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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The intensity of post-treatment
melanoma
patient follow-up varies widely among physicians. We investigated whether physician age accounts for the observed variation in surveillance intensity among plastic surgeons. A custom-designed questionnaire was mailed to USA and non-USA surgeons, all of whom were members of the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons. Subjects were asked how they use 14 specific follow-up modalities during years 1-5 and 10 following primary treatment for patients with cutaneous melanoma. Repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to compare practice patterns by
TNM
stage, year post-surgery, and age. Of the 3,032 questionnaires mailed, 1,142 (38%) were returned. Of those returned, 395 (35%) were evaluable. Non-evaluability was usually due to lack of
melanoma
patient follow-up in surgeons' practices. Follow-up strategies for most of the 14 modalities were highly correlated across
TNM
stages and years post-surgery, as expected. The pattern of testing varied significantly by surgeon age for 3 modalities (complete blood count, liver function tests, and chest X-ray), but the variation was quite small. We concluded that the post-treatment surveillance practice patterns of ASPRS members caring for patients with cutaneous melanoma vary only marginally with physician age. Continuing medical education could account for this observation.
...
PMID:How surgeon age affects post-treatment surveillance strategies for melanoma patients. 1140 40
The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) recently proposed a new staging system for cutaneous melanoma. We tested its practicability and its prognostic value was compared with the currently used
TNM
classification. The data of 1976
melanoma
patients were used for the testing. 1218 patients (61.6%) could be assigned to the proposed pT classification, 136 patients (90.1%) with lymph node metastases and/or in-transit metastases to the proposed pN classification and all 14 patients with distant metastases to the proposed pM classification. Proposed pathological staging was possible for 971 patients (49%). The number of pT1 patients (399 versus 230) and stage I patients (544 versus 393) was distinctly higher in the proposed classification. In proposed stage II and III groups, subgroups with different prognosis could be identified. The new staging system includes more detailed information on clinical and pathohistological findings. Nevertheless, it is practicable and enables more patients with excellent prognosis to be identified.
...
PMID:Testing a new staging system for cutaneous melanoma proposed by the American Joint Committee on Cancer. 1187 44
Data from long-term follow-up examinations of patients with conjunctival
melanoma
are limited. A retrospective study of survival rates and local tumor relapse rates was performed on 85 patients initially treated between 1958 and 1993. Therapeutic procedures were local excision, local excision followed by brachytherapy, local excision combined with cryotherapy, and local excision followed by either irradiation or cryotherapy and adjuvant mitomycin C (MMC) application. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate cumulative survival rates and event rate curves. Clinical parameters of the patients and the tumors were obtained and analyzed for their relation to tumor recurrence and death from metastatic melanoma using the multivariate Cox hazards modeling. The median follow-up duration among the surviving patients was 13.1 years (mean 13.8 years). The cumulative 10-year survival rate of the 85 patients based on all causes of death was 62.5%, and that based on tumor-related death was 77.7%. Patient age greater than 55 years, higher
TNM
category, and unfavorable tumor location (palpebral conjunctiva, fornix, caruncle, corneal stroma, eyelid) were identified as prognostic factors for death from metastatic melanoma. Tumors with unfavorable location, higher
TNM
grade, and excision alone as initial therapy showed a higher cumulative probability of local relapse than favorably located (bulbar and limbal conjunctiva) tumors, lower
TNM
grade, and excision plus adjuvant therapy. The behavior of conjunctival melanomas remains unpredictable in individual cases. To minimize local recurrence rate surgical excision should be combined with an adjunctive procedure such as irradiation, cryotherapy, or local chemotherapy with MMC. Randomized prospective multicentric studies are required.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of patients with conjunctival melanoma. 1204 Feb 82
