ARTICLE
Auteur(s) : Paolo CARLI1, Daniela
BALZI2, Vincenzo DE GIORGI1, Daniela
MASSI3, Domenico PALLI4, Alessandra
CHIARUGI1, Paolo NARDINI1, Benvenuto
GIANNOTTI1
1 Department of Dermatology, University of
Florence, 2 Epidemiology Unit, ASL Florence,
3 Department of Human Pathology and Oncology,
University of Florence, 4 Epidemiology Unit, Centro
per lo Studio e la Prevenzione Oncologica (CSPO), Via degli Alfani,
37, 50121 Florence ‐‐ Italy
Corresponding author: P. Carli e‐mail: CARLIunifi.it Fax:
(+39)‐055‐2758757
Article accepted on 25\7\03 Key words: Risk factors
for cutaneous melanoma have been mainly investigated in
fair‐skinned populations of northern European origin [1, 2], while
little is known about predictors of melanoma risk in Mediterranean
populations. Although not predominantly fair‐skinned, people living
southern Europe are nevertheless not spared by the so‐called
"melanoma epidemic", with an average increase of melanoma incidence
rates of about 5 % per year [3, 4]. Many case‐control studies
indicated that a high number of nevi and the presence of atypical
nevi are the strongest predictor of melanoma risk [1,2]; this has
been recently confirmed also in Mediterranean populations [5, 6].
Little is known however about the impact of prevention programmes
based on specialized periodical examination of at risk individuals
on melanoma diagnosis. Our aim was to investigate the occurrence of
new melanomas and the microstaging of disease at diagnosis in an
a priori defined high‐risk cohort actively followed over
time. Moreover, in order to evaluate the excess risk associated
with a specific pattern of nevi, the number of tumors observed in
this cohort was compared with the number of melanomas expected
according to age‐ and sex‐specific incidence rates in the general
population, provided by the local cancer registry. In addition, we
also enrolled a group of intermediate‐risk subjects in a similar
programme of counselling and specialized examination, in order to
have a comparison group.
Materials and methods
Since 1989, when an educational campaign, directed at the
general population and family doctors, was launched in the Florence
area, the Pigmented Lesion Clinic (PLC) of the Department of
Dermatology University Hospital has been the referral center for
the early diagnosis of melanoma in this area. According to the
campaign protocol, residents with self‐ or GP‐detected suspicious
pigmented skin lesions as well as subjects with risk factors for
melanoma requiring periodic examination were invited to undergo
dermatological examination at the local PLC.
Standardized examination of subjects at PLC
At each PLC examination, the subjects were visited by
dermatologists with experience in the diagnosis of cutaneous
pigmented lesions (P.C., V.D.G.). All the body surface except the
scalp and genitalia were systematically examined and the number of
common and atypical nevi counted and recorded in a digitalized
file, in agreement with a published protocol [6]. The genitalia and
scalp were examined when the subjects were referred for a
potentially suspicious pigmented skin lesion at these sites.
Clinical definitions of common and atypical nevi have been reported
elsewhere [5]. Briefly, acquired melanocytic nevi were defined as
pigmented lesions larger than 2 mm. in diameter clinically
different from freckles, lentigines, blue nevi, seborrheic
keratoses, and pigmented basal cell carcinoma. Acquired melanocytic
nevi larger than 6 mm. in diameter that showed at least two of
the following criteria were defined as atypical: irregular or
ill‐defined borders, variegated or irregularly distributed
pigmentation, background erythema, or accentuated skin markings.
The eye color was evaluated according to a four‐category scale
(black‐brown, hazel, green‐gray, blue). Phototype according to
Fitzpatrick was also recorded (category from I to IV) [5].
Criteria for entry into the cohort
The present cohort study included all the consecutively observed
subjects showing more than 30 common nevi and 3 or more
atypical nevi (here considered at high‐risk), who had at least two
dermatological examinations at PLC with a minimum interval of
1 year between the two consultations and who were resident in
the district of Florence (about 1,150,000 inhabitants). A
group of subjects with less than 30 common nevi and
3 atypical nevi were also enrolled (intermediate‐risk).
The number of nevi chosen to identify the high‐risk group was
defined a priori, in accordance with the results of a
previous population‐based case‐control study performed by our group
in the Florence area [5]. According to this study, subjects with
more than 30 nevi showed a relative risk of melanoma, as
expressed by the odds ratio, of 22.3 compared to subjects with
less than 10 nevi [5]. The presence of at least three atypical
nevi as an additional factor for entry into the study was chosen in
accordance with recent studies carried out in a predominantly fair
skinned population [7]. No definite estimates of risk of melanoma
associated with number of atypical nevi are available for
Mediterranean populations as yet.
