Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy and Completion Lymph Node Dissection for Melanoma

被引:0
作者
Sabran J. Masoud
Jennifer A. Perone
Norma E. Farrow
Paul J. Mosca
Douglas S. Tyler
Georgia M. Beasley
机构
[1] Duke University,Department of Surgery
[2] University Texas Medical Branch,Department of Surgery
[3] Duke University Medical Center,undefined
来源
Current Treatment Options in Oncology | 2018年 / 19卷
关键词
Melanoma; Sentinel lymph node biopsy; Lymph node dissection; Staging; Metastasis; Survival;
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摘要
This review critically evaluates recent trials which have challenged the practice of completion lymph node dissection (CLND) for melanoma patients diagnosed with regional metastasis by positive sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB). Two trials in the last 2 years, DeCOG-SLT and MSLT-II, found no significant differences in melanoma-specific survival between patients, whether they received immediate CLND or observation after positive SLNB, despite decreases in nodal recurrence achieved by dissection. These trials together disfavor routine CLND in most patients after positive SLNB. However, their conclusions are limited by study populations which overall harbored a lower burden of SLN disease. Special attention needs to be given to patients who do have higher risk disease, with SLN tumor burdens exceeding 1 mm in diameter, for whom CLND may remain both prognostic and therapeutic. Current guidelines thus recommend either CLND or careful observation after positive SLNB after appropriate risk stratification of patients. While a decline in CLND is inevitable, treatment of stage III melanoma is witnessing the concurrent rise of effective adjuvant therapies. PD-1 inhibitors such as nivolumab, or combination BRAF/MEK inhibitors for V600E or K mutant melanoma, which were previously available to only trial patients with completely resected stage III disease, are now approved for use in patients with positive SLNB alone. Providers are better equipped than ever to treat clinically occult, regional metastatic disease with SLNB followed by adjuvant therapy for most patients, but should take steps to avoid undertreatment of high-risk patients who may proceed to disease relapse or progression.
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