The procedure of sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with malignant cutaneous melanoma has evolved from the notion that the tumor drains in a logical way through the lymphatic system, from the first to subsequent levels. As a consequence, the first lymph node encountered (the sentinel node) will most likely be the first affected by metastasis; therefore, a negative sentinel node makes it highly unlikely that other nodes in the same lymphatic basin are affected. Although the long-term therapeutic benefit of the sentinel lymph node biopsy per se has not yet been ascertained, this procedure distinguishes patients without nodal metastases, who can avoid nodal basin dissection with its associated risk of lymphedema, from those with metastatic involvement, who may benefit from additional therapy. Sentinel lymph node biopsy would represent a significant advantage as a minimally invasive procedure, considering that an average of only 20% of
melanoma
patients with a Breslow thickness between 1.5 and 4 mm harbor metastasis in their sentinel node and are therefore candidates for elective lymph node dissection. Furthermore, histologic sampling errors (amounting to approximately 12% of lymph nodes in the conventional routine) can be reduced if one assesses a single (sentinel) node extensively rather than assessing the standard few histologic sections in a high number of lymph nodes per patient. The cells from which cutaneous melanomas originate are located between the dermis and the epidermis, a zone that drains to the inner lymphatic network in the reticular dermis and, in turn, to larger collecting lymphatics in the subcutis. Therefore, the optimal route for interstitial administration of radiocolloids for lymphoscintigraphy and subsequent radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy is intradermal or subdermal injection. (99m)Tc-Labeled colloids in various size ranges are equally adequate for radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with cutaneous melanoma, depending on local experience and availability. For melanomas along the midline of the head, neck, and trunk, particular consideration should be given to ambiguous lymphatic drainage, which frequently requires interstitial administration virtually all around the tumor or surgical scar from prior excision of the
melanoma
. Lymphoscintigraphy is an essential part of radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy because images are used to direct the surgeon to the sites of the nodes. The sentinel lymph node should have a significantly higher count than that of the background (at least 10:1 intraoperatively). After removal of the sentinel node, the surgical bed must be reexamined to ensure that all radioactive sites are identified and removed for analysis. Virtually the entire sentinel lymph node should be processed for histopathology, including both conventional hematoxylin-eosin staining and immune staining with antibodies to the S-100 and HMB-45 antigens. The success rate of radioguidance in localizing the sentinel lymph node in
melanoma
patients is approximately 98% in institutions that perform a high number of procedures and approaches 99% when combined with the vital blue-dye technique. Growing evidence of the high correlation between a sentinel lymph node biopsy negative for cancer and a negative status for the lymphatic basin-evidence, therefore, of the high prognostic value of sentinel node biopsy-has led to the procedure's being included in the most recent version of the
TNM
staging system and starting to become the standard of care for patients with cutaneous melanoma.
...
PMID:Radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy in malignant cutaneous melanoma. 1205 Mar 28
The authors investigated a group of 51 patients (29 men and 22 women) with intraocular melanoma: 41 patients with
melanoma
of the chorioid, 10 patients with
melanoma
of the ciliary body. They evaluated the clinical and pathological finding according to the
TNM
classification recommended by UICC (International Union Against Cancer). In all investigated patients they assessed circulating tumour cells (melanocytes) in the peripheral blood stream based on the detection of mRNA tyrosinase and marker MART 1. When evaluating the presence of markers according to the diagnosis irrespective of time, they found in patients in the clinical stage of T2 choroidal
melanoma
a 19% positivity of different markers and very rare a concurrent positivity of both markers. Patients in the clinical stage T3 had a 51% positivity of one marker and 34% concurrent positivity of both markers. In
melanoma
of the ciliary body evidence of individual markers was positive in 17% and only in 11% both markers were positive concurrently. On comparison of therapeutic procedures from the aspect of development in time in patients treated by brachytherapy only rare positivity was found at the time of administration the radioactive plaque, following an eight-month interval after brachytherapy the positivity of markers increased to 28%. On evaluation of markers of choroidal
melanoma
and ciliary body
melanoma
resolved by enucleation had their positivity at the time of operation was 36%, and during check-ups up to one year or longer it persisted at similar levels. Concurrent presence of both markers before this operation was rare, during postoperative check-up examinations it was within a range of 23 and 33%. The presence of both markers was repeatedly proved in five patients with chooidal
melanoma
after enucleation of the eye, in four of them in direct correlation with a metastatic process.
...