Only subjects resident in the Florence district (municipality of
Florence and surrounding towns) were considered eligible for the
study in order to compare the observed cases of melanoma in the
cohort to that expected according to age‐ and sex‐ specific
incidence rates in the general population residing in the same
geographically defined area.
Subjects with personal or family history of melanoma or with a
diagnosis of melanoma at the time of the first PLC observation were
excluded.
The enrollment period (first PLC consultation) started in 1990 and
finished in 1996.
In the series of 2,479 consecutive subjects without melanoma
who had a first visit at the PLC in the enrollment period,
455 individuals, all Caucasians, fulfilled the above mentioned
inclusion criteria. Therefore the study population included
218 high risk subjects (96 males, 122 females, mean
age 27.8 years, range 18‐61); the intermediate risk group
included 237 subjects (80 males, 157 females, mean
age 30.7, range 19‐73).
The major reasons for which the remaining subjects were not
eligible were: i) the lack of a second consultation, ii) residence
outside the Florence district or iii) family history of
melanoma.
When a subject included in the PLC file was referred to the PLC
for further examinations, the examination outcome, i.e., no
suspicious lesion or suspicious lesion to be excised, was recorded
in the file. At the end of the study, the list of cohort subjects
for whom surgical excision of a pigmented lesion was recommended
were retrieved from the PLC data base. In these cases the files
were examined and histopathologic materials reviewed by an
independent pathologist with expertise in melanoma to finalize the
diagnosis (D.M.). The date of detection of a histologically
confirmed melanoma was considered the time of exit from the cohort
for that subject.
Registry‐based incidence rate of in situ and invasive melanoma
in the Florence District
Melanoma incidence rates were provided by the local cancer
registry (Tuscany Cancer Registry), which produces, since 1985,
incidence data in accordance with the quality standard requested by
the International Agency for Research on Cancer [4]. The proportion
of histological verification for melanoma cases was 96 % in
1997. The proportion of Death Certification Only (DCO) cases, ie.
melanoma cases for which the registry does not have clinical
documentation and which represent the "unsuccessful" case as far as
completeness of collection is concerned, is 0.4 %.
For the purpose of our study, age‐ and sex‐specific incidence
rates of melanoma were recalculated to include in situ
lesions, collected but not routinely included in the incidence
rates. Thus, both digitalized and hard copies of histopathologic
certifications of all in situ melanomas as well as atypical
melanocytic hyperplasias were retrieved. Lesions classified with an
equivocal terminology, such as "atypical melanocytic hyperplasia",
were reviewed by an experienced pathologist (D.M.) to confirm the
diagnosis of in situ melanoma according to currently used
histopathological criteria [8]. In particular, a diagnosis of in
situ melanoma was made when there were increased numbers of
atypical melanocytes, both in solitary units and\or in nests at the
dermo‐epidermal junction and at all levels of the epidermis, with
possible extension of melanocytes far down into adnexal structures.
Cytologically, melanocytes show marked variations in size and shape
and display enlarged, pleomorphic nuclei.
Since the incidence of melanoma is increasing over time, the local
cancer registry data base analyzed as raw data for calculation of
the overall incidence rate of melanoma (invasive plus in
situ forms) included the period 1995‐1998, ie, the most recent
available data about melanoma incidence in the Florence area.
The 218 high‐risk subjects have been followed for an average
of 3.4 years (range 1‐6.5), for an overall total of
741.7 person‐years. The mean number of examinations was
2.7 + \ ‐‐ SD 2.0 for females (range 1‐10)
and 2.8 + \ ‐‐ SD 1.9 (range 1‐8) for males. No
statistically significant difference in the number of examinations
was found according to the number of common nevi or atypical
nevi.
Intermediate risk subjects have been followed for an average of
3.1 years (range 1‐7), with an overall total of
658.3 person‐years; the mean number of examinations was 2.00
(range 1‐6). Characteristics of the study population are shown in
Table I‐II.
