Abstract

Melanoma incidence has increased over the last few decades. How the prognosis of a previously diagnosed melanoma may be affected by a woman’s subsequent pregnancy has been debated in the literature since the 1950s, and the outcomes are essential to women who are melanoma survivors in their childbearing years. The main objective of this systematic review is to improve the understanding of whether the course of melanoma in a woman may be altered by a subsequent pregnancy and to help clinicians’ diagnosis. Eligible studies for the systematic review were clinical trials, observational cohort studies and case-control studies that compared prognosis outcomes for non-pregnant patients with melanoma, or pregnant before melanoma diagnosis, versus pregnant patients after a diagnosis of melanoma. The search strategy yielded 1101 articles, of which 4 met the inclusion criteria for the systematic review. All the studies were retrospective non-randomised cohorts with patients with melanomas diagnosed before pregnancy. According to our findings, a subsequent pregnancy was not a significant influence on the outcome of a previous melanoma. However, given the small number of identified studies and the heterogeneous data included, it is recommended to approach these patients with caution, and counselling should be given by known prognostic factors. We also reviewed the medical records of 84 patients of childbearing age (35.8 ± 6.3 years, range 21–45 years) who were diagnosed with cutaneous invasive melanoma in our hospital between 2008 and 2018 (N = 724). Of these, 11 (13.1%) had a pregnancy after melanoma diagnosis (age at pregnancy: 35.6 ± 6.3 years). No statistical differences in outcome were detected.

Highlights

  • The results showed that current evidence does not support the hypothesis that pregnancy after successful treatment of melanoma worsens prognosis

  • All studies were retrospective non-randomised cohorts with patients diagnosed with melanoma before pregnancy: Three were population-based studies with data from statistical departments (1, 3, 4) [4,12,13,14] and one from a hospital-based population (2)

  • None of the selected articles had the analysis of the melanoma prognosis in subsequent pregnancy as the primary outcome, so all data were secondarily extracted from the information provided

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Summary

Introduction

Melanoma incidence has experienced a significant increase over the last few decades [1]. Europe and North America have a relatively flat age melanoma distribution curve so that it is relatively common in young adults. The thickness and the survival are better during childbearing years than at other times of life [2]. The desire to conceive after a melanoma diagnosis is increasing because of delayed childbearing.

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