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Prognostic Significance Of MIB-1 Proliferative Activity in Thin Melanomas and Immunohistochemical Analysis of MIB-1 Proliferative Activity in Melanocytic Tumors
52
Citations
16
References
1998
Year
Metastasis from thin melanomas is rare and unpredictable. In order to assess the prognostic value of the proliferation marker, MIB-1, immunohistochemical staining was evaluated in a retrospective case-control study of 11 thin melanomas with documented metastasis and 11 control tumors that failed to metastasize. Tumors selected were < 1-mm thick and were individually matched for tumor thickness, date of excision, and patient age and sex. Analysis of MIB-1 expression as both a mean and a maximum level for the case and control groups revealed no association with metastasis. Wilcoxon's matched-pairs signed-rank test had p-values of 0.45 for the maximum values and 0.79 for the mean values. For the 11 thin melanomas that metastasized, there was a weak, yet statistically insignificant, correlation between the proportion of cells positive for MIB-1 and the length of the relapse-free period [Spearman's correlation coefficient = 0.20 for the maximum level (p = 0.56) and 0.19 for the mean level (p = 0.58)]. These results suggest that MIB-1 expression may be of limited value as a prognostic marker for increased risk of metastasis in patients with thin melanomas. MIB-1 immunohistochemistry was also performed on 25 benign and 70 malignant paraffin-embedded melanocytic tumors to evaluate the level of MIB-1 expression at different stages of tumor progression. A progressive increase in MIB-1 expression was seen from benign tumors through to primary melanomas, with the highest level seen in metastatic melanomas. Within the group of primary melanomas, the MIB-1 score was shown to correlate significantly with tumor thickness and Clark's level of invasion (Spearman's correlation coefficient = 0.71 for level and 0.77 for thickness).
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