Erschienen in:
01.04.2016 | Melanomas
Minimum Safe Pathologic Excision Margins for Primary Cutaneous Melanomas (1–2 mm in Thickness): Analysis of 2131 Patients Treated at a Single Center
verfasst von:
Lauren E. Haydu, MIPH, Joram T. Stollman, BSc, Richard A. Scolyer, MD, Andrew J. Spillane, MD, Michael J. Quinn, MBBS, Robyn P. M. Saw, MB, Kerwin F. Shannon, MBBS, Jonathan R. Stretch, MBBS, D Phil (Oxon), Johannes J. Bonenkamp, MD, John F. Thompson, MD
Erschienen in:
Annals of Surgical Oncology
|
Ausgabe 4/2016
Einloggen, um Zugang zu erhalten
Abstract
Objective
This study was designed to determine the minimum safe pathologic excision margin for primary cutaneous melanomas 1.01–2.00-mm thick (T2) and to identify prognostic factors that influence survival in these patients.
Background
Several studies have shown previously that “narrow” clinical excision margins (1–2 cm in vivo) are as safe as “wide” excision margins (4–5 cm) for management of primary T2 melanomas. However, pathologic margins are likely to be a better predictor of recurrence than clinical margins.
Methods
Clinicopathologic and follow-up data for 2131 T2 melanoma patients treated at Melanoma Institute Australia between January 1992 and May 2012 were analyzed.
Results
Of the 2131 patients, those who had a pathologic excision margin of <8 mm (equivalent to 1 cm in vivo) had poorer prognosis in terms of disease-free survival compared with the 8–16-mm group (equivalent to 1–2 cm in vivo; P = 0.044). When comparing 8-mm with 16-mm pathologic margins, no differences were observed in any of the survival outcomes. Only the deep margin proved to be an independent predictor of local and in-transit recurrence-free survival (P = 0.003) in all excision margin categories. Pathologic excision margins <8 mm were associated with worse regional node recurrence-free survival and distant recurrence-free survival compared with margins ≥8 mm (P = 0.049 and P = 0.045; respectively). However, these results failed to translate into a statistically significant difference in melanoma-specific survival.
Conclusions
The results of this study suggest that if a peripheral/radial pathologic excision margin for a T2 primary cutaneous melanoma is <8 mm consideration should be given to performing a wider excision.