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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The neurological manifestations of melanoma are analysed in this review of 1,500 patients in the Queensland Melanoma Project from 1963 to 1969. Three hundred and fifty patients have died, and 113 were recognized as having central nervous system metastases. The natural history of these metastases was examined, together with the results of a limited number of autopsies. The results of treatment are discussed.
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PMID:Melanoma of the central nervous system. 27 41

During a follow-up period of six to 12 years, 15.4% of patients in the Queensland Melanoma Project (Q.M.P.) developed histologically proven secondary deposits in lymph nodes. The incidence rate in males (21%) was twice that in females (11%), but the mortality rate was similar (M., 67%; F., 61%). Thirty-two patients (2%) had positive nodes with no known primary lesion. Metastases developed in males with lesions on the foot (50%), on the thigh (29%), and on the back (22%); and in females with lesions on the lower leg (9%) and thigh (20%). About one-half of the nodes were removed at the time of treatment of the primary growth or within two months. Three-quarters were removed in the first year. However, it was found that tumour could remain dormant for more than eight years. Dormant tumours behaved in a similar aggressive fashion on regrowth as non-dormant secondaries. Nodal metastases were present in 5% of patients at the time of their first presentation with primary melanoma. Elective node dissections were done in 6% of males and 11% of females.
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PMID:Secondary malignant melanoma in lymph nodes: incidence, time of occurrence, and mortality. 27 55

Metastatic involvement of the gallbladder in melanoma is rare, but constitutes the most common metastatic lesion involving this organ. Two cases of metastatic melanoma to the gallbladder with radiographic evidence of gallbladder abnormality prior to surgery are presented. These cases are compared to the nine previously reported cases of metastatic melanoma to the gallbladder with abnormal cholecystograms. All eleven cases presented with signs and symptoms compatible with cholecystitis. Nine of the eleven patients had a previous melanoma primary and most had other extrabiliary metastases. Associated cholelithiasis appeared to be only incidental. In addition, nine reported cases of "primary" biliary melanoma were reviewed. Clinical and pathologic presentations in the latter cases were similar to the former cases with metastases. Seventy-eight percent had extrabiliary sites of metastasis at some time in the course of their disease, tending to refute the impression of "primary" biliary melanoma. Melanoma in the gallbladder is much more likely to have metastasized from a regressed skin primary than to have arisen de novo. The two reported cases and the 18 cases from the literature indicate that the physician must consider gallbladder metastasis in melanoma patients presenting with symptoms compatible with cholecystitis.
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PMID:Metastatic melanoma of the gallbladder. 38 9

Stage I melanoma encompasses an extraordinary diversity of biologic behavior. In such a setting where numerous parameters appear to influence survival, a multifactorial analysis using Cox's regression model is a valuable statistical model. Using a computerized data base of 394 clinical stage I melanoma patients treated at this institution during the past 20 years, a multifactorial analysis was used to compare the relative prognostic strength of 11 parameters. Two pathological factors (tumor thickness and ulceration) and two clinial factors (initial surgical treatment and anatomic location) were identified as the dominant prognostic variables. Other factors examined simultaneously that did not provide additional predictive influence on survival included the level of invasion, pigmentation, growth pattern, lymphocyte infiltration, pathological state, sex, and age. Melanoma thickness was the most important factor for predicting survival in patients with stage I melanoma (P less than 10(-8). This parameter is easy to measure and provides a quantitative estimate of clinically occult regional and distant metastases. Contrary to other reports using single factor analysis, the type of initial surgical treatment, in fact, did influence survival after other variables were taken into consideration. Thus the multifactorial analysis supports the observation that patients with intermediate thickness melanoma thickness of 1.5 to 3.99 mm had a 78% 8-year survival rate with wide excision of the melanoma and elective node dissection, while none survived more than 8 years if a melanoma of the same thickness was only widely excised. Multifactorial analysis is a useful and important statistical method when comparing treatment alternatives and prognostic factors in patients with melanoma.
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PMID:A multifactorial analysis of melanoma. II. Prognostic factors in patients with stage I (localized) melanoma. 46 79

