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Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance

Approximately one‐third of Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) patients eventually develop distant metastatic disease. Little is known about whether the location of the primary lesion is predictive of initial distant metastatic site, or if survival likelihood differs depending on the metastatic site. Such d...

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Autores principales: Lewis, Christopher W., Qazi, Jamiluddin, Hippe, Daniel S., Lachance, Kristina, Thomas, Hannah, Cook, Maclean M., Juhlin, Ilsa, Singh, Neha, Thuesmunn, Zoe, Takagishi, Seesha R., McEvoy, Aubriana, Doolittle‐Amieva, Coley, Bhatia, Shailender, Paulson, Kelly G., O'Malley, Ryan B., Wang, Carolyn L., Nghiem, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7013053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31883234
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2781
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author Lewis, Christopher W.
Qazi, Jamiluddin
Hippe, Daniel S.
Lachance, Kristina
Thomas, Hannah
Cook, Maclean M.
Juhlin, Ilsa
Singh, Neha
Thuesmunn, Zoe
Takagishi, Seesha R.
McEvoy, Aubriana
Doolittle‐Amieva, Coley
Bhatia, Shailender
Paulson, Kelly G.
O'Malley, Ryan B.
Wang, Carolyn L.
Nghiem, Paul
author_facet Lewis, Christopher W.
Qazi, Jamiluddin
Hippe, Daniel S.
Lachance, Kristina
Thomas, Hannah
Cook, Maclean M.
Juhlin, Ilsa
Singh, Neha
Thuesmunn, Zoe
Takagishi, Seesha R.
McEvoy, Aubriana
Doolittle‐Amieva, Coley
Bhatia, Shailender
Paulson, Kelly G.
O'Malley, Ryan B.
Wang, Carolyn L.
Nghiem, Paul
author_sort Lewis, Christopher W.
collection PubMed
description Approximately one‐third of Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) patients eventually develop distant metastatic disease. Little is known about whether the location of the primary lesion is predictive of initial distant metastatic site, or if survival likelihood differs depending on the metastatic site. Such data could inform imaging/surveillance practices and improve prognostic accuracy. Multivariate and competing‐risk analyses were performed on a cohort of 215 MCC patients with distant metastases, 31% of whom had two or more initial sites of distant metastasis. At time of initial distant metastasis in the 215 patients, metastatic sites (n = 305) included non‐regional lymph nodes (present in 41% of patients), skin/body wall (25%), liver (23%), bone (21%), pancreas (8%), lung (7%), and brain (5%). Among the 194 patients who presented with MCC limited to local or regional sites (stage I‐III) but who ultimately developed distant metastases, distant progression occurred in 49% by 1 year and in 80% by 2 years following initial diagnosis. Primary MCC locations differed in how likely they were to metastasize to specific organs/sites (P < .001). For example, liver metastases were far more likely from a head/neck primary (43% of 58 patients) versus a lower limb primary (5% of 39 patients; P < .0001). Skin‐only distant metastasis was associated with lower MCC‐specific mortality as compared to metastases in multiple organs/sites (HR 2.7; P = .003), in the liver (HR 2.1; P = .05), or in distant lymph nodes (HR 2.0; P = .045). These data reflect outcomes before PD1‐pathway inhibitor availability, which may positively impact survival. In conclusion, primary MCC location is associated with a pattern of distant spread, which may assist in optimizing surveillance. Because it is linked to survival, the site of initial distant metastasis should be considered when assessing prognosis.
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spelling pubmed-70130532020-03-24 Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance Lewis, Christopher W. Qazi, Jamiluddin Hippe, Daniel S. Lachance, Kristina Thomas, Hannah Cook, Maclean M. Juhlin, Ilsa Singh, Neha Thuesmunn, Zoe Takagishi, Seesha R. McEvoy, Aubriana Doolittle‐Amieva, Coley Bhatia, Shailender Paulson, Kelly G. O'Malley, Ryan B. Wang, Carolyn L. Nghiem, Paul Cancer Med Clinical Cancer Research Approximately one‐third of Merkel cell carcinoma (MCC) patients eventually develop distant metastatic disease. Little is known about whether the location of the primary lesion is predictive of initial distant metastatic site, or if survival likelihood differs depending on the metastatic site. Such data could inform imaging/surveillance practices and improve prognostic accuracy. Multivariate and competing‐risk analyses were performed on a cohort of 215 MCC patients with distant metastases, 31% of whom had two or more initial sites of distant metastasis. At time of initial distant metastasis in the 215 patients, metastatic sites (n = 305) included non‐regional lymph nodes (present in 41% of patients), skin/body wall (25%), liver (23%), bone (21%), pancreas (8%), lung (7%), and brain (5%). Among the 194 patients who presented with MCC limited to local or regional sites (stage I‐III) but who ultimately developed distant metastases, distant progression occurred in 49% by 1 year and in 80% by 2 years following initial diagnosis. Primary MCC locations differed in how likely they were to metastasize to specific organs/sites (P < .001). For example, liver metastases were far more likely from a head/neck primary (43% of 58 patients) versus a lower limb primary (5% of 39 patients; P < .0001). Skin‐only distant metastasis was associated with lower MCC‐specific mortality as compared to metastases in multiple organs/sites (HR 2.7; P = .003), in the liver (HR 2.1; P = .05), or in distant lymph nodes (HR 2.0; P = .045). These data reflect outcomes before PD1‐pathway inhibitor availability, which may positively impact survival. In conclusion, primary MCC location is associated with a pattern of distant spread, which may assist in optimizing surveillance. Because it is linked to survival, the site of initial distant metastasis should be considered when assessing prognosis. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-12-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7013053/ /pubmed/31883234 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2781 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Cancer Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Clinical Cancer Research
Lewis, Christopher W.
Qazi, Jamiluddin
Hippe, Daniel S.
Lachance, Kristina
Thomas, Hannah
Cook, Maclean M.
Juhlin, Ilsa
Singh, Neha
Thuesmunn, Zoe
Takagishi, Seesha R.
McEvoy, Aubriana
Doolittle‐Amieva, Coley
Bhatia, Shailender
Paulson, Kelly G.
O'Malley, Ryan B.
Wang, Carolyn L.
Nghiem, Paul
Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance
title Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance
title_full Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance
title_fullStr Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance
title_short Patterns of distant metastases in 215 Merkel cell carcinoma patients: Implications for prognosis and surveillance
title_sort patterns of distant metastases in 215 merkel cell carcinoma patients: implications for prognosis and surveillance
topic Clinical Cancer Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7013053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31883234
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cam4.2781
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