Melanoma with unknown primary: report and analysis of 24 patients.

Med Oncol

Clinica Dermatologica, Dipartimento di Medicina Interna e Specialità Mediche, University of Rome, La Sapienza, Viale del Policlinico, Rome, Italy.

Published: December 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on patients with metastatic melanoma from unknown primary lesions (MUP) indicates a lower incidence (1.4%) and shows that these patients have a significantly better survival rate compared to those with known primary melanoma (MMKP) at the same stages.
  • A retrospective study analyzed 24 MUP patients, revealing better prognosis for MUP patients even when focusing on those with only lymph node involvement.
  • Findings suggest that the immune response might play a role in the regression of the primary melanoma, with older median ages at diagnosis possibly linked to prolonged immune interactions with the disease.

Article Abstract

In the literature, there are some papers reporting on patients with metastatic melanoma from an unknown primary lesion (MUP). The pathogenesis of this phenomenon and the prognosis of these patients are still debatable. Therefore, we reviewed our casistics on MUP patients. We identified 24 MUP patients out of all patients registered into a melanoma database from June 1996 to June 2011. The incidence was 1.4%. We compared the survival rate of all patients with MUP stage III-IV with all patients with metastatic melanoma known primary (MMKP) stage III-IV observing a clear survival improvement for MUP patients in front of MMKP patients (p<0.01). In a second instance, we compared stage III MUP patients with only lymph nodal involvement with stage III MMKP patients with only lymph nodal involvement, and again we found statistically significant better survival for MUP patients (p<0.05). In this retrospective study, the number of lymph nodes involved (p=0.8), the sex (p=0.9), and S100 value (p=0.2) were not statistically relevant for prognosis. The better prognosis for these patients is very similar to better survival rate for metastatic melanoma patients and vitiligo. This correlation may be in accord with the hypothesis of a regression of primary lesion by immunological system of the host and also the median age of patients at the time of diagnosis, commonly older than melanoma patients, may correspond to a long period of immunological interferences between the host and the melanoma disease.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12032-012-0217-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mup patients
12
patients
10
melanoma unknown
8
unknown primary
8
patients metastatic
8
metastatic melanoma
8
stage iii-iv
8
mup
5
melanoma
4
primary report
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!