Quantitative measurement of melanoma spread in sentinel lymph nodes and survival.

PLoS Med

Chair of Experimental Medicine and Therapy Research, Department of Pathology, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany ; Project Group Personalized Tumor Therapy, Fraunhofer-Institut für Toxikologie und Experimentelle Medizin, Regensburg, Germany.

Published: February 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sentinel lymph node spread significantly affects melanoma outcomes, with minimal cancer spread and the number of disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) influencing survival rates.
  • A study of 1,834 sentinel nodes from melanoma patients revealed that even a low number of DCCs increased the risk of mortality, indicating that DCC density is a critical predictor of melanoma-specific survival.
  • The research concluded that incorporating DCC quantification alongside other factors like tumor thickness and ulceration provided a more accurate survival prediction than traditional staging methods.

Article Abstract

Background: Sentinel lymph node spread is a crucial factor in melanoma outcome. We aimed to define the impact of minimal cancer spread and of increasing numbers of disseminated cancer cells on melanoma-specific survival.

Methods And Findings: We analyzed 1,834 sentinel nodes from 1,027 patients with ultrasound node-negative melanoma who underwent sentinel node biopsy between February 8, 2000, and June 19, 2008, by histopathology including immunohistochemistry and quantitative immunocytology. For immunocytology we recorded the number of disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) per million lymph node cells (DCC density [DCCD]) after disaggregation and immunostaining for the melanocytic marker gp100. None of the control lymph nodes from non-melanoma patients (n = 52) harbored gp100-positive cells. We analyzed gp100-positive cells from melanoma patients by comparative genomic hybridization and found, in 45 of 46 patients tested, gp100-positive cells displaying genomic alterations. At a median follow-up of 49 mo (range 3-123 mo), 138 patients (13.4%) had died from melanoma. Increased DCCD was associated with increased risk for death due to melanoma (univariable analysis; p<0.001; hazard ratio 1.81, 95% CI 1.61-2.01, for a 10-fold increase in DCCD + 1). Even patients with a positive DCCD ≤3 had an increased risk of dying from melanoma compared to patients with DCCD = 0 (p = 0.04; hazard ratio 1.63, 95% CI 1.02-2.58). Upon multivariable testing DCCD was a stronger predictor of death than histopathology. The final model included thickness, DCCD, and ulceration (all p<0.001) as the most relevant prognostic factors, was internally validated by bootstrapping, and provided superior survival prediction compared to the current American Joint Committee on Cancer staging categories.

Conclusions: Cancer cell dissemination to the sentinel node is a quantitative risk factor for melanoma death. A model based on the combined quantitative effects of DCCD, tumor thickness, and ulceration predicted outcome best, particularly at longer follow-up. If these results are validated in an independent study, establishing quantitative immunocytology in histopathological laboratories may be useful clinically.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3928050PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001604DOI Listing

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