WAIKOLOA, HAWAII -- An incisional biopsy that fails to remove all
of a pigmented skin lesion suspected of melanoma certainly isn't
optimal, but it doesn't adversely affect overall or disease-free
survival, Dr. Daniel G. Colt said at the annual Hawaii dermatology
seminar sponsored by Skin Disease Education Foundation.
Although complete excisional biopsy is the standard, "I would
rather have an incomplete shave biopsy than no biopsy at all. Not
getting all the tumor out is actually not all that terribly important in
terms of outcome," said Dr. Colt, a surgeon who is coleader of the
melanoma disease management team at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York and a member of the American Joint Committee on
Cancer melanoma staging committee.
Indeed, the key determinant of outcome in melanoma is not biopsy
technique but rather tumor biology as expressed in factors including
Breslow thickness, sentinel lymph node status, mitotic index,
ulceration, and body site, he added. Dr. Colt also addressed two other
controversies related to melanoma biopsy: the significance of the time
interval between biopsy and definitive wide excision and the optimal
margin of wide excision.
With regard to the clinical impact of biopsy technique, Dr. Colt
cited a study by Dr. Barbara G. Molenkamp and colleagues at Vrije
University Medical Center, Amsterdam, who reported on 471 patients who
underwent initial complete or partial removal of what proved to be stage
I/II melanoma. Following reexcision and sentinel lymph node biopsy, all
patients were followed for a mean of more than 5 years.
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The Dutch group found adjusted overall and disease-free survival
were unaffected by whether the initial diagnostic biopsy was a wide or
narrow excision, an excision with positive margins, or incisional. The
presence of residual tumor--found in 41 patients--did not adversely
affect these key outcomes, either (Ann. Surg. Oncol. 2007;14:1424-30).
Similarly, when dermatologists at Case Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, retrospectively studied 108 patients with invasive melanoma
who initially underwent nonexcisional shave or punch biopsy followed by
definitive wide excision, they found 88% of the initial biopsies were
accurate as to Breslow depth (J. Am. Acad. Dermatol. 2003;48:420-4).
"So, for the most part, if you take less than the whole lesion out,
you should expect to be correct about 88% of the time. And that's
not bad. It certainly beats massing a melanoma altogether," Dr.
Colt observed.
Interval Between Biopsy, Definitive Tx
The Scottish Melanoma Group studied 986 patients with primary
cutaneous melanoma whose interval between diagnosis and definitive wide
local excision ranged from less than 2 weeks to more than 92 days, with
a median of 30 days. Surgical interval wasn't predictive of overall
survival, disease-free survival, or local recurrence at a median
follow-up of 5 years (Br. J. Dermatol. 2002;147:48-54).
"The interval from biopsy to definitive wide excision does not
make a whit of difference other than dealing with patient anxiety, which
is important. You can reassure your patients that, while we're
doing everything to move them along, most of that is to deal with their
anxiety It will not [affect] the outcome of their melanoma," he
said.
Optimal Wide Excision Margins
There are data from well-conducted prospective studies addressing
this issue. A recent meta-analysis of five randomized trials totaling
3,313 invasive melanoma patients showed no significant differences with
wide as compared with narrow margins insofar as local recurrence,
disease-specific survival, or overall survival (Arch. Surg.
2007;142:885-91). The exception is melanoma in situ, for which there are
no prospective data. The current recommendation is to aim for
histologically negative margins, starting with a 0.5-cm margin beyond
the visible disease. "You need to explain to patients with melanoma
in situ that their disease may extend beyond that, and they may need to
return," he said.
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Elsevier.
BY BRUCE JANCIN
Denver Bureau
COPYRIGHT 2008 International Medical News
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