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Melanoma

Melanoma. By Dr Abeer Elsayed Aly Lecturer of medical oncology SECI 19/03/2013. Melanoma Incidence and Mortality. Incidence (US) 59,580 new cases 33,580 new male cases 26,000 new female cases 12 per 100,000 population Mortality (US) 7,770 total 4,910 males 2,860 females.

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Melanoma

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  1. Melanoma By Dr Abeer Elsayed Aly Lecturer of medical oncology SECI 19/03/2013

  2. Melanoma Incidence and Mortality • Incidence (US) • 59,580 new cases • 33,580 new male cases • 26,000 new female cases • 12 per 100,000 population • Mortality (US) • 7,770 total • 4,910 males • 2,860 females American Cancer Society,Cancer Facts and Figures. 2005.

  3. Melanoma: risk factors • Constitutional predisposition • Fair skin/hair color/ freckling • Burn vs tan • >20 benign nevi (moles) or >3 atypical nevi • Family history of dysplastic nevi • Increasing age • Immunosuppression • Xeroderma pigmentosum • H/O solar keratosis, squamous cell carcinoma

  4. Melanoma: risk factors • Risk behaviors • >3 sunburns • Episodic excessive sunlight exposure • Long term continuous sunlight exposure • UV exposure at tanning salons

  5. Melanoma The challenge (historically): • Early detection • Rapid growth/high proliferation rate • Chemotherapy resistant • Radiation resistant • Short anticipated survival

  6. Types of Melanoma • Acral lentiginous • Mucosal melanoma • Superfical spreading melanoma • Lentigo maligna melanoma • Nodular melanoma

  7. Superficial spreading • most common head and neck, 50% • 4th to 5th decade • clinical mixture of brown/tan, pink/white irregular borders, biphasic growth • irregular nests in epidermis • underlying lymphoid infiltrate • enlarged nests and single cells in all epidermal layers

  8. Lentigo maligna • 20% of head and neck • longest radial growth phase >15 yrs • elderly sun exposed areas • clinical dark, irregular ink spot • contiguous lintiginous proliferation, dyshesive, variable shape, atrophic epidermis, infundibular basal cell layer of hair follicles

  9. Lentigo maligna

  10. Nodular melanoma • 30% of head and neck • 5th decade • aggressive monophasic growth • sun-exposed and nonexposed areas • well circumscribed blue/black or nodular with involution in irregular plaque • downward tumorigenic growth, expand papillary dermis into reticular dermis

  11. Nodular melanoma

  12. Mucosal melanoma • 8% head and neck • histologic staging little use • local control predicts survival • neck dissection for clinical N+ • XRT for histo N+ • adjuvant interferon alpha 2-b

  13. Biopsy techniques Excisional biopsy 1-3 mm margins avoid wider margins (accurate lymphatic mapping) Full thickness incisional/punch biopsy for large lesions lesions of the palms, soles, digits, face, ears Deep shave biopsies When suspicion for melanoma is low NCCN Guidelines 2005

  14. Staging system

  15. Clark staging • Based upon histologic level of invasion • Level I – Epidermis only (in situ) • Level II – Invades the papillary dermis, but not to the papillary-reticular interface • Level III – Invades to the papillary-reticular interface, but not into the reticular dermis • Level IV – Into the reticular dermis • Level V – Into subcutaneous tissue

  16. Breslow staging • Based upon absolute depth of invasion • Stage I – < 0.75 mm • Stage II – 0.76 – 1.5 mm • Stage III – 1.51 – 4.0 mm • Stage IV - > 4.0 mm

  17. Work up Labs LDH Radiology CXR Possible CT for metastasis Possible CT abdomen, MRI brain Possible Lymphoscintigraphy Excision 2 cm margins Adjunctive Therapy Possible elective neck dissection Possible sentinel lymph node biopsy Possible elective radiation

  18. Prognostic indicators Thickness (Breslow depth) Nodal status Ulceration Mitosis Satellite lesions In transit lesions

  19. Prognostic indicators Thickness (Breslow depth) Nodal status Ulceration Mitosis Satellite lesions In transit lesions

  20. Prognostic indicators Thickness (Breslow depth) Nodal status Ulceration Mitosis Satellite lesions In transit lesions

  21. Prognostic Indicators: Nodal status OS for patients with 1 positive sentinel node is 60% at 5 years OS for patients with a single palpable node is 40% at 5 years Gershenwald et al, 2001

  22. Prognostic indicators Thickness (Breslow depth) Nodal status Ulceration Mitosis Satellite lesions In transit lesions

  23. Mitotic Index N = 3661 from the Sydney Melanoma Database Correlated clinical information (survival) primary tumor thickness (Breslow depth) ulcerative state (infiltrative, attenuative, and traumatic) tumor mitotic rate (TMR) (at the invading front, deep border) Conclusion: TMR is a more powerful prognostic indicator than ulceration in patients with primary cutaneous melanoma Azzola et al, Cancer 2003

  24. Prognostic indicators Thickness (Breslow depth) Nodal status Ulceration Mitosis Satellite lesions In transit lesions

  25. Risk of In-Transit Metastasis In- transit metastasis Cutaneous / subcutaneous tissue Between the primary tumor and the draining lymph node basin 5 yr survival rates: 12% - 37% Risk factors: Thicker primary Lower extremity Regional LN metastasis

  26. Other prognostic factors: LDH Elevated levels correlate with: Early recurrence Shorter survival (Newcki et al, 2008) Serum S100 level Early studies suggest: Shorter survival Early distant relapse Poorer response to treatment (Smith et al, 2008) Microvessel Density

  27. Other prognostic factors: LDH Elevated levels correlate with: Early recurrence Shorter survival (Newcki et al, 2008) Serum S100 level Early studies suggest: Shorter survival Early distant relapse Poorer response to treatment (Smith et al, 2008) Microvessel Density

  28. Other prognostic factors: LDH Elevated levels correlate with: Early recurrence Shorter survival (Newcki et al, 2008) Serum S100 level Early studies suggest: Shorter survival Early distant relapse Poorer response to treatment (Smith et al, 2008) Microvessel Density

  29. Adjuvant treatment

  30. Metastatic Melanoma

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