Clinicopathologic associations of BRAF mutation status in patients with metastatic melanoma
Keywords:
metastatic melanoma, BRAF mutation, clinicopathologic features, tyrosine kinase inhibitorsAbstract
Aim: BRAF is frequently mutated in cutaneous melanoma. The aim of the study was to assess BRAF status association with clinicopathologic features and outcome in patients with metastatic melanoma. Methods: We identified 197 consecutive Polish patients with metastatic melanoma treated in one oncological center and tested for BRAF mutation. We performed a retrospective chart review of patients to identify clinicopathologic characteristics in BRAF-mutant and BRAF wild-type patients. Results: 122/197 patients (61.9%) had BRAF mutation. The age at diagnosis of primary melanoma (PM) was significantly younger for BRAF-mutant (median age 52, n=122, range 19−78) than for BRAF wild-type (median age 58, n=75, range 19-85; p<0.05) patients. The most common site of PM in BRAF-mutant patients was the trunk (45.9%). The most common locations of first distant metastasis were the lungs, regardless of the BRAF mutation status. There was no difference in the time to occurrence of metastatic disease between BRAF-positive and BRAF-negative cohorts (p=0.75). Patients without BRAF mutations had non-significantly better overall survival (OS) when calculated from diagnosis of metastatic disease as compared to BRAF-mutant patients not treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (median OS: 337 vs. 270 days, respectively), but OS was significantly better for BRAF-mutant patients treated with BRAF/MEK inhibitors (median OS not reached; p<0.05). Conclusions: Age at diagnosis differed between the groups. The presence of mutant BRAF had no impact on the interval from diagnosis of melanoma to first distant metastasis, but had some impact on the natural course of metastatic disease.Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
OPEN ACCESS
All the articles of the European Journal of Oncology and Environmental Health are published with open access under the CC-BY Creative Commons attribution license (the current version is CC-BY, version 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). This means that the author(s) retain copyright, but the content is free to download, distribute and adapt for commercial or non-commercial purposes, given appropriate attribution to the original article.
The articles in the previous edition of the Journal (European Journal of Oncology) are made available online with open access under the CC-BY Creative Commons attribution license (the current version is CC-BY, version 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Upon submission, author(s) grant the Journal the license to publish their original unpublished work within one year, and the non exclusive right to display, store, copy and reuse the content. The CC-BY Creative Commons attribution license enables anyone to use the publication freely, given appropriate attribution to the author(s) and citing the Journal as the original publisher. The CC-BY Creative Commons attribution license does not apply to third-party materials that display a copyright notice to prohibit copying. Unless the third-party content is also subject to a CC-BY Creative Commons attribution license, or an equally permissive license, the author(s) must comply with any third-party copyright notices.