Abstract

Aberrant glycosylation is a common feature of metastatic sub-clones of malignant tumours and in uveal melanoma in particular, the HNK-1 glycotope has been positively correlated with poor prognosis. So far, no such correlation has been investigated in cutaneous melanoma. In order to do so, HNK-1 expression was evaluated immunohistochemically in 100 primary cutaneous melanomas and correlated with metastasis after up to 10-years' follow-up. Furthermore, HNK-1 expression was analysed in metastatic deposits (19 distant cutaneous metastases and six sentinel lymph node metastases), as well as in benign nevi. Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a positive association between HNK-1 expression and metastasis (p < 0.005) and multivariate Cox regression analysis adjusted for the standard prognostic markers ulceration and vertical tumour thickness confirmed HNK-1 expression as an independent prognostic marker. HNK-1 expression was preserved in 42% of the distant cutaneous metastases, but metastatic cells in lymph nodes were devoid of HNK-1 immunoreactivity. None of the benign pigmented lesions exhibited HNK-1 immunoreactivity. Expression of the HNK-1 glycotope in cutaneous malignant melanoma is an independent prognostic marker of metastasis. Differential HNK-1 expression at the metastatic sites implies that its expression is modulated by the surrounding environment. As HNK-1 is also transiently expressed during migration of melanocyte precursor cells derived from the neural crest, recapitulation of this transient expression might occur during metastatic spread of cutaneous malignant melanoma.

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