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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (mole)
21,279 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied 13 prognostic factors in 582 patients with clinical stage I melanoma to determine which factor or combination of factors was associated with death from melanoma within the first 24 months following diagnosis. Thirty-six patients died during this period. Only 2 deaths occurred in patients with primary tumors thinner than 1.70 mm, and only 2 patients of 189 died with tumors located on the non-BANS extremities, excluding the hands and feet. Individual factors associated with high risk for death within 2 years included level V tumors, acral location, thickness greater than or equal to 3.65 mm, histologic ulceration greater than 3 mm, nodular type, presence of microscopic satellites, greater than 6 mitoses/mm2, positive elective node dissection, absence of lymphocyte response at the tumor base, and absence of an associated nevus histologically. Many of the preceding individual factors are highly correlated. By the use of logistic regression analysis, only one very high risk group was found: 71 percent of patients with level V tumors greater than 1.70 mm thick with histologic ulceration width greater than 3 mm located in an area other than the extremities (excluding hands and feet) had died within 2 years of diagnosis. The ability to select high-risk groups should be useful to investigators involved with the design and evaluation of adjuvant therapy studies.
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PMID:Early death from clinical stage I melanoma. 685 54

We studied 14 prognostic factors in 428 patients with clinical stage I melanoma to determine which factor or combination of factors was associated with death from melanoma from 24 to 60 months following diagnosis. Forty-eight patients (11 percent) died during this period. All 17 patients who had visceral metastases present at 24 months died during this period. All surviving patients were followed for at least 60 months. Individual high risk factors included ulceration width (as determined by histology), level IV or V tumor, recurrence other than visceral, 6 or more mitoses per square millimeter, presence of involved nodes on elective dissection, absent or slight lymphocyte response, tumor type other than superficial spreading, location other than extremities (excluding hands and feet), microscopic satellites, thickness, sex, and wide local excision. The presence of sex as a risk factor for patients dying from 2 to 5 years following diagnosis is noteworthy because no sex difference was noted in the early death (less than 24 months) group. Age, presence of a nevus, and histologic regression were not significant factors. A logistic regression analysis selected a combination of the following independent factors: (1) location on extremities excluding hands and feet (favorable), (2) thickness, (3) recurrence other than visceral, (4) positive elective nodal dissection, (5) 6 or more mitoses per square millimeter, and (6) moderate to marked lymphocyte response (favorable). Twenty-five percent of patients with level IV lesions died between 24 and 60 months compared with only a 6 percent death rate within the first 24 months.
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PMID:Factors associated with death from melanoma from 2 to 5 years following diagnosis in clinical stage I patients. 685 55

From the Scottish Melanoma Group database for south-east Scotland we evaluated 5-year follow-up in patients with cutaneous malignant melanoma excised between 1979 and 1994 and devised an 'evidence-based' review protocol. Of the 1568 with stage I melanoma, 293 (19%) developed a recurrence, 32 had a second primary melanoma and 97 had an in-situ melanoma. The disease-free interval shortened progressively with increasing tumour thickness. Overall, 80% of recurrences were within the first 3 years, but a few patients (< 8%) had recurrences 5 or 10 years after the initial surgery. In-situ melanomas did not recur. Almost half (47%) the recurrences were noted first by the patient, and only 26% were detected first at a follow-up clinic. One hundred and thirty-nine patients (89%) were still under review when their recurrences were detected, and 102 (65%) had been seen within the previous 3 months. Questionnaires were completed by 120 patients: sun protection and avoidance, and mole examination were more likely after melanoma excision. We recommend 3-monthly review of patients with invasive lesions for the first 3 years. Thereafter, those with lesions >/= 1.0 mm need two further annual reviews. Patients with in-situ lesions should be reviewed once, to confirm adequate excision (0.5 cm margins) and to give appropriate education. Surveillance beyond 5 years is only justified if there are special risk factors.
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PMID:A rational approach to melanoma follow-up in patients with primary cutaneous melanoma. Scottish Melanoma Group. 1058 43

