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Comparison of clinicopathologic features and survival of histopathologically amelanotic and pigmented melanomas: a population-based study

Authors :
Thomas, Nancy E
Kricker, Anne
Waxweiler, Weston T
Dillon, Patrick M
Busman, Klaus J
From, Lynn
Groben, Pamela A
Armstrong, Bruce K
Anton-Culver, Hoda
Gruber, Stephen B
Marrett, Loraine D
Gallagher, Richard P
Zanetti, Roberto
Rosso, Stefano
Dwyer, Terence
Venn, Alison
Kanetsky, Peter A
Orlow, Irene
Paine, Susan
Ollila, David W
Reiner, Anne S
Luo, Li
Hao, Honglin
Frank, Jill S
Begg, Colin B
Berwick, Marianne
Genes, Environment, and Melanoma (GEM) Study Group
Source :
JAMA dermatology, vol 150, iss 12
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2014.

Abstract

IMPORTANCE Previous studies have reported that histopathologically amelanotic melanoma is associated with poorer survival than pigmented melanoma; however, small numbers of amelanotic melanomas, selected populations, lack of centralized pathologic review, or no adjustment for stage limit the interpretation or generalization of results from prior studies.OBJECTIVE To compare melanoma-specific survival between patients with histopathologically amelanotic and those with pigmented melanoma in a large international population-based study.DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Survival analysis with a median follow-up of 7.6 years.The study population comprised 2995 patients with 3486 invasive primary melanomas centrally scored for histologic pigmentation from the Genes, Environment, and Melanoma(GEM) Study, which enrolled incident cases of melanoma diagnosed in 1998 through 2003 from international population-based cancer registries.MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Clinicopathologic predictors and melanoma-specific survival of histologically amelanotic and pigmented melanoma were compared using generalized estimating equations and Cox regression models, respectively.RESULTS Of 3467 melanomas, 275 (8%) were histopathologically amelanotic. Female sex,nodular and unclassified or other histologic subtypes, increased Breslow thickness, presence of mitoses, severe solar elastosis, and lack of a coexisting nevus were independently associated with amelanotic melanoma (each P < .05). Amelanotic melanoma was generally ofa higher American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) tumor stage at diagnosis (odds ratios[ORs] [95%CIs] between 2.9 [1.8-4.6] and 11.1 [5.8-21.2] for tumor stages between T1b and T3b and ORs [95%CIs] of 24.6 [13.6-44.4] for T4a and 29.1 [15.5-54.9] for T4b relative to T1a;P value for trend

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA dermatology, vol 150, iss 12
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..780f0fffb4424eeebc5953fb326593df