Abstract

The therapeutic efficacy of isolated limb perfusion in patients with localized melanoma of the extremity remains controversial. We compared patients treated at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, with wide local excision and isolated limb perfusion using either melphalan or imidazole carboxamide with a group matched for prognostic factors from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and the University of Sydney (Australia) who were treated with wide local excision alone. No significant difference in disease-free or overall survival rates was found between patients treated with wide local excision with adjuvant isolated limb perfusion or wide local excision alone. However, a subset of patients with thicker lesions (greater than 2.0 mm) treated with wide local excision and isolated limb perfusion using melphalan had a significant improvement in both disease-free and overall survival rates. These data suggest that isolated limb perfusion using melphalan may improve survival rates in selected patients with localized melanoma of the extremity who are at increased risk for local and regional micrometastases, and justifies the continued study of this treatment approach in prospective clinical trials.

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