Table I. Main characteristics of the study
population: high risk subjects
|
Males (n.96) |
Females (n.122) |
| Phototype |
|
|
| I‐II |
54 (56 %) |
78 (64 %) |
| III‐IV |
42 (44 %) |
44 (36 %) |
| Eye color |
|
|
| Black‐ brown; hazel |
63 (66 %) |
91 (75 %) |
| Green; blue |
33 (34 %) |
31 (25 %) |
| Number of controls at PLC |
|
| 1‐3 |
66 (69 %) |
85 (70 %) |
| 4‐6 |
21 (22 %) |
25 (21 %) |
| 6‐10 |
9 (9 %) |
12 (9 %) |
| Number of common nevi |
|
|
| 31‐60 |
41 (43 %) |
65 (53 %) |
| 61‐90 |
28 (29 %) |
40 (33 %) |
| > 90 |
27 (28 %) |
17 (14 %) |
| Number of atypical nevi |
|
|
| 3‐6 |
32 (33 %) |
60 (49 %) |
| 7‐10 |
22 (23 %) |
28 (23 %) |
| > 10 |
42 (44 %) |
34 (28 %) |
.
Table II. Main characteristics of the study
population: intermediate‐risk subjects
|
Males (n.80) |
Females (n.157) |
| Phototype |
|
|
| I‐II |
29 (36 %) |
56 (36 %) |
| III‐IV |
51 (64 %) |
98 (64 %) |
| Eye color |
|
|
| Black‐ brown; hazel |
66 (85 %) |
130 (84 %) |
| Green; blue |
12 (15 %) |
25 (16 %) |
| Number of controls at PLC |
|
| 1‐3 |
72 (90 %) |
124 (79 %) |
| 4‐6 |
8 (10 %) |
33 (21 %) |
| Number of common nevi |
|
|
| < 15 |
52 (65 %) |
106 (68 %) |
| 15‐30 |
28 (35 %) |
51 (32 %) |
| Number of atypical nevi |
|
| None |
45 (56 %) |
95 (60 %) |
| 1 |
31 (38 %) |
37 (23 %) |
| 2 |
4 (6 %) |
25 (17 %) |
.
Results
At consultations during the follow up of the high risk group,
27 pigmented skin lesions in 24 subjects were defined as
suspicious and referred for surgery. Histopathological examination
identified a cutaneous melanoma in 4 and a melanocytic nevus
in the remaining 23 lesions (18\23 histologically classified
as nevi with architectural disorder and cytologic atypia). The
malignant \benign ratio (melanomas detected\benign lesions excised)
resulted 1: 5.7.
In the intermediate‐risk group, 6 pigmented lesions were
considered suspicious or equivocal in 5 subjects during follow
up examination and excised. Histologic diagnoses were melanocytic
nevi in 4 cases and non melanocytic lesion in 2 cases
(1 pigmented seborrheic keratosis, 1 basal cell
carcinoma).
Thus, during the study period, 4 new melanomas were detected
in subjects with more than 30 common nevi and three or more
atypical nevi while no melanoma has been found in the
intermediate‐risk group.
All detected melanomas were in situ (Clark level I) (Table III). The average interval between the
entry in the cohort and the date of melanoma diagnosis was
4.6 years (range 1.4‐6.5). Three out of 4 cases that
developed a melanoma spontaneously reported a change in the index
lesion to the PLC dermatologist, and the lesion subsequently was
diagnosed as a melanoma. In one case, the subject did not notice
any change in the lesion over time and the diagnosis was based on
purely morphologic criteria adopted by the clinician during the
follow up PLC visit. The mean age at enrollment into the study was
35.9 years for the 4 subjects who later developed a
melanoma and 27.6 for the remaining 214 subjects who did
not. The mean number of follow up examination was 2.2 for
subjects developing melanoma and 2.7 for subjects without
melanoma. The average number of common nevi was 63.5 and
72.3 in subjects developing melanoma or not, respectively. The
mean number of atypical nevi was 4.5 and 9.7 in subjects
with or without melanoma, respectively.
Table III. Characteristics of subjects who
developed a melanoma.
|
Sex |
Age at MM diagnosis |
Anatomic site |
Interval (months) from first examination |
Number of follow up examinations |
Number of atypical nevi |
Number of common nevi |
phototype |
Histological diagnosis |
| Case 1 |
f |
34 |
Chest |
77.4 |
4 |
6 |
73 |
II |
In situ SSM with regression |
| Case 2 |
m |
43 |
Neck |
66.7 |
1 |
4 |
35 |
IV |
In situ SSM |
| Case 3 |
f |
50 |
Leg |
17.2 |
1 |
3 |
60 |
III |
In situ SSM |
| Case 4 |
f |
34 |
Trunk |
43.8 |
3 |
5 |
86 |
III |
In situ SSM |
.
According to the data provided from the Tuscany Cancer Registry,
including both invasive and in situ forms, the expected
number of melanomas in our high risk group followed for a total of
741.7 person‐years totalized by the cohort was 0.09. The
standardized incidence ratio (SIR), i.e., the ratio between the
observed and expected cases of melanoma was 44.1 (95 % CI
16.5‐117.5).
