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Prognostic value of ulceration varies across Breslow thicknesses and clinical stages in acral melanoma: a retrospective study.

Xiaoting WeiDi WuYu ChenHang LiRui ZhangHong YaoZhihong ChiChuanliang CuiXue BaiLili MaoZhonghui QiKe LiShijie LanLizhu ChenRui GuoXinyu YaoBin LianYan KongJie DaiBixia TangXuan WangJun GuoLu Si
Published in: The British journal of dermatology (2022)
Ulceration is an independent negative prognostic factor for patients with AM, but the impact varies across Breslow thicknesses and clinical stages. Ulceration has a significant effect on prognosis for patients with thin (≤ 1 mm) melanoma, but there was no association between ulceration and survival in intermediate/thick AM or stage III AM. What is already known about this topic? Ulceration status is used together with Breslow tumour thickness to subcategorize patients into different stages according to the America Joint Committee on Cancer melanoma staging system. As one distinctive subtype of cutaneous melanoma, acral melanoma (AM) is characterized by poor survival outcomes due to delayed diagnosis and a high prevalence of negative prognostic and genetic features. The prognostic impact of ulceration in AM is still controversial. What does this study add? This was the first large-scale study to assess the prognostic and staging values of ulceration in patients with AM. Ulceration has a significant effect on prognosis for patients with thin (≤1 mm) melanoma, but no association between ulceration and survival was found in intermediate/thick or stage III AM. These findings should be considered when using ulceration-based staging systems.
Keyphrases
  • prognostic factors
  • skin cancer
  • lymph node
  • pet ct
  • newly diagnosed
  • ejection fraction
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • young adults
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • patient reported