We studied 13 prognostic factors in 582 patients with clinical stage I melanoma to determine which factor or combination of factors was associated with death from melanoma within the first 24 months following diagnosis. Thirty-six patients died during this period. Only 2 deaths occurred in patients with primary tumors thinner than 1.70 mm, and only 2 patients of 189 died with tumors located on the non-BANS extremities, excluding the hands and feet. Individual factors associated with high risk for death within 2 years included level V tumors, acral location, thickness greater than or equal to 3.65 mm, histologic ulceration greater than 3 mm, nodular type, presence of microscopic satellites, greater than 6 mitoses/mm(2), positive elective node dissection, absence of lymphocyte response at the tumor base, and absence of an associated nevus histologically. Many of the preceding individual factors are highly correlated. By the use of logistic regression analysis, only one very high risk group was found: 71 percent of patients with level V tumors greater than 1.70 mm thick with histologic ulceration width greater than 3 mm located in an area other than the extremities (excluding hands and feet) had died within 2 years of diagnosis. The ability to select high-risk groups should be useful to investigators involved with the design and evaluation of adjuvant therapy studies.
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PMID:Early death from clinical stage I melanoma. 2047 34

We studied 14 prognostic factors in 428 patients with clinical stage I melanoma to determine which factor or combination of factors was associated with death from melanoma from 24 to 60 months following diagnosis. Forty-eight patients (11 percent) died during this period. All 17 patients who had visceral metastases present at 24 months died during this period. All surviving patients were followed for at least 60 months. Individual high risk factors included ulceration width (as determined by histology), level IV or V tumor, recurrence other than visceral, 6 or more mitoses per square millimeter, presence of involved nodes on elective dissection, absent or slight lymphocyte response, tumor type other than superficial spreading, location other than extremities (excluding hands and feet), microscopic satellites, thickness, sex, and wide local excision. The presence of sex as a risk factor for patients dying from 2 to 5 years following diagnosis is noteworthy because no sex difference was noted in the early death (<24 months) group. Age, presence of a nevus, and histologic regression were not significant factors. A logistic regression analysis selected a combination of the following independent factors: (1) location on extremities excluding hands and feet (favorable), (2) thickness, (3) recurrence other than visceral, (4) positive elective nodal dissection, (5) 6 or more mitoses per square millimeter, and (6) moderate to marked lymphocyte response (favorable). Twenty-five percent of patients with level IV lesions died between 24 and 60 months compared with only a 6 percent death rate within the first 24 months.
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PMID:Factors associated with death from melanoma from 2 to 5 years following diagnosis in clinical stage I patients. 2047 35

Capsular nevi (CN) are clusters of benign melanocytes situated in the capsule of lymph nodes and occur in up to 20% of lympadenectomy specimens. The molecular profile of CN in relation to prognostic parameters in patients with primary cutaneous melanoma (PCM) has not been previously investigated. We assessed BRAF V600E mutation by immunohistochemistry (IHC) in the CN of sentinel lymph nodes (SLN) in PCM patients and correlated the findings with demographic characteristics, PCM histopathologic and molecular features, and clinical outcome parameters. Seventy-eight cases of CN involving SLN of PCM patients were evaluated for BRAF V600E mutation by IHC. The results were correlated with patient demographics, PCM histopathologic and molecular features, and outcome measures. Thirty-six (46%) of 78 CN cases expressed BRAF V600E mutation by IHC. Nineteen (53%) of those BRAF-positive CN cases were from patients with at least American Joint Committee on Cancer stage II melanoma, whereas 62% of BRAF-negative CN cases (26/42) were from patients with stage I melanoma (P = .013). Twelve (33%) of the 36 BRAF-positive CN cases had metastatic melanoma involving lymph nodes, compared with 14% (6/42) of BRAF-negative CN cases (P = .061). CN mutation status was not associated with patient demographics, histopathologic or molecular features of the PCM, or survival outcomes. A high percentage of CN identified in the SLN of patients with PCM harbor BRAF V600E mutation. Positive mutation was associated with adverse clinicopathological parameters, specifically increased tumor stage and lymph node metastasis. These findings suggest that BRAF V600E mutation in CN of SLN may be useful as an adverse predictive biomarker in patients with melanoma.
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PMID:Clinical significance of BRAF V600E mutational status in capsular nevi of sentinel lymph nodes in patients with primary cutaneous melanoma. 2766 65