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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Thickness, cross-sectional areas and depth of invasion in the prognosis of cutaneous melanoma.

Alexander Breslow
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 172, Iss: 5, pp 902-908
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TLDR
The depth of invasion was studied using the criteria for staging of Clark et al.2 to see if maximal cross-sectional area, thickness, stage of invasion, or a combination of these can be of value in assessing the prognosis of cutaneous melanoma.
Abstract
CuTANEous melanoma is a most unpredictable lesion. The marked variation in prognosis is probably a function of many variables, one of which is the size of the tumor. Though there is a roughly inverse relationship between the diameter of the lesion and survival,5 very small lesions have recurred or metastasized. One possible reason for the lack of reliability of tumor size in estimating prognosis may be that studies to date have considered size in only two diamensions and have neglected tumor volume. Two melanomas can have the same diameter but differ greatly in thickness because of variation in either depth of invasion or degree of protrusion from the surface of the skin or both. A recent study 2 has shown that prognosis correlates well with staging of the depth of invasion, but there have been no studies relating survival to tumor volume. To measure tumor volume it is necessary to know the surface area of the tumor, but in this retrospective study we only know the maximal diameters of the lesions. By measuring the maximal thickness of the lesions we can calculate the maximal crosssectional area, which should be roughly proportional to the volume of the tumor. The depth of invasion was also studied using the criteria for staging of Clark et al.2 to see if maximal cross-sectional area, thickness, stage of invasion, or a combination of these can be of value in assessing the prognosis of cutaneous melanoma. A total of 98 lesions were so studied.

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Citations
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Molecular Pathology of Skin Neoplasms of the Head and Neck

TL;DR: Molecular alterations in cutaneous neoplasms of the head and neck are often related to UV exposure, and familiarity with these changes will be increasingly necessary for diagnostic and therapeutic considerations.
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Melanoma of the head and neck: current concepts in diagnosis and management.

TL;DR: It is critical that head and neck surgeons have a thorough understanding of the natural history, diagnosis, staging, and treatment of CMM, and it is also important that clinicians are aware of the less common types of melanoma arising in theHead and neck, including mucosal melanoma and desmoplastic melanoma.
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Cutaneous malignant melanoma (Arizona Cancer Center experience). I. Natural history and prognostic factors influencing survival in patients with stage I disease.

TL;DR: The authors have studied the natural history of 377 patients with Stage I cutaneous malignant melanoma followed at the Arizona Cancer Center, Tucson, and identified four factors as highly significant in predicting survival: Breslow thickness, an age/sex interaction, clinical ulceration, prophylactic node dissection, and a proPHylactic nodes dissection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Observer variation in the measurement of Breslow depth and Clark's level in thin cutaneous malignant melanoma.

TL;DR: It is concluded that Breslow depth and Clark's level should not be the sole basis of wide excision protocols because of the high degree of observer variation and where surgical management is potentially disfiguring it is not high enough.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Some Methods for Strengthening the Common χ 2 Tests

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss two kinds of failure to make the best use of x2 tests which I have observed from time to time in reading reports of biological research, and propose a number of methods for strengthening or supplementing the most common uses of the ordinary x2 test.
Journal Article

The Histogenesis and Biologic Behavior of Primary Human Malignant Melanomas of the Skin

TL;DR: Evidence is presented suggesting that superficial spreading melanoma and lentigo maligna melanoma (Hutchinson9s melanotic freckle) show a long period of superficial growth, followed by the relatively rapid appearance of nodules or deeper invasion within the primary lesion.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Detection of Partial Association, I: The 2 × 2 Case

TL;DR: In this article, a criterion for testing null hypotheses of conditional independence of two dichotomous random variables is derived for testing whether the association of the two random variables in the conditional distribution is, in a certain sense, constant.
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