PMID:[Detection of tumor circulating cells in patients with ocular melanoma]. 1218 79
Primary sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanomas are uncommon tumors that are frequently misclassified, resulting in inappropriate clinical management. A total of 115 cases of sinonasal tract mucosal
malignant melanoma
included 59 females and 56 males, 13-93 years of age (mean 64.3 years). Patients presented most frequently with epistaxis (n = 52), mass (n = 42), and/or nasal obstruction (n = 34) present for a mean of 8.2 months. The majority of tumors involved the nasal cavity (n = 34), septum alone, or a combination of the nasal cavity and sinuses (n = 39) with a mean size of 2.4 cm. Histologically, the tumors were composed of a variety of cell types (epithelioid, spindled, undifferentiated), frequently arranged in a peritheliomatous distribution (n = 39). Immunohistochemical studies confirmed the diagnosis of sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanomas with positive reactions for S-100 protein, tyrosinase, HMB-45, melan A, and microphthalmia transcription factor. Sinonasal tract mucosal malignant melanomas need to be considered in the differential diagnosis of most sinonasal malignancies, particularly carcinoma, lymphoma, sarcoma, and olfactory neuroblastoma. Surgery accompanied by radiation and/or chemotherapy was generally used. The majority of patients developed a recurrence (n = 79), with 75 patients dying with disseminated disease (mean 2.3 years), whereas 40 patients are either alive or had died of unrelated causes (mean 13.9 years). A
TNM
-type classification separated by anatomic site of involvement and metastatic disease is proposed to predict biologic behavior.
...
PMID:Sinonasal tract and nasopharyngeal melanomas: a clinicopathologic study of 115 cases with a proposed staging system. 1271 45
The American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) implemented major revisions of the
melanoma
TNM
and stage grouping criteria in the recently published 6th edition of the Staging Manual. The new staging system better reflects independent prognostic factors that are used in clinical trials and in reporting the outcomes of various
melanoma
treatment modalities. Major revisions include: 1)
melanoma
thickness and ulceration but not level of invasion to be used in the T classification, 2) the number of metastatic lymph nodes rather than their gross dimensions and the delineation of microscopic vs. macroscopic nodal metastases to be used in the N classification, 3) the site of distant metastases and the presence of elevated serum lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) to be used in the M classification, 4) an upstaging of all patients with Stage I, II, and III disease when a primary
melanoma
is ulcerated, 5) a merging of satellite metastases around a primary
melanoma
and in transit metastases into a single staging entity that is grouped into Stage III disease, and 6) a new convention for defining clinical and pathological staging so as to take into account the new staging information gained from intraoperative lymphatic mapping and sentinel node biopsy.
...
PMID:New TNM melanoma staging system: linking biology and natural history to clinical outcomes. 1292 15
In the period 1997-2001, 466 sentinel lymph nodes from 342 lymphatic basins in 322
melanoma
patients were examined at the Health Unit of Florence. The lymphatic mapping was performed through pre-operative lymphoscintigraphy using technetium-labelled nano-colloid, intradermal injections of vital blue dye and intra-operative gamma-probe. The examined patients were 182 females and 140 males. Sentinel lymph node was one in 65.2% of cases; two sentinel lymph nodes were detected in 27% of cases and more than 2 sentinel nodes were detected in 7.8% of cases.
Melanoma
metastases in one or more sentinel lymph nodes were found in 61/322 patients (18.9%). Lymphatic basins resulted to be involved by
melanoma
metastases were 64/342 (18.7%); sentinel lymph nodes containing metastatic melanoma deposits were 73/466 (15.6%). No metastasis was found in patients with
melanoma
thickness < or = 1 mm. One or more positive sentinel lymph nodes were found in 7.5% of patients with
melanoma
thickness > 1.00 and < or = 1.50 mm, in 27.7% of patients with
melanoma
> 1.50 and < or = 3.00 mm, in 38.2% of patients with
melanoma
> 3.00 and < or = 4.00, and in 60.7% of patients with
melanoma
> 4.00 mm. Frozen section analysis of sentinel lymph nodes, performed in 59/61 patients with nodal metastases, detected nodal involvement in 21 patients (35.6%). Metastases were identified by routine hematoxylin-eosin staining in 57/64 positive lymphatic basins; in 7 cases (11%) metastases were detected by immunohistochemical stainings (S100 and HMB-45). A nodal nevus was found in 3/466 sentinel lymph nodes (0.6%). Our data are analyzed and compared to previously data of the literature. The value of frozen section analysis and the major problems in the diagnosis of
melanoma
micrometastases in sentinel lymph nodes are discussed. The importance of the sentinel node biopsy for the detection of occult metastases and for the correct staging of
melanoma
patients are stressed, according to the new
TNM
melanoma
classification.
