Factors influencing the survival of patients with regional melanoma of the extremity treated by perfusion.

Patients with regional metastases of malignant melanoma (75 with Stage IIIA soft tissue metastases, 124 with Stage IIIB nodal metastases and 75 with Stage IIIAB soft tissue and nodal metastases) treated by regional perfusion between 1957 and 1982 were retrospectively studied to identify prognostic factors relating to survival. In patients with Stage IIIB disease, the melanoma specific cumulative survival rates at five years was 72 per cent for one, 33 per cent for two to three and 20 per cent for four or more positive lymph nodes. In patients with Stage IIIAB disease, those with one node had a better survival rate at five years than those with multiple nodes (45 versus 25 per cent). In patients with Stage IIIA melanoma, two groups were identified based upon the results of prior treatment--those with and without prophylactic lymph node dissection (PLND) at the time of primary therapy. The factors associated with decreased survival rates in patients with PLND were: 1, increasing age; 2, presence of subcutaneous or both subcutaneous and dermal metastases, and 3, treatment at normothermic temperatures or earlier date of treatment. No significant factors were found in the group without PLND; however, the survival time was similar to that for patients with Stage IIIAB and one positive node (45 per cent at five years). Knowledge of these factors is important in assessing the prognosis and establishing randomization criteria for prospective studies evaluating various forms of therapy.