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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (melanoma)
69,561 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A review was conducted of 264 consecutive patients who underwent surgical treatment for nodal metastases of the groin area from a primary melanoma of the lower extremity. We found no significant difference in survival or regional control created by the extent of node dissection performed, whether or not surgical treatment was a superficial femoral (n = 133) or an iliac and femoral node dissection (n = 131). We also determined that the age and sex of the patient, the location of the primary melanoma and the time that elapsed before the development of nodal metastases were not significant factors. However, the extent of tumor burden (the number of positive nodes and presence of extranodal disease) was useful in predicting patient survival and subsequent nodal basin relapse. Future improvement in survival rates will require effective systemic regimens rather than radical surgical treatment alone.
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PMID:Surgical management of groin nodal metastases from primary melanoma of the lower extremity. 154 34

Metastases from solid tumors to lymph nodes do not portend as poor a prognosis as metastases to other sites. The authors wished to determine whether specific subpopulations of cells metastasized to lymph nodes and whether they have different properties than cells metastatic to visceral sites. Repetitive selection for "spontaneous" metastases of a B16 melanoma to either lung or lymph node increased the incidence of lymph node metastases. Cells derived from pulmonary and lymph node metastases were assayed for their ability to adhere to cryostat sections of lung and lymph node and respond to target organ-conditioned media in serum-free conditions. Both cell types were four times more adherent to lymph node than lung, and consistently attached to the hilar and subcapsular sinuses. Attachment of cells derived from pulmonary metastases to either tissue was threefold greater than that of cells derived from nodal metastases. Lung-conditioned media stimulated proliferation of both cell types, and transiently induced differentiated morphology in cells derived from lymph node metastases, but not in cells from pulmonary metastases. Neither effect was found in lymph-node-conditioned medium. These results suggest that cells metastasize to lymph nodes preferentially not because of a specific predilection for lymph node, but because it is an easy site to colonize. Adhesive interactions in the lymph node rather than trophic ones appear to account for this effect. Cells metastatic to lymph node may be less "malignant" than cells metastatic to visceral sites because less has been required for them to succeed as a metastatic focus.
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PMID:Locally increased metastatic efficiency as a reason for preferential metastasis of solid tumors to lymph nodes. 154 3

The initial route of metastases in most patients with melanoma is via the lymphatics to the regional nodes. However, routine lymphadenectomy for patients with clinical stage I melanoma remains controversial because most of these patients do not have nodal metastases, are unlikely to benefit from the operation, and may suffer troublesome postoperative edema of the limbs. A new procedure was developed using vital dyes that permits intraoperative identification of the sentinel lymph node, the lymph node nearest the site of the primary melanoma, on the direct drainage pathway. The most likely site of early metastases, the sentinel node can be removed for immediate intraoperative study to identify clinically occult melanoma cells. We successfully identified the sentinel node(s) in 194 of 237 lymphatic basins and detected metastases in 40 specimens (21%) on examination of routine hematoxylin-eosin-stained slides (12%) or exclusively in immunohistochemically stained preparations (9%). Metastases were present in 47 (18%) of 259 sentinel nodes, while nonsentinel nodes were the sole site of metastasis in only two of 3079 nodes from 194 lymphadenectomy specimens that had an identifiable sentinel node, a false-negative rate of less than 1%. Thus, this technique identifies, with a high degree of accuracy, patients with early stage melanoma who have nodal metastases and are likely to benefit from radical lymphadenectomy.
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PMID:Technical details of intraoperative lymphatic mapping for early stage melanoma. 155 90

One of the most difficult decisions in the management of patients with melanoma remains whether or not to dissect electively the regional lymph nodes of patients with high risk primary tumors. There is abundant evidence that a proportion of such patients will eventually develop nodal metastases and that the probability of metastasis increases with increasing tumor thickness and depth of invasion. If elective node dissection is performed on all patients with high risk primaries, most patients (who have no tumor in the nodes) will be subjected to a potentially morbid operation from which they can achieve no benefit. On the other hand, a "wait and see" policy accepts that a minority of patients will go on to develop nodal metastases and that if definitive therapy is delayed until metastases are detected clinically their likelihood of survival is much reduced. We describe a new technique of dye-directed selective lymphadenectomy that allows accurate and objective identification of individual patients who have subclinical metastases, the individuals who a priori are most likely to benefit from lymphadenectomy. We also discuss new approaches to the assessment of prognosis after lymphadenectomy for node-spread melanoma, a group of patients in whom the prognosis is not uniformly bad. We end with a consideration of quality assurance aspects of the pathological evaluation of lymphadenectomy specimens.
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PMID:Management of the regional lymph nodes in patients with cutaneous malignant melanoma. 156 1

Twenty-one patients with disseminated malignant melanoma received recombinant tumor necrosis factor (TNF), 150 micrograms/m2 intravenously on days 1-5 every 2 weeks for four cycles and then every 3 weeks. Recombinant TNF produced no meaningful palliation. One patient (5%) attained an objective response of nodal, but not visceral, disease, which lasted 3 weeks. The median time to progression was 4 weeks. The median survival was 7.7 months. Ninety percent of patients developed mild to severe cytokine "flu." Ten percent developed significant hepatic toxicity (AST greater than 3 times normal). As a single agent, recombinant TNF is not likely to palliate disseminated malignant melanoma. However, combinations of recombinant TNF and cytotoxic or immune modulatory agents, particularly gamma interferon, may merit further investigation.
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PMID:Phase II trial of recombinant tumor necrosis factor in disseminated malignant melanoma. 159 Feb 81

