Surgical Treatment of Lymph Nodes With Metastatic Melanoma From Unknown Primary Site
- 1 December 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 122 (12) , 1380-1383
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1987.01400240026003
Abstract
• To determine the prognosis of patients with lymph node metastases from an unknown primary melanoma, we retrospectively reviewed the clinicopathologic features of 188 such patients treated from 1971 through 1986 and compared their records with those of patients with clinical stage II melanoma with known primary lesions. Patients with lymph node metastases from an unknown primary melanoma represented 4.6% of all patients with melanoma treated during that period. The five- and ten-year survival rates were 42% and 40%, respectively (median, 37 months). When stratified by number of tumor-containing lymph nodes, there was no significant difference in survival between patients with an unknown primary melanoma and lymph node metastases and those with clinical stage II melanoma and known primary sites. The prognosis of the former patients is no worse than that of patients with lymph node metastases from a known primary site and should be treated in a comparable manner. (Arch Surg 1987;122:1380-1383)Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Frequency of Occult Residual Melanoma After Excision of a Clinically Positive Regional Lymph NodeAnnals of Surgery, 1987
- Clinical Aspects of Unknown Primary MelanomaAnnals of Surgery, 1980
- Occult primary malignant melanoma: Factors influencing survivalBritish Journal of Surgery, 1977
- Spontaneous regression of melanomaPathology, 1975
- Spontaneous regression of human melanoma.Clinical and experimental studiesCancer, 1960