Metastatic conjunctival melanoma: A multicentre international study Journal Article


Authors: Jain, P.; Finger, P. T.; Filì, M.; Damato, B.; Coupland, S. E.; Heimann, H.; Kenawy, N.; Brouwer, N. J.; Marinkovic, M.; van Duinen, S.; Caujolle, J. P.; Maschi, C.; Seregard, S.; Pelayes, D. E.; Folgar, M.; Yousef, Y.; Krema, H.; Gallie, B.; Calle Vasquez, C. A.; American Joint Committee on Cancer Ophthalmic Oncology Task Force
Contributor: Yin, V.
Article Title: Metastatic conjunctival melanoma: A multicentre international study
Abstract: Background To reveal clinical findings related to metastatic conjunctival melanoma. Methods 10 ophthalmic oncology centres (9 countries and 4 continents) shared data to create a large clinical case series. The main outcome measures were the incidence and cumulative risk of systemic metastasis, study mortality rates and Kaplan-Meier patient mortality after developing conjunctival melanoma metastasis. Results Of 288 patients, 29 developed metastasis. Five had metastasis at presentation, were American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) cT3-category and exhibited tumour-surface ulceration. Four of five (80%) had melanotic tumours with plical and/or caruncular involvement and died within 1 year. One survived 21 months. In contrast, 24 developed metastases during follow-up (mean 4.6±3.2 years). Their primary tumours were cT1 (n=13/24, 54.1%), cT2 (n=6/24, 25%), cT3 (n=2/24, 8.3%) and 3 cTx (12.5%) at presentation. Death had occurred in 17 patients (n=17/24, 71%) by the end of the study. The cumulative risk of systemic metastasis after treatment was 0.4% (95% CI 0.6% to 2.9%) at 1 year, 8.6% (95% CI 5.1% to 14.3%) at 5 years and 22.3% (95% CI 14.5% to 33.5%) at 10 years. Each increase in AJCC cT category was associated with an 89% higher risk for metastasis (HR=1.89, p<0.001). Among all 29 patients who developed metastasis, those who presented with AJCC cT3 disease were at highest risk (p<0.001). Liver and lung (n=13 each) were the most reported metastatic sites. Conclusion Metastatic conjunctival melanoma was found in 10% of conjunctival melanoma patients. Tumour-specific characteristics including AJCC cT3-category, conjunctival location and surface ulceration were associated with metastatic risk. Survival durations were shorter for those presenting with metastasis. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ Group.
Keywords: adult; aged; aged, 80 and over; middle aged; survival rate; retrospective studies; clinical trial; mortality; follow up; follow-up studies; melanoma; incidence; risk factors; pathology; retrospective study; risk factor; multicenter study; epidemiology; therapy; conjunctival neoplasms; neoplasia; conjunctiva; conjunctiva tumor; very elderly; humans; human; male; female; ocular surface
Journal Title: British Journal of Ophthalmology
Volume: 109
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0007-1161
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.  
Date Published: 2025-06-01
Start Page: 652
End Page: 659
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/bjo-2024-326043
PUBMED: 39694605
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC12171484
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Vivian Tsui-Wen Yin
    6 Yin