Metastatic melanoma: Surgical treatment of brain metastases – Analysis of 110 patients

2020 
Abstract New Zealand has one of the highest rates of melanoma in the world. In up to 10% of cases, the disease is metastatic at diagnosis. Cerebral metastatic involvement carries a particularly poor prognosis. 110 patients were included in the analysis. A retrospective consecutive series of patients treated surgically at Auckland City Hospital were studied, with parameters of demographics, tumour characteristics, surgery, pathology, systemic therapy and survival analysed. Mean age was 59.9 years (range 22–81 years). Median survival from date of surgery was 8.1 months (95% CI 6.9–9.4 months). Of the 58 patients tested for BRAF mutation, 28 were positive, similar to previously published data. This conferred a better prognosis with median overall survival of 12.3 months (95% CI 7.2–17.3 months) compared to 7.8 months (95% CI 5.6–10 months) for those who were negative (p  Survival from resection of cerebral metastases from melanoma is improving. Survival benefit is conferred by BRAF mutation, solitary metastasis and gross total resection of lesion.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    45
    References
    3
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []