Abstract

There are no well-defined clinical factors to predict the risk of occult invasion in melanoma of the lentigo maligna type (LM) before complete histopathologic analysis. To evaluate whether clinical size was a predictor of invasion in LM and subclinical extension. Consecutive cases of LM were recorded in a prospectively maintained database from 2006 to 2019. Patient and tumor data were recorded during initial evaluation. The LM clinical area was calculated in square millimeters (length×width). All patients were treated with staged excision. We included 600 patients. The mean age was 65.9years (standard deviation, 12.3; range, 27-95years); 62.8% (n=377) were men. The mean LM clinical area was 128.32mm2 for in situ lesions versus 200.14mm for invasive lesions (P=.1). Based on quantile regression, the median margin required for complete removal increased with LM clinical area. The study was performed in a tertiary cancer center with possible referral bias and more complex cases. LM can present with variable clinical size, which may correlate with subclinical extension;however, the presence of invasion is not well estimated by LM clinical area.

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