Computed tomography in evaluation of patients with stage III melanoma Journal Article


Authors: Kuvshinoff, B. W.; Kurtz, C.; Coit, D. G.
Article Title: Computed tomography in evaluation of patients with stage III melanoma
Abstract: Background: Metastatic disease is detected infrequently by computed tomography (CT) in early stage melanoma. The diagnostic yield of routine CT for stage III melanoma is less established, despite extensive use in clinical practice. Methods: Charts from 347 asymptomatic patients with stage III melanoma were reviewed. Findings suggestive of metastatic melanoma identified by head or body CT, chest radiography, bone scan, or liver function studies were confirmed histologically or by progression of disease. Results: Individual CT scans identified 33/788 (4.2%) instances of metastatic melanoma, with 66/788 (8.4%) false positive studies. No metastases were identified among 104 head CT scans. Chest CT had the highest yield in patients with cervical adenopathy (7/35, 20%), and the lowest yield with groin adenopathy (1/50, 2%). Pelvic CT diagnosed metastases in 7/94 (7.4%) patients with groin adenopathy, but no patients with palpable axillary (n = 76) or cervical (n = 21) nodes. Metastatic melanoma was diagnosed in 11/136 (8.1%) patients having complete body CT imaging (chest, abdomen, and pelvis), including six patients (4.4%) identified by CT alone. Conclusions: Routine CT in patients with clinical stage III melanoma infrequently identifies metastatic disease. Head CT in the asymptomatic patient, chest CT in patients with groin adenopathy, and pelvic CT in the presence of axillary or cervical adenopathy are not indicated. Selective use of chest CT in patients with cervical adenopathy or pelvic CT in the presence of groin disease may be useful. Published by Lippincott-Raven Publishers © 1997 The Society of Surgical Oncology, Inc.
Keywords: adolescent; adult; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; retrospective studies; sensitivity and specificity; melanoma; metastasis; computer assisted tomography; skin neoplasms; tomography, x-ray computed; retrospective study; economics; skin tumor; computer assisted emission tomography; neoplasm metastasis; scintiscanning; radiography; cost-benefit analysis; cost benefit analysis; computed tomography; tomography, emission-computed; medical audit; humans; human; male; female; article; chest radiography; metastatic workup
Journal Title: Annals of Surgical Oncology
Volume: 4
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1068-9265
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 1997-04-01
Start Page: 252
End Page: 258
Language: English
PUBMED: 9142387
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI: 10.1007/BF02306618
DOI/URL:
Notes: Review -- Export Date: 17 March 2017 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Daniel Coit
    542 Coit