The prognostic significance of 2 histological parameters, level of invasion and maximum thickness is evaluated in 248 cases of malignant melanoma of the limbs staged T1-3NoMo which were collected for Trial No. 1 of the W.H.O. Collaborating Centres for the Evaluation of Methods of Diagnosis and Treatment of Melanoma between September 1967 and December 1974. There is a linear relation of tumor thickness to mortality with a high statistical significance (P = 0.0002). Mortality also increases with progression of the level of invasion. The incidence of occult metastases to the regional lymph nodes increases with increasing thickness or level of invasion. Moreover the age and sex corrected survival curves are also dependent on both parameters. The comparison of the 2 methods revealed that maximal tumor thickness is a more powerful measure of prognosis than is the determination of the level of invasion.
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PMID:Stage I melanoma of the limbs: assessment of prognosis by levels of invasion and maximum thickness. 67 57

Fortner's Melanotic Melanoma No 1 was inoculated into the right hindfoot of 86 golden hamsters. Three, 7, 14, 21, and 28 days after inoculation, groups of hamsters underwent amputations at the ipsilateral hindhip to determine when pulmonary metastases initially occur. Upon subsequent sacrifice of the hamsters, pulmonary metastases were found to occur initially within 14 days of tumor inoculation.
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PMID:Chronicled metastases in a hamster melanoma. 84 52

From September, 1967, to January, 1974, a clinical trial was carried out by the WHO Melanoma Group to evaluate the efficacy of elective lymph-node dissection in the treatment of malignant melanoma of the extremities with clinically uninvolved regional lymph nodes. Treatment was prospectively randomized: 267 patients to excision of primary melanoma and immediate regional-lymph-node dissection and 286 to excision of primary melanoma and regional-lymph-node dissection at the time of appearance of metastases. The statistical analysis showed no difference in survival between the two groups of patients, regardless of how the data were analyzed (according to sex, site of origin, maximum diameter of primary tumor or Clark's level or Breslow's thickness). Elective lymph-node dissection in malignant malanoma of the limbs does not improve the prognosis and is not recommended when patients can be followed at intervals of three months.
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PMID:Inefficacy of immediate node dissection in stage 1 melanoma of the limbs. 89 64

Melanoma cells carry membrane-bound antigens that induced both antibody production and cellular immunity. However, these antigens appear not to be tumor-specific, as the activity of human antisera can be absorbed out by fetal antigens. Nonetheless, the phenomenon of spontaneous regression, though mostly affecting only parts of a lesion, indicates that effective attack mechanisms do exist. Simultaneous tumor progression is due to heterogeneity of tumor cells, which vary widely in antigen expression. Cells that are not recognizable sneak through defense mechanisms and produce metastases.
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PMID:[Immunology of malignant melanoma (author's transl)]. 99 70

We have described the clinicopathologic findings in two cases of anorectal melanoma, and extracted the salient features from the medical literature. The disease is rare. Melanoma arises from the anal squamous membrane and very often spreads upward through submucosal planes, producing secondary satelites in the rectum. Trauma from defecation, vast lymphatic and venous systems in the anorectal region, and high invasiveness of the tumor cells eviden;ly account for early distant metastases. Histologically, the neoplastic cells often mimic other cancers. Treatment is surgical, with dismal end results.
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PMID:Anorectal melanoma: report of two cases. 108 61

Thirty patients with malignant melanoma and cerebral metastases confirmed by CT were studied. Metastases were classified according to their size: < or = 1 cm (group A), 1.1-4 cm (group B), and > 4 cm (group C), in order to assess the clinical course of the disease and predict the response to treatment with fotemustine. Group B lesions were the most common, independent of the site of the primary tumour, except for patients with rectal melanoma. Group C metastases were least common and were usually solitary. Asymptomatic patients usually had group A metastases, whereas those with non-specific complaints, hemisyndrome or neurobehavioural changes usually had group B metastases. The time from diagnosis of the primary tumour to discovery of disease in the CNS was significantly longer for those who had group A lesions, compared with those who had groups B or C lesions (P < 0.0001). Solitary lesions usually belonged to groups B or C, whereas multiple lesions belonged mainly to groups A or B. All the responders to fotemustine has mainly cortical, group A or group B lesions. Patients with group C lesions or leptomeningeal spread did not respond to fotemustine. Our findings suggest an association between the size of the cerebral metastatic lesion from malignant melanoma and clinical parameters characteristic of tumour behaviour.
Melanoma Res 1992 Dec
PMID:Cerebral metastatic melanoma: correlation between clinical and CT findings. 129 86


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