In an attempt to elucidate possible mechanisms responsible for the synergistic interaction between hyperthermia and melphalan observed in melanoma cells, we investigated the effect of heat on the formation and removal of melphalan-induced DNA interstrand cross-links (DNA ISC). Cells obtained from melanoma nodal metastases of 15 patients were grown as monolayer primary cultures and their malignant nature was confirmed by specific monoclonal antibodies. Cultures were treated with melphalan for 1 h at 37 or 42 degrees C and DNA ISC were determined by alkaline elution after proteinase K digestion. Results showed an enhanced induction of DNA ISC at hyperthermic conditions. Median number of DNA lesions 6 h after treatment was significantly higher for samples treated at 42 degrees C than for those treated at 37 degrees C (185 compared with 95 rad equivalents, p = 0.01). Moreover, the concomitant hyperthermic treatment prevented the long-term removal of DNA ISC produced by melphalan in most of the tumours considered.
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PMID:Effect of hyperthermia on the formation and removal of DNA interstrand cross-links induced by melphalan in primary cultures of human malignant melanoma. 160 39

Claviculectomy has been described for primary or metastatic tumors of the clavicle. In 11 patients, claviculectomy was used as a technical expedient for the exposure and en bloc resection of large, underlying nodal metastases from melanoma (7 patients) and soft tissue tumors (4 patients). There were no wound complications. Three patients developed moderate edema of the arm. There was little limitation at the shoulder, and the use of the upper extremity has been essentially normal. Claviculectomy is well tolerated, provides good exposure of the underlying neurovascular structures, and, in some patients, provides a method of limb salvage for underlying tumors in preference to forequarter amputation.
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PMID:Claviculectomy for the exposure and en bloc resection of adjacent tumors. 162 8

Therapeutic lymph node dissections in patients with grossly palpable metastatic melanoma are performed to control regional disease, to salvage a small percentage of patients, and to obtain staging information. Patients with malignant melanoma may undergo elective lymph node dissections, when the basin is clinically negative, for three reasons. There is some evidence based on large retrospective studies that survival is increased in patients with intermediate thickness melanoma if elective lymph node dissections are performed as part of the initial treatment of the primary melanoma. Second, in a small percentage of patients, a previous elective lymph node dissection may have helped control disease in the regional lymphatics, so that more extensive procedures, including amputations, are not necessary. Another important reason is to obtain staging and prognostic information for the patient because most adjuvant protocols are based on the presence or absence of disease in the regional basin. During a 3-year period, 115 patients have undergone a regional nodal dissection at the Moffitt Cancer Center and James Haley VA Hospital as part of their surgical treatment. With a follow-up of 3 years, patients with 1 node positive do significantly better than those with more than 1 node positive in their dissection (p = 0.06). The percentage of nodes positive is also important. Those patients who have less than 10% of their nodes involved with metastatic melanoma have a better survival than those patients whose percentage is greater than 10% (p = 0.07).
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PMID:The concept of lymph node dissections in patients with malignant melanoma. 164 4

The prognostic factors for stage 1, 2 melanoma have been elucidated. Tumor thickness, ulceration of the primary melanoma, and perhaps, primary site may be used to predict the percentage of patients with regional nodal disease or systemic metastases and the prognosis of patients who have only cutaneous disease at diagnosis. Very little is known about prognosis once there is a recurrence. A retrospective, computer-aided chart review identified 4,185 patients registered at the Duke University Melanoma Database who had stage 1, 2 disease at diagnosis. During a mean follow-up period of 7 years, 35.9% experienced a recurrence. Local regional recurrences explained 62.5% to 85.5% of the recurrences. Even after elective node dissections, local regional recurrences explained most relapses (58.1%). Sixty-five percent of the recurrences occurred within the first 3 years of of follow-up. There was a pronounced difference in 5-year survival in those patients who suffered a recurrence sometime during their clinical course compared with those who never relapsed (p = 0.00001, for trunk primary melanoma). Patients with local or regional recurrence have a better prognosis than patients who relapse systemically, with 5-year survivals from the time of recurrence of 55% for a patient with a local recurrence, 51% for a patient with a regional nodal recurrence, and 20% for a patient with a systemic recurrence. A multivariate regression analysis identified thickness, ulceration of the primary melanoma, and age and location of the primary melanoma on the extremity as variables that predicted prognosis. The only factors concerning the recurrent state that added prognostic information was the disease-free interval and the presence of systemic metastases as the initial recurrence.
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PMID:Recurrent malignant melanoma: the identification of prognostic factors to predict survival. 164 5

A prospective, nonrandomized trial was performed of the four-drug chemotherapy protocol consisting of dacarbazine, carmustine, cisplatin, and tamoxifen citrate given to high-risk patients for recurrence of melanoma after local regional treatment. The treated patients were consecutively registered and 6 patients who did not elect to be treated served as the control population. Criteria for inclusion in the trial were the presence of four or more lymph nodes positive for metastatic melanoma on regional modal dissection, the presence of metastatic disease in second station lymph node areas such as the iliac basin, greater than 5 cm in maximal diameter tumor burden in the nodal basin, and patients who had resected stage 4 (systemic metastases) disease with clear margins and were rendered free of disease. Actuarial survival curves for the treated group and the control subjects were similar (p = 0.91). There was a definite trend toward an increased disease-free survival for the group receiving adjuvant chemotherapy (p = 0.09). The mean disease-free survival for the control population was 200 days and for the treated group, 600 days. The study suggests a therapeutic benefit for adjuvant chemotherapy treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma who have been rendered free of disease but are at high risk for recurrence.
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PMID:Adjuvant chemotherapy in malignant melanoma using dacarbazine, carmustine, cisplatin, and tamoxifen: a University of South Florida and H. Lee Moffitt Melanoma Center Study. 164 8


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