| 1977 | Dresden, Germany | 1957–1975 | 12 LM, 5 LMM | 0% | 100% | 12–84 months | “excellent” | 79% head and neck region; publication in German | |
| 1976 | New York, USA | 1964–1973 | 16 LM | 31% | 94% | median: 32.5 months (range 6–113) | “fair to excellent” in most cases | ||
| 1975 | Munich, Germany | 1955–1970 | 68 LM | 0% (LM) | 100% (LM) | 36 months (mean, range 12–120 months) | «good» | 86% facial or head area; histological diagnosis only in 10 cases; publication in German | |
| 1970 | Zurich, Switzerland | 1941–1965 | 69 LM, 19 LMM | 3% (LM), 0% (LMM, but metastatic spread in 26%) | 100% (LM) | at least 60 months in 74 patients | n.a. | 84% facial localization; publication in German |
LM Lentigo maligna; LMM Lentigo maligna melanoma; M Melanoma (not further specified); n.a. Not available; RT Radiotherapy
Technical parameters of radiotherapy for lentigo maligna and lentigo maligna melanoma
| First author | RT techniques | RT dose and fractionation | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grenz or soft x-rays (10–30 kV) | 42–120 Gy in 3–13 fx, 3–4 day intervals | 15 mm | |
| Superficial x-rays («contact therapy»), 30–150 kV | 40 Gy in 10 fx, 2x/week; or 39 Gy in 13 fx, 3x/week | 5–10 mm | |
| Grenz rays (10 kV) | 100–160 Gy, in 6 fx, 2x/week | 10 mm | |
| Superficial x-rays | 50 Gy in 20 fx | n.a. | |
| Grenz rays, 10 kV | 120 Gy in 6 fx | at least 5 mm | |
| Grenz rays (12 kV, 107 patients) or superficial X-rays (20 to 50 kV, 57 patients) | 12 kV: 100–120 Gy, 10–12 fx, 2x/week; 20–50 kV: 42–54 Gy, 7–9 fx, 2x/week | 7–10 mm | |
Grenz rays (14.5 kV) excision of the nodular part of LMM before RT | 100 Gy, 10 fx, 5x/week | 5–20 mm | |
| Superficial x-rays (100 kV) | 44 Gy in 11 daily fx or 57.5 Gy in 23 daily fx | at least 10 mm | |
| Superficial/ orthovoltage x-rays (100–250 kV) | 35 Gy in 5 daily fx, 45 Gy in 10 daily fx or 50 Gy in 15 daily fractions | 5–10 mm | |
| Superficial/orthovoltage x-rays (LM: 100 kV; LMM: 125–175 kV) | 35 Gy in 5 daily fx, 45 Gy in 10 daily fx, 50 Gy in 10–20 daily fx | at least 10 mm | |
LM: Grenz rays (9 kV) or superficial x-rays (48.5 kV) LMM: superficial x-rays (26–38 kV) | LM: 10,000 R in 5–10 fx LMM: 6000–10,000 R in 12–20 fx | n.a. | |
| Grenz rays (12 kV) | 10,000 R in 5 fx, 3–4 day intervals | 5 mm | |
| Grenz rays (14.5 kV) | 10,000 R in 5–10 daily fx | n.a. | |
| LM: Grenz rays (12 kV); LMM: Grenz rays or superficial x-rays (50–60 kV) | LM: most commonly 10,000–12,000 R in 5–6 fx every 5–7 days; LMM: various schedules | n.a. |
Fx Radiotherapy fraction; LM Lentigo maligna; LMM Lentigo maligna melanoma; M Melanoma (not further specified); n.a. Not available