Malignant Melanoma Practical Considerations Concerning Prophylactic Regional Lymph Node Dissection
- 1 August 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Annals of Surgery
- Vol. 206 (2) , 206-209
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00000658-198708000-00014
Abstract
Seventy-three patients had 77 prophylactic regional lymph node dissections (PRLND) in addition to wide excision of the primary lesion for clinical Stage I primary malignant melanoma. The preoperative evaluation, surgical procedure, and postoperative follow-up were performed by one surgical oncologist. Seven patients had micrometastatic disease in the regional nodes for a yield of 9.6%. Considering only patients with Clark IV and V melanomas, and Clark III melanomas ≥ 2.00 mm, the yield was 15.6%. The most optimistic, published survival statistics demonstrate a 25% 5-year survival advantage for patients who have PRLND with an incidence of occult nodal disease of 14.3% thus, even the most optimistic data would predict that only a modest number of patients would actually benefit from surgery. It is difficult to justify PRLND for its therapeutic benefit unless a higher yield of positive-node patients is obtained or the surgical indication is for staging or prognostic information.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Occult melanoma in lymph nodes detected by antiserum to S-100 proteinInternational Journal of Cancer, 1984
- REGIONAL LYMPH-NODE DISSECTION FOR MALIGNANT-MELANOMA OF THE EXTREMITIES1981
- A multifactorial analysis of melanoma. II. Prognostic factors in patients with stage I (localized) melanoma.1979
- Inefficacy of Immediate Node Dissection in Stage 1 Melanoma of the LimbsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977