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Reporting of melanoma cell densities in the sentinel node refines outcome prediction.

Authors :
Ulmer, Anja
Pfefferle, Vanessa
Walter, Vincent
Granai, Massimo
Keim, Ulrike
Fend, Falko
Sulyok, Mihály
Bösmüller, Hans
Source :
European Journal of Cancer. Oct2022, Vol. 174, p121-130. 10p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Sentinel node biopsy is a key procedure to predict prognosis in melanoma. In a prospective study we compare reporting on melanoma cell densities in cytospin preparations with semiquantitative histopathology for predicting outcome. Sentinel nodes from 900 melanoma patients were bisected. One half of each node was disaggregated mechanically. The melanoma cell density (number of HMB45 positive cells per million lymphocytes with at least one cell showing morphological features of a melanoma cell) was recorded after examining two cytospins. For the second half the maximum diameter of metastasis was determined after haematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and immunohistological staining of three slides. Cytospins were positive for melanoma in 218 of 900 patients (24%). Routine pathology was positive in 111 of 900 (12%) patients. A more extensive pathological workup in cytospin-only positive patients led to a revised diagnosis (from negative to positive) in 23 of 101 patients (22.7%). We found a moderate but significant correlation between melanoma cell densities (determined in cytospins) and the maximum diameter of metastasis (determined by pathology) (rho = 0.6284, p < 0.001). At a median follow-up of 37 months (IQR 25–53 months) melanoma cell density (cytospins) (p < 0.001), thickness of melanoma (p = 0.008) and ulceration status (p = 0.026) were significant predictors for melanoma specific survival by multivariable testing and were all confirmed as key predictive factors by the random forest model. Maximum diameter of metastases, age and sex were not significant by multivariable testing (all p > 0.05). Recording melanoma cell densities by examining two cytospins accurately predicts melanoma outcome and outperforms semiquantitative histopathology. • Melanoma cell densities in the sentinel node accurately reflect melanoma outcome. • Quantitative immunocytology outperforms semiquantitative pathology. • Pathological examination may be restricted to qualitative examination of few slides. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
174
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159189968
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejca.2022.06.054