Department of Dermatology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Department of Medical Biometry, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
PLoS Med. 2014 Feb 18;11(2):e1001604. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001604. eCollection 2014 Feb.
Sentinel lymph node spread is a crucial factor in melanoma outcome. We aimed to define the impact of minimal cancer spread and of increasing numbers of disseminated cancer cells on melanoma-specific survival.
We analyzed 1,834 sentinel nodes from 1,027 patients with ultrasound node-negative melanoma who underwent sentinel node biopsy between February 8, 2000, and June 19, 2008, by histopathology including immunohistochemistry and quantitative immunocytology. For immunocytology we recorded the number of disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) per million lymph node cells (DCC density [DCCD]) after disaggregation and immunostaining for the melanocytic marker gp100. None of the control lymph nodes from non-melanoma patients (n = 52) harbored gp100-positive cells. We analyzed gp100-positive cells from melanoma patients by comparative genomic hybridization and found, in 45 of 46 patients tested, gp100-positive cells displaying genomic alterations. At a median follow-up of 49 mo (range 3-123 mo), 138 patients (13.4%) had died from melanoma. Increased DCCD was associated with increased risk for death due to melanoma (univariable analysis; p<0.001; hazard ratio 1.81, 95% CI 1.61-2.01, for a 10-fold increase in DCCD + 1). Even patients with a positive DCCD ≤3 had an increased risk of dying from melanoma compared to patients with DCCD = 0 (p = 0.04; hazard ratio 1.63, 95% CI 1.02-2.58). Upon multivariable testing DCCD was a stronger predictor of death than histopathology. The final model included thickness, DCCD, and ulceration (all p<0.001) as the most relevant prognostic factors, was internally validated by bootstrapping, and provided superior survival prediction compared to the current American Joint Committee on Cancer staging categories.
Cancer cell dissemination to the sentinel node is a quantitative risk factor for melanoma death. A model based on the combined quantitative effects of DCCD, tumor thickness, and ulceration predicted outcome best, particularly at longer follow-up. If these results are validated in an independent study, establishing quantitative immunocytology in histopathological laboratories may be useful clinically.
前哨淋巴结转移是影响黑色素瘤患者预后的关键因素。本研究旨在明确微小癌灶转移和播散癌细胞数量增加对黑色素瘤特异性生存的影响。
我们分析了 2000 年 2 月 8 日至 2008 年 6 月 19 日期间,通过组织病理学(包括免疫组织化学和定量免疫细胞化学)检测 1027 例超声淋巴结阴性黑色素瘤患者的 1834 枚前哨淋巴结。对于免疫细胞化学,我们在对黑色素细胞标志物 gp100 进行免疫染色后,记录每百万个淋巴结细胞中的播散癌细胞数量(DCC 密度[DCCD])。52 例非黑色素瘤患者的对照淋巴结(n=52)均未检出 gp100 阳性细胞。我们通过比较基因组杂交分析了黑色素瘤患者的 gp100 阳性细胞,发现 46 例检测患者中有 45 例 gp100 阳性细胞存在基因组改变。中位随访时间为 49 个月(范围 3-123 个月),138 例患者(13.4%)死于黑色素瘤。DCCD 增加与黑色素瘤死亡风险增加相关(单变量分析;p<0.001;风险比 1.81,95%CI 1.61-2.01,DCCD 增加 10 倍+1)。即使 DCCD≤3 的阳性患者与 DCCD=0 的患者相比,死于黑色素瘤的风险也增加(p=0.04;风险比 1.63,95%CI 1.02-2.58)。多变量检验后,DCCD 是死亡的更强预测因子,而不是组织病理学。最终模型纳入厚度、DCCD 和溃疡(均 p<0.001)作为最重要的预后因素,通过自举法进行内部验证,并与当前的美国癌症联合委员会分期类别相比,提供了更好的生存预测。
黑色素瘤前哨淋巴结转移是影响黑色素瘤患者死亡的定量风险因素。基于 DCCD、肿瘤厚度和溃疡的联合定量效应建立的模型,对结局的预测最佳,尤其是在随访时间较长时。如果这些结果在独立研究中得到验证,那么在组织病理学实验室中建立定量免疫细胞化学可能具有临床应用价值。