Wanebo H J, Cooper P H, Young D V, Harpole D H, Kaiser D L
Department of Surgery, Division of Surgical Oncology, University of Virginia Medical Center, Charlottesville.
Cancer. 1988 Aug 15;62(4):831-7. doi: 10.1002/1097-0142(19880815)62:4<831::aid-cncr2820620432>3.0.co;2-x.
Cutaneous malignant melanomas of the head and neck are prognostically engimatic. In addition to known prognostic determinants of stage and lesion microstage, lesion location also appears to have prognostic importance. The authors have reviewed a series of 83 microstaged head and neck melanoma patients in order to analyze the relative importance of these factors. There were 36 males and 47 females with a median age of 56 years. Eighty-one percent had pathologic Stage I disease, 7% were Stage II, and 12% were Stage III. The primary location was face in 32 patients, neck in 18, ear in 12, and scalp in 21 patients. The actuarial 5-year survival according to lesion thickness was 86% for melanoma less than 1.0 mm, 56% for 1 to 2 mm thick lesions, 47% for 2.1 to 4 mm thick lesions, and 25% for melanomas greater than 4.0 mm. The 5-year survival according to lesion location was 78% for facial and 58% for neck melanomas; for ear and scalp, the respective survivals were 33% and 37%. Median thickness was 2.0 mm for facial and 1.85 mm for neck lesions. It was 2.7 mm for ear and 2.0 mm for scalp lesions (differences not significant). There were no microstage factors that correlated with the adverse prognosis seen with scalp and ear melanomas. Multivariate analysis in the entire series (all clinical stages) showed the following to be significant: stage, thickness, and location of the primary melanoma (all less than 0.0002). In clinical Stage I melanoma, the significant prognostic factors were location (P = 0.035), thickness (P = 0.008), level (P = 0.024), and ulceration (P = 0.035). The prognosis of head and neck melanoma is uniquely influenced by location of the primary lesions in addition to stage, thickness, level, and ulceration, as observed with other cutaneous melanomas at other sites. Ear and scalp melanomas are high-risk lesions whose poor prognosis is not readily explained by any of the microstage factors reviewed.
头颈部皮肤恶性黑色素瘤的预后情况难以捉摸。除了已知的分期和病灶微分期等预后决定因素外,病灶位置似乎也具有预后重要性。作者回顾了一系列83例进行了微分期的头颈部黑色素瘤患者,以分析这些因素的相对重要性。其中男性36例,女性47例,中位年龄为56岁。81%的患者处于病理I期疾病,7%为II期,12%为III期。原发部位为面部的有32例患者,颈部18例,耳部12例,头皮21例。根据病灶厚度,厚度小于1.0 mm的黑色素瘤患者的5年精算生存率为86%,1至2 mm厚病灶的患者为56%,2.1至4 mm厚病灶的患者为47%,大于4.0 mm的黑色素瘤患者为25%。根据病灶位置,面部黑色素瘤患者的5年生存率为78%,颈部黑色素瘤患者为58%;耳部和头皮黑色素瘤患者的生存率分别为33%和37%。面部病灶的中位厚度为2.0 mm,颈部病灶为1.85 mm。耳部病灶为2.7 mm,头皮病灶为2.0 mm(差异无统计学意义)。没有任何微分期因素与头皮和耳部黑色素瘤的不良预后相关。对整个系列(所有临床分期)进行多因素分析显示,以下因素具有显著性:原发黑色素瘤的分期、厚度和位置(均小于0.0002)。在临床I期黑色素瘤中,显著的预后因素为位置(P = 0.035)、厚度(P = 0.008)、水平(P = 0.024)和溃疡(P = 0.035)。与其他部位的皮肤黑色素瘤一样,头颈部黑色素瘤的预后除了受分期、厚度、水平和溃疡影响外,还独特地受到原发病灶位置的影响。耳部和头皮黑色素瘤是高危病灶,其不良预后难以用所回顾的任何微分期因素来解释。