| Literature DB >> 33330052 |
Rishi Suresh1, Arturas Ziemys2, Ashley M Holder3.
Abstract
Melanoma is the most lethal form of skin cancer in the United States. Current American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging uses Breslow depth and ulceration as the two primary tumor factors that predict metastatic risk in cutaneous melanoma. Early disease stages are generally associated with high survival rates. However, in some cases, patients with thin melanomas develop advanced disease, suggesting other factors may contribute to the metastatic potential of an individual patient's melanoma. This review focuses on the role of the lymphatic system in the metastasis of cutaneous melanoma, from recent discoveries in mechanisms of lymphangiogenesis to elements of the lymphatic system that ultimately may aid clinicians in determining which patients are at highest risk. Ultimately, this review highlights the need to integrate pathological, morphological, and molecular characteristics of lymphatics into a "biomarker" for metastatic potential.Entities:
Keywords: lymphangiogenesis; lymphatics; melanoma; metastasis; transport
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330052 PMCID: PMC7729077 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2020.576190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
The Shields index to predict metastatic potential of cutaneous melanoma.
| Authors | Sample size | Design | Epitumoral lymphatic vessel density method | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shields et al. ( | 21 | Retrospective | Complete | Index predicted metastasis more effectively than thickness alone |
| Emmett et al. ( | 102 | Retrospective | Complete and hotspot | Hotspot faster but comparable |
| Spiric et al. ( | 100 | Retrospective | Hotspot | Shields index (75% specific, 81.3% sensitive), performed better at predicting metastasis than thickness and AJCC staging |
Studies concluding that lymphatic invasion does not predict metastasis.
| Authors | Sample size | Staining technique | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pettit et al. ( | 27 | D2-40/S-100 dual | Lymphatic Invasion (LI) not associated with SLN metastasis |
| Egger et al. ( | 6894 | n/a | LI not a significant predictor of metastasis in T1b melanoma |
| Storr et al. ( | 202 specimens of thickness | D2-40/CD34 | No association with clinical outcome (relapse free or overall survival) |
| Rose et al. ( | 246 specimens | D2-40/CD34 | LI not significant predictor of SLN |
LI, lymphatic invasion.
Mechanistic studies evaluating melanoma metastasis.
| Authors | Model | Key findings |
|---|---|---|
| Hoshida et al. ( | B16F10 melanoma with | VEGF-C overexpressing cell lines increased tumor cell delivery and flow rate |
| Qian et al. ( | Human NPC cell line in | Tumor-draining lymph nodes can enlarge prior to evidence of metastasis |
| Harrell et al. ( | B16F10 melanoma with C57BL/6 mice | Increase in size of lymphatic sinuses and flow in draining lymph node of tumor |
| Fankhauser et al. ( | B16F10 melanoma model | Blocking VEGF Receptor-3 inhibited lymphangiogenesis and immunosuppressive cell infiltration |
| Lund et al. ( | B16F10 melanoma with C57BL/6 mice | VEGF-C associated with infiltration of Treg into primary tumor; tumors with VEGF-C expression suppressed naïve T cell activation |
| Lane et al. ( | C57BL/6J mice with B16F10.OVA, MC38, YUMM1.7, YUMMER1.7 cells | Lymphatic endothelium plays a critical role in creating an immunosuppressive environment permitting tumor growth |
| Commerford et al. ( | B16F10 melanoma with BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice | Adhesion genes such as Jam3 or integrin aIIb differentially regulated in tumor draining lymph nodes |
Studies evaluating lymphatic transport kinetics as predictive of sentinel lymph node metastasis.
| Authors | Samplesize | Location of melanoma | Melanoma features | Type of melanomaa | Design | Colloid | Time cutoffsb | Variablec | Resultsd |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maza et al. ( | 276 | Trunk, lower limbs, upper limbs, head/neck | pT1-T4 | SS, NM, LM, AL | Prospective | Tc-99 nanocolloid | 20 min | SAT | No SLN metastasis in slow drainage |
| Cammilleri et al. ( | 88 | Trunk, upper limb, lower limb | Stage I and II | n/a | Prospective | Tc-99m colloidal | 30 min | SAT | No SLN metastasis in slow drainage |
| Mahieu-Renard et al. ( | Retro: | Limbs, trunk, hands/feet, head/neck | Breslow: ≤1mm->4mm | SS, NM, AL, LM | Retrospective, prospective | Tc-99m colloidal rhenium sulfide | 30 min | SAT | Slow lymphatic drainage had a |
| Fujiwara et al. ( | 11 | Trunk | n/a | SS | Retrospective | Tc-99m phytate | 30 min | SST, LTR | All SLNs with <1.8cm/min LTR were non-metastatic |
| Toubert et al. ( | 160 | Upper limb, lower limb, trunk, head/neck | Breslow >1mm | n/a | Prospective | Tc-99m colloidal | 30 min | SAT | No significant difference based on speed of drainage |
aSuperficial spreading (SS), lentigo maligna (LM), acral lentiginous (AL), nodular melanoma (NL).
bLymphatic transport rate (LTR).
cScintigraphic appearance time (SAT), scintigraphic saturation time (SST), lymphatic transport rate (LTR).
dSentinel lymph node (SLN).