This is the journal update section of the Skin Cancer Clinic Blogsite. If you see a relevant article email me at imccoll@ozemail.com.au
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Primary Dermal Melanoma
This is a lesion I am not familiar with. If I saw one with no overlying epidermal component and well separated from the overlying epidermis, I would think it was a metastasis! However this was excluded in these cases. The interesting thing is the thickness of the lesions but how accurate this is without overlying epidermal involvement I just dont know! The important message was the long survival time despite the thickness of the lesions.(IMCC)
Primary Dermal Melanoma
Distinct Immunohistochemical Findings and Clinical Outcome Compared With Nodular and Metastatic Melanoma
David S. Cassarino, MD, PhD; Erik S. Cabral, BS; Reena V. Kartha, PhD; Susan M. Swetter, MD
Arch Dermatol. 2008;144(1):49-56.
Objective To provide an updated and expanded analysis of clinical outcome and immunohistochemical (IHC) findings unique to primary dermal melanoma (PDM) that may be used to differentiate this entity from primary nodular melanoma (PNM) and cutaneous metastatic melanoma (MM).
Design Cohort analysis and extensive IHC panel comparing PDM with PNM and cutaneous MM.
Setting Melanoma clinics and pathology departments of academic and VA medical centers.
Patients Thirteen patients with a solitary dermal or subcutaneous nodule of histologically proven melanoma, prospectively followed through April 30, 2007.
Interventions Clinical, pathologic, and IHC assessment of patients diagnosed as having PDM.
Main Outcome Measures Long-term clinical outcome and determination of unique clinical and IHC features in the study cohort compared with other melanoma subtypes.
Results Histologically, there was no evidence of an overlying in situ component, ulceration, or regression, and there was no associated nevus in any cases. Clinical history and findings from workup, including imaging studies, skin examination, and sentinel lymph node biopsy, were negative for evidence of melanoma elsewhere. The mean Breslow depth was 9.6 mm. Two patients developed satellite or in-transit recurrences, 1 developed pulmonary metastasis, and another died of liver metastases. Overall, the cohort showed a 92% melanoma-specific survival rate at a mean duration of follow-up of 44 months. The IHC findings showed that PDM exhibited lower levels of staining for the antigens p53 (P = .02), Ki-67 (Mib-1) (P = .002), cyclin D1 (P = .001), and podoplanin (recognized by D2-40 antibody) lymphovascular staining (P <.001) compared with MM and PNM. All other markers were comparable.
Conclusions Patients with PDM have remarkably prolonged survival compared with patients with MM or PNM of similar thickness. Preliminary results suggest that PDM may be characterized by lower levels of p53, Ki-67, cyclin D1, and D2-40 compared with histologically similar MM and PNM.
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1 comment:
Primary Dermal Melanoma. Having just excised a "lipoma" which proved to be melanoma (presumed metastatic, primary unknown) it occurs to me, how do we know these are primaries and not metastases of regressed primaries? Anyway certainly important information that despite being very thick, the prognosis of such tumours is surprisingly good.
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