Conjunctival Melanoma: Outcomes based on the American Joint Committee on Cancer Clinical Classification (8th Edition) of 425 Patients at a Single Ocular Oncology Center
Carol L. Shields, Antonio Yaghy, Lauren A. Dalvin, Sarangdev Vaidya, Richard R. Pacheco, Alejandro Pérez, Sara E. Lally, Jerry A. Shields
Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to evaluate outcomes of conjunctiva melanoma based on the American Joint Committee on Cancer Classification (AJCC) 8th edition. DESIGN: Retrospective interventional case series. METHODS: Outcomes analysis of 425 patients. RESULTS: In this analysis of 425 patients with conjunctival melanoma, there were 266 (63%) patients classified as T1, 75 (18%) as T2, 84 (20%) as T3, and 0 (0%) as T4. A comparison (T1 vs T2 vs T3) revealed that history of primary acquired melanosis was more common in T2 (81% vs 96% vs 81%; P = 0.01) and conjunctival nevus more common in T1 (20% vs 9% vs 11%; P = 0.03). Of 381 patients with follow-up (mean of 57.6 months), comparison revealed higher T category with increasing local recurrence/new tumor (30% vs 43% vs 49%; P = 0.004), increasing exenteration (3% vs 9% vs 28%; P < 0.001), increasing melanoma-related locoregional lymph node metastasis (2% vs 7% vs 12%; P = 0.001), increasing melanoma-related systemic metastasis (9% vs 25% vs 23%; P < 0.001), and increasing melanoma-related death (4% vs 12% vs 18%; P < 0.001). A comparison at 10 years revealed visual acuity loss of >3 lines (32% vs 42% vs 63%; P < 0.001), melanoma recurrence/new tumor (47% vs 70% vs 74%; P < 0.001), exenteration (4% vs 24% vs 46%; P < 0.001), melanoma-related locoregional lymph node metastasis (3% vs 13% vs 25%; P < 0.001), melanoma-related systemic metastasis (13% vs 45% vs 40%; P < 0.001), and melanoma-related death (8% vs 22% vs 37%; P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Based on the AJCC 8th edition of conjunctival melanoma, the 10-year risk per T category significantly increased for visual acuity loss of >3 lines, recurrence/new tumor, exenteration, locoregional and systemic melanoma-related metastasis, and melanoma-related death.