Clinical features, molecular characteristics and surgical management of primary penile mucosal melanoma based on the European Association of Urology Penile Cancer Guidelines

Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text. Penile mucosal melanoma is an aggressive and rare genital malignancy. The aim of the present study was to review the management and outcomes of a homogenous cohort of patients with histologically confirmed penile mucosal melanoma, at a single specialist centre. A retrospective review of an institutional database identified patients with penile mucosal melanoma over a 10-year period. Patient demographics, histopathological characteristics, type of primary surgery, recurrence, presence of metastatic disease and molecular markers were evaluated. The management of the patients was initially based on the European Association of Urology (EAU) penile cancer guidelines which are primarily for squamous cell carcinoma with inputs from a melanoma multidisciplinary team. Twelve patients with penile mucosal melanoma were analysed. Median [interquartile range (IQR)] age was 69.5 (67.25−81) years. The overall median follow-up (IQR) was 69.5 (20−114) months, while median follow-up for cancer-specific survival (CSS) was 11.5 (8−37) months. Location of the primary tumour was glans penis (n = 7), urethra (n = 2) and inner prepuce (n = 3). The CSS at 1, 2 and 5 years after primary surgery was 33%, 16.7% and 0%, respectively. The recurrence-free survival at 1, 3 and 5 months after the primary surgery was 90%, 67% and 56%, respectively. All patients with metastatic disease or with inguinal lymph node invasion at presentation, died within 25 months of the primary diagnosis. Management based on the modified EAU penile cancer guidelines still led to poor outcomes. We present a management diagram based on our experience.

[1]  K. Harrington,et al.  Head and neck mucosal melanoma: The United Kingdom national guidelines. , 2020, European journal of cancer.

[2]  M. Gore,et al.  Ano-uro-genital mucosal melanoma UK national guidelines. , 2020, European journal of cancer.

[3]  L. M. Montoya,et al.  Penile melanoma: a 20-Year analysis of six patients at the National Cancer Institute of Peru, Lima , 2017, Ecancermedicalscience.

[4]  Michelle D. Williams,et al.  Update from the 4th Edition of the World Health Organization Classification of Head and Neck Tumours: Mucosal Melanomas , 2017, Head and Neck Pathology.

[5]  H. Tawbi,et al.  Melanoma Brain Metastases: Current Areas of Investigation and Future Directions. , 2017, Cancer Journal.

[6]  AACR Project GENIE: Powering Precision Medicine through an International Consortium. , 2017, Cancer discovery.

[7]  C. Cui,et al.  GNAQ and GNA11 mutations occur in 9.5% of mucosal melanoma and are associated with poor prognosis. , 2016, European journal of cancer.

[8]  Oscar Urtatiz,et al.  Gnaq and Gna11 in the Endothelin Signaling Pathway and Melanoma , 2016, Front. Genet..

[9]  R. Sullivan,et al.  Primary genitourinary melanoma: Epidemiology and disease-specific survival in a large population-based cohort. , 2016, Urologic oncology.

[10]  C. Bunker,et al.  Primary Melanoma of the Penis in 3 Patients With Lichen Sclerosus. , 2016, JAMA dermatology.

[11]  S. Horenblas,et al.  Textbook of Penile Cancer , 2016, Springer International Publishing.

[12]  A. Freeman,et al.  Feasibility of performing dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy as a delayed procedure in penile cancer , 2016, World Journal of Urology.

[13]  G. Karakousis,et al.  Current staging and prognostic factors in melanoma. , 2015, Surgical oncology clinics of North America.

[14]  A. Antabak,et al.  Melanoma of the glans penis and urethra. , 2014, Urology.

[15]  Franz S Campos,et al.  Penile primary melanoma: analysis of 6 patients treated at Brazilian National Cancer Institute in the last eight years. , 2013, International braz j urol : official journal of the Brazilian Society of Urology.

[16]  M. Frisch,et al.  Marriage, cohabitation and incidence trends of invasive penile squamous cell carcinoma in Denmark 1978–2010 , 2013, International journal of cancer.

[17]  C. Corbishley,et al.  Dynamic sentinel lymph node biopsy in patients with invasive squamous cell carcinoma of the penis: a prospective study of the long-term outcome of 500 inguinal basins assessed at a single institution. , 2013, European urology.

[18]  A. Cubilla The role of pathologic prognostic factors in squamous cell carcinoma of the penis , 2009, World Journal of Urology.

[19]  A. Eggermont,et al.  Prognosis of primary mucosal penile melanoma: a series of 19 Dutch patients and 47 patients from the literature. , 2007, Urology.

[20]  P. Tamboli,et al.  Melanoma of the penis, scrotum and male urethra: a 40-year single institution experience. , 2005, The Journal of urology.

[21]  F. Algaba,et al.  EAU guidelines on penile cancer. , 2002, European urology.

[22]  C. Chang,et al.  Evaluation of Micrometastases in Sentinel Lymph Nodes of Cutaneous Melanoma: Higher Diagnostic Accuracy With Melan-A and MART-1 Compared With S-100 Protein and HMB-45 , 2001, The American journal of surgical pathology.

[23]  P. Russo,et al.  Primary genitourinary melanoma. , 2001, Urology.

[24]  K. Yoneda,et al.  Melanoma in situ of the penis. , 2000, Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.

[25]  H. Joller-jemelka,et al.  Serum S100--a marker for disease monitoring in metastatic melanoma. , 1997, Dermatology.

[26]  J. Renauld,et al.  A new gene coding for a differentiation antigen recognized by autologous cytolytic T lymphocytes on HLA-A2 melanomas , 1994, The Journal of experimental medicine.

[27]  C. Mackenzie,et al.  A new method of classifying prognostic comorbidity in longitudinal studies: development and validation. , 1987, Journal of chronic diseases.