Discussion
Recent case‐control studies indicate that the number of
melanocytic nevi and the presence of atypical nevi are the
strongest risk factors for non familial melanoma in Mediterranean
populations [5‐6]. Up to now, however, no demonstration of a
suitable prevention program based on follow up of subjects
presenting the above mentioned conditions has been reported. From
our data, four new melanomas developed in 218 high risk
subjects in a mean follow up period of 4.6 years. All these
tumors were detected when still in situ, therefore
associated with a favourable prognosis. This finding suggests
clinically relevant effects of the prevention programme in term of
earliness of diagnosis. The number of melanomas was higher than
that expected in the general population, confirming the role played
by the large number of nevi as strong risk factor for melanoma. The
frequency of new melanomas resulted about 40‐fold higher than
expected in the age‐ and sex‐matched general population. A word of
caution is however needed since high risk individuals were examined
within an intensive control programme which rendered these subjects
more prompt to notice the suspicious lesion or to have this lesion
diagnosed compared to general population. Nevertheless, the
significance of the predictor of risk associated with large number
of nevi is given by the fact that no melanoma was found in the
intermediate‐risk subjects submitted to the same follow up
protocol. Regarding possible histologic misdiagnosis of in
situ melanoma, all the precautions to avoid this risk were
taken: first, diagnosis came from a pathologist blinded as to the
risk factor category of the subjects, in order to avoid any
overestimation of atypia of the melanocytic lesions; second,
histologic slides were reviewed by an independent pathologist with
great expertise in melanoma and melanocytic lesions who provided
the same diagnosis; third, all these lesions showed clinical and
dermoscopical features clearly suggestive of melanoma, with,
therefore, strong correlation between clinical and histologic
diagnosis of melanoma.
Counseling of at risk individuals is probably important to improve
the self‐detection of suspicious lesions [1,2]: in our program
during the first dermatological consultation (entry in the cohort),
all subjects were given an educational leaflet to inform them of
the importance of self‐skin examination to detect any new
suspicious lesions (ABCDE rule, "changing mole") [9]. Actually in
our study, 3 of the 4 subjects who developed a melanoma
alerted the PLC dermatologist to the presence of a suspicious
lesion, thus showing that they had performed the recommended
self‐skin examination correctly.
Periodic examination of subjects coupled with recommendation of
self‐skin examination, led in all cases to discovery of the tumor
when still in situ. This scenario would probably change with
a higher number of patients since the possible occurrence of
nodular melanoma histotypes, which lack the in situ phase
since they show more aggressive behaviour (vertical growth phase
ab initio). Therefore, the detection of all melanomas when
still in situ should be considered a contingent, although
promising result.
It has sometimes been pointed out that after screening campaigns
the increased workload of subjects with atypical lesions seeking
consultation results in a reduction in the ratio between the number
of MM and number of nevi excised compared to pre‐campaign values
(from 1:11 to 1: 16) [15]. This is due to the fact that the
worry about the risk of false negative diagnosis prompts clinicians
to lower the treatment threshold and consequently to prescribe
excision of a larger numbers of benign lesions. Even if a number of
benign lesions was excised to rule out the suspicion of a melanoma
the melanoma\nevi ratio observed in the high risk group (4:23, ie.
1: 5.7) can be considered acceptable to guarantee the timely
excision of all the tumors in these subjects.
Some authors have suggested using photographic surveillance
(baseline photography and follow up) to enable early diagnosis of
melanoma [16]. This is a very controversial point that requires
more reliable support from randomized studies [17]. In our clinic,
photographing the body surface in subjects with many nevi has been
abandoned over time because of doubtful utility ‐‐ and the fact
that it is very time‐consuming ‐‐ when compared to the good
diagnostic performance obtained by a skilled eye using the new
method for non‐invasive diagnosis of pigmented skin lesions, ie,
dermoscopy [18]. Since atypical nevi, by definition, undergo
modification over time, total body photographs could force the
dermatologist to remove any changing or new moles in these
patients, leading to unnecessary surgical removal of many nevi
[17]. Very recently, follow up of atypical lesions by means of
digital dermoscopy ‐‐ instead of immediate removal ‐‐ has been
suggested [19,20]. However, a study of Kittler et al.
alerted dermatologists to the risk of an increased number of false
negative diagnoses (melanomas left unexcised) associated with this
procedure [21].
In conclusion, a follow up program of high risk individuals
classified on the basis of number of nevi proved feasible and
should be recommended as a part of prevention programs in southern
European populations.
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