Back to Search Start Over

Surgery and adjuvant therapies in the treatmentof stage IV melanoma: our experience in 84 patients

Authors :
Massimo Framarini
Laura Ridolfi
Giorgio Maria Verdecchia
Francesca Tauceri
Roseano M
Gianni Mura
F., Tauceri
G., Mura
Roseano, Mauro
M., Framarini
L., Ridolfi
G. M., Verdecchia
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Survival rates of patients with stage IV melanoma are poor: Median survival is 7–8 months and 5-year survival rates about 5%. There is no agreement on the role of surgery at this stage. Most patients with metastatic melanoma are not able to undergo resection and usually are sent to systemic chemo- and immunotherapy. Eighty-four patients operated on for stage IV melanoma were evaluated. Of them, 61.9% were submitted to reiterative surgery with 168 operations and 182 surgical procedures overall. A total of 90.5% was submitted to adjuvant therapies according to aggressive and reiterated schedules: chemotherapy, immunotherapy, dendritic cells vaccine, infusion of tumor infiltrating lymphocytes, local therapies as electrochemotherapy. The mean overall survival (Kaplan–Meier) was 56.7 months (1 year: 72.1%, 3 years: 46.5%, 5 years: 23.16%). The survival of reiterative surgery was significatively longer than single surgery (62.7 vs 42.4 months, median 50.9 vs 16.0), p = 0.03. Multivariated Cox analysis was performed for disease-free interval, repeated surgery, adjuvant therapies, and site of metastasis according to the American Joint Committee on Cancer: Reiterative surgery was shown as an independent prognostic factor (p

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c65bf049c4e85c57039aad3dbdccda0