Developing Indications for the Use of Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy and Adjuvant High-Dose Interferon Alfa-2b in Melanoma
Robert W. Dubois,Susan M. Swetter,Michael B. Atkins,Kelly M. McMasters,Ronald J. Halbert,Stanley J. Miller,Ronald Shiell,John M. Kirkwood +7 more
TL;DR: A multidisciplinary panel of dermatologists, surgical oncologists, and medical oncologist to formally review available data on the sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy procedure and high-dose adjuvant interferon alfa-2b therapy for patients with melanoma and to rate the "appropriateness" of the procedure and therapy to guide clinical decision making in practice.
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Abstract: Objectives To convene a multidisciplinary panel of dermatologists, surgical oncologists, and medical oncologists to formally review available data on the sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy procedure and high-dose adjuvant interferon alfa-2b therapy for patients with melanoma and to rate the "appropriateness," "inappropriateness," or "uncertainty" of the procedure and therapy to guide clinical decision making in practice. Participants The panel comprised 13 specialists (4 dermatologists, 4 oncologists, and 5 surgeons) from geographically diverse areas who practiced in community-based settings (n = 8) and academic institutions (n = 5). Participants were chosen based on recommendations from the relevant specialty organizations. Evidence A formal literature review was conducted by investigators at Protocare Sciences Inc, Santa Monica, Calif, on the risks and benefits of performing an SLN biopsy in patients with stage I or II melanoma and adjuvant interferon alfa-2b therapy in patients with stage II or III disease. The MEDLINE database was searched from 1966 through July 2000, and supplemental information was obtained from various cancer societies and cancer research groups. Panel participants were queried on additional sources of relevant information. Unpublished, presented data were included in abstract form on 1 recently closed clinical trial. Consensus Process The RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method was used to review and rate multiple clinical scenarios for the use of SLN biopsy and interferon alfa-2b therapy. The consensus method did not force agreement. Conclusions The panel rated 104 clinical scenarios and concluded that the SLN biopsy procedure was appropriate for primary melanomas deeper than 1.0 mm and for tumors 1 mm or less when histologic ulceration was present and/or classified as Clark level 4 or higher. The SLN biopsy was deemed inappropriate for nonulcerated Clark level 2 or 3 melanomas 0.75 mm or less in depth and uncertain in tumors 0.76 to 1.0 mm deep unless they were ulcerated or Clark level 4 or higher. Interferon alfa-2b therapy was deemed appropriate for patients with regional nodal and/or in-transit metastasis and for node-negative patients with primary melanomas deeper than 4 mm. The panel considered the use of interferon alfa-2b therapy uncertain in patients with ulcerated intermediate primary tumors (2.01-4.0 mm in depth) and inappropriate for node-negative patients with nonulcerated tumors less than 4.0 mm deep. Specialty-specific ratings were conducted as well.
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Management of cutaneous melanoma.
TL;DR: The authors of this review discuss the pathogenesis and management of cutaneous melanoma and provide perspective on treatment options.
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Tumour thickness as a predictor of occult lymph node metastases in patients with stage I and II melanoma undergoing sentinel lymph node biopsy.
TL;DR: Sentinel lymph node biopsy is a minimally invasive procedure used accurately to stage nodal basins at risk of occult metastases and if Breslow thickness of the tumour correlates well with positive SLNB, it could be used to select patients for SLNB.
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Cutaneous melanoma in the elderly: epidemiology, prognosis and treatment.
TL;DR: Despite differences in clinical presentation and pathological characteristics of CM in the elderly, there is no evidence that primary surgical treatment should differ from that proposed generally for melanoma, but the rate of positive sentinel node dissection decreases with age, even though overall survival is shorter in older patients, a paradox that remains to be explained.
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Desmoplastic and neurotropic melanoma
Lyndon D. Su,Douglas R. Fullen,Lori Lowe,Timothy S. Wang,Jennifer L. Schwartz,Vincent Cimmino,Vernon K. Sondak,Timothy M. Johnson +7 more
TL;DR: The authors report on the utility of SLNB in the management of patients withDNMM and the value of sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) has not been demonstrated clearly for patients with DNMM.
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John M. Kirkwood,Myla Hunt Strawderman,Marc S. Ernstoff,Thomas J. Smith,Ernest C. Borden,Ronald H. Blum +5 more
TL;DR: IFN alpha-2b is the first agent to show a significant benefit in relapse-free and overall survival of high-risk melanoma patients in a randomized controlled trial.
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Jeffrey E. Gershenwald,William A. Thompson,Paul F. Mansfield,Jeffrey E. Lee,Maria I. Colome,Chi-Hong Tseng,J. Jack Lee,Charles M. Balch,Douglas S. Reintgen,Merrick I. Ross +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of pathologic sentinel lymph node (SLN) status with that of other known prognostic factors on recurrence and survival in patients with stage I or II cutaneous melanoma was compared.
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Validation of the Accuracy of Intraoperative Lymphatic Mapping and Sentinel Lymphadenectomy for Early-Stage Melanoma: A Multicenter Trial
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TL;DR: The accuracy of LM/SL/SCLND was determined by comparing the rates of sentinel node (SN) identification and the incidence of SN metastases in the MSLT and JWCI groups.
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Patterns of recurrence following a negative sentinel lymph node biopsy in 243 patients with stage I or II melanoma.
Jeffrey E. Gershenwald,Maria I. Colome,Jeffrey E. Lee,Paul F. Mansfield,Chi Tseng,J. Jack Lee,Charles M. Balch,Merrick I. Ross +7 more
TL;DR: Regional nodal failures in melanoma patients following a negative SLN biopsy are infrequent and to date have most commonly occurred because conventional histologic evaluation was unable to identify occult metastatic disease.
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A new American Joint Committee on Cancer staging system for cutaneous melanoma.
Charles M. Balch,Antonio C. Buzaid,Michael B. Atkins,Natale Cascinelli,Daniel G. Coit,Irvin D. Fleming,Alan N. Houghton,John M. Kirkwood,Martin F. Mihm,Donald L. Morton,Douglas S. Reintgen,Merrick I. Ross,Arthur J. Sober,Seng-Jaw Soong,John A. Thompson,John F. Thompson,Jeffrey E. Gershenwald,Kelly M. McMasters +17 more
TL;DR: The Melanoma Staging Committee of the AJCC has proposed major revisions of the melanoma TNM and stage grouping criteria to better reflects independent prognostic factors that are used in clinical trials and in reporting the outcomes of various melanoma treatment modalities.
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