...
PMID:[Sentinel lymph nodes in cutaneous melanoma: the experience in the Florence area]. 1296 7
Of the numerous prognostic factors for patients with localized
malignant melanoma
(LMM), none is superior to the simple parameter of tumor thickness. The aim of the present study was to better define prognostic factors for this disease. Between January 1992 and December 1994, 188 consecutive patients with LMM were treated at the Rabin Medical Center. Patient and tumor characteristics were retrospectively examined as potential prognostic factors. Patients (n=173) who had had at least two-year follow-up were included in the overall survival (OS) analysis, and 159 patients for whom accurate data on recurrent disease were available were included in the disease-free survival (DFS) analysis. At a median follow-up of 85 months (range 24-114), 48 patients (30%) had recurrent disease which resulted in death in 35 (20%). The five-year OS and DFS rates for the entire group were 82 and 72%, respectively. On univariate analysis, female gender, age younger than 75 years, metachronous or synchronous second skin cancer (including
melanoma
), light skin color, tumor thickness and
TNM
stage were predictive of both OS and DFS. Tumor location and ulceration, correlated with only one endpoint, OS or DFS, respectively. On multivariate analysis, three factors retained statistical significance with regard to both OS and DFS: tumor thickness (p=0.000 for both), second skin cancer (p=0.02 for both), and age (p=0.04 for both). Alongside the well-established predictive factor of tumor thickness in LMM, older age and the presence of a second skin cancer also have prognostic significance. The prognostic importance of the latter is reported here for the first time.
...
PMID:Older age and second skin cancer as prognostic factors in localized malignant melanomas. 1453 42
As for other solid tumors, malignant cutaneous melanoma drains in a logical way through the lymphatic system, from the first to subsequent levels. Therefore, the first lymph node encountered (the sentinel node) will most likely be the first to be affected by metastasis, and a negative sentinel node makes it highly unlikely that other nodes in the same lymphatic basin are affected. Sentinel lymph node biopsy distinguishes patients without nodal metastases, who can avoid nodal basin dissection with its associated risk of lymphedema, and those with metastatic involvement who might benefit from additional therapy. This procedure represents a significant advantage as a minimally invasive procedure, considering that only an average 20% of
melanoma
patients with Breslow thickness between 1.5 and 4 mm harbour metastasis in their sentinel node(s) and are therefore candidates to elective lymph node dissection procedures. The cells that originate cutaneous melanomas are located between dermis and epidermis, a zone that drains to the inner lymphatic network in the reticular dermis, in turn to larger collecting lymphatics in subcutis. Therefore, the optimal modality of interstitial administration of radiocolloids for lymphoscintigraphy and subsequent radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy is through intradermal/subdermal injection. (99m)Tc-labeled colloids in various size ranges are equally adequate for radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with cutaneous melanoma, depending on local experience and availability. For melanomas located in the midline area of the head, neck, and trunk, particular consideration should be given to ambiguous lymphatic drainage, which frequently requires interstitial administration virtually all around the tumor or surgical scar from prior excision of the
melanoma
. Lymphoscintigraphy is an essential part of radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy because images are used to direct the surgeon to the sites of the node(s). The sentinel lymph node should have a significantly higher count than that of background (at least 10:1 intraoperatively). After removal of the sentinel node, the surgical bed must be reexamined to ensure that all radioactive sites are identified and removed for analysis. The success rate of radioguidance in localizing the sentinel lymph node in
melanoma
patients is about 98% in institutions where a high number of procedures are performed, approaching 99% when combined with the vital blue dye technique. The procedure is becoming the standard of care for patients with cutaneous melanoma because of its high prognostic value that has led to include the procedure in the most recent version of the
TNM
staging system.
...
PMID:Radioguided sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with malignant cutaneous melanoma: the nuclear medicine contribution. 1499 86
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