Malignant melanoma of the head and neck: effect of treatment on survival.

Autor: Peralta EA, Yarington CT Jr., Glenn MG, Peralta, E A, Yarington, C T, Glenn, M G
Zdroj: Laryngoscope; 1998, Vol. 108 Issue 2, p220-223, 4p
Abstrakt: This study compared outcomes for intermediate-thickness (1.5 to 3.99 mm) head and neck melanomas treated with or without elective lymph node dissection (ELND). The records of all head and neck melanomas treated at Virginia Mason Medical Center from 1974 through 1995 were reviewed and analyzed for outcome by stage and elective or therapeutic lymph node dissection. One hundred seventy-four patients with head and neck melanomas were treated in the study period, of which only 25% had intermediate-thickness lesions. Of 38 clinically node-negative patients with intermediate-thickness lesions followed more than 3 years, 10 underwent ELND, yielding two positive dissections (20%). The rate of distant metastases and the mortality rate were 44% and 35% lower in patients undergoing ELND compared with stage II patients who did not undergo ELND, but the difference did not achieve statistical significance (P = 0.12 and 0.21, respectively). The role of ELND in head and neck melanoma is uncertain. This retrospective study is limited by the small number of intermediate-thickness lesions, yet there appears to be a survival advantage to ELND in head and neck melanoma, even in negative dissections. Conventional histologic stains miss micrometastases detected by immunohistological and polymerase chain techniques. Removal of such micrometastases may explain the improved outcome. A multicenter prospective trial in head and neck melanomas, incorporating the latest techniques of sentinel node biopsy and immunohistological staining of node specimens, is needed to clarify definitive therapy for this increasingly common diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index