[HTML][HTML] Vitiligo is an independent favourable prognostic factor in stage III and IV metastatic melanoma patients: results from a single-institution hospital-based …

P Quaglino, F Marenco, S Osella-Abate, N Cappello… - Annals of …, 2010 - Elsevier
P Quaglino, F Marenco, S Osella-Abate, N Cappello, M Ortoncelli, B Salomone, MT Fierro…
Annals of Oncology, 2010Elsevier
Background The clinical features and the prognostic relevance of vitiligo lesions in
melanoma patients are still controversial. This prospective observational study was
designed to characterise the clinical features of melanoma-associated vitiligo, to analyse the
association with other autoimmune manifestations and to ascertain whether the
development of vitiligo lesions carries a prognostic relevance on the clinical course of
melanoma. Materials and methods A total of 2954 consecutive patients have been included; …
Background
The clinical features and the prognostic relevance of vitiligo lesions in melanoma patients are still controversial. This prospective observational study was designed to characterise the clinical features of melanoma-associated vitiligo, to analyse the association with other autoimmune manifestations and to ascertain whether the development of vitiligo lesions carries a prognostic relevance on the clinical course of melanoma.
Materials and methods
A total of 2954 consecutive patients have been included; multivariate analyses of distant metastasis-free survival (DMFS) and overall survival (OS) were carried out to ascertain the independent prognostic role of vitiligo as a time-dependent covariate.
Results
Vitiligo was demonstrated in 83 of 2954 melanoma patients (2.8%). A significantly higher percentage of autoimmune diseases was demonstrated in vitiligo patients (7 of 83) with respect to patients without vitiligo (80 of 2871) (P = 0.004). Multivariate analyses selected the time-dependent covariate vitiligo as the favourable independent prognostic variable associated to a longer DMFS in stage III and a higher OS in both stage III and stage IV.
Conclusion
Melanoma-associated vitiligo should be considered as a distinct clinical entity, separate from vitiligo vulgaris, and identifies a subgroup of patients characterised by a high prevalence of immune-mediated diseases and by a favourable prognosis.
Elsevier