Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of melanoma gene expression as a marker of the presence of melanoma cells in lymphatic drainage routinely collected after lymphadenectomy and to correlate reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay results with recurrence, survival, and prognostic factors. We collected 24-hour postoperative lymphatic drainage samples (between days 2 and 4) from 93 patients with stage III melanoma who underwent radical lymphadenectomy between May 2002 and November 2003. We used RT-PCR assays with primers specific for the tyrosinase and MART-1 (Melan-A) genes. The samples were considered positive if at least one marker was expressed. Median follow-up time was 12.8 months. In 18 (19.4%) of 93 patients, the RT-PCR assay results were positive: in 8 of 18 for tyrosinase only, in 7 of 18 for MART-1 only, and in 3 of 18 for both markers. We observed a significantly higher recurrence rate in patients with positive RT-PCR results (15 of 18; 83%) than negative results (26 of 75; 35%; P = .0001). Positive results of RT-PCR correlated with the number of involved lymph nodes (P = .0001) and extracapsular extension of nodal metastases (P = .03). We observed significant differences in overall and disease-free survival for RT-PCR-positive and -negative patients in univariate and multivariate analyses. We observed positive RT-PCR assay results for melanoma cells in the lymphatic drainages of approximately 20% of patients after lymphadenectomy. This correlated significantly with early recurrence and shorter survival. These results may suggest that the RT-PCR assay could be useful for routinely analyzing postoperatively collected lymphatic drainage in stage III melanoma patients and for predicting disease progression.

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