Prediction of disease outcome in melanoma patients by molecular analysis of paraffin-embedded sentinel lymph nodes
- PMID: 12913098
- DOI: 10.1200/JCO.2003.01.063
Prediction of disease outcome in melanoma patients by molecular analysis of paraffin-embedded sentinel lymph nodes
Abstract
Purpose: A significant number of patients who develop recurrence after a histopathologically negative sentinel lymph node (SLN) biopsy will demonstrate occult metastases on re-evaluation of the SLNs with serial sectioning and immunohistochemistry. Reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) has been evaluated to improve disease staging and avoid false-negative findings in fresh or frozen-section SLNs. The purpose of this study was to develop a multimarker RT-PCR assay for assessing melanoma patients' archived paraffin-embedded (PE) SLNs.
Patients and methods: Archived PE histopathologically positive (n = 37) and negative (n = 40) SLNs from patients with primary melanoma were analyzed using a semiquantitative multimarker RT-PCR assay.
Results: Marker expression in histopathologically positive and negative SLNs were as follows: 89%, 92%, 35%, and 43% (positive) and 40%, 33%, 5%, and 13% (negative) for tyrosinase, melanoma antigen recognized by T cells-1, tyrosinase-related protein-1, and tyrosinase-related protein-2, respectively. Twenty-five percent of histopathologically negative SLN patients were upstaged using at least two markers. Of these, 80% developed a recurrence. Furthermore, at a median follow-up of 55 months, patients with histopathologically negative SLNs who expressed zero or one marker had a significantly improved disease-free (P <.002) and overall (P <.03) survival versus those expressing two or more markers.
Conclusion: These findings demonstrate the feasibility of a multimarker RT-PCR assay for evaluating archived PE SLNs. More significantly, identification of molecular risk factors can be detected in histopathologically negative SLNs for distinguishing early-stage melanoma patients with a worse prognosis.
Comment in
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Advances in molecular staging of melanoma patients: multimarker analysis of archival lymph node tissue.J Clin Oncol. 2003 Oct 1;21(19):3550-1. doi: 10.1200/JCO.2003.07.982. Epub 2003 Aug 11. J Clin Oncol. 2003. PMID: 12913105 No abstract available.
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