Ra. Ghossein et al., PROGNOSTIC-SIGNIFICANCE OF PERIPHERAL-BLOOD AND BONE-MARROW TYROSINASE MESSENGER-RNA IN MALIGNANT-MELANOMA, Clinical cancer research, 4(2), 1998, pp. 419-428
The objectives of this study were to evaluate the prognostic significa
nce of reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) detection of tyrosinase mRNA
in the peripheral blood (PB) and bone marrow (BM) of patients with st
age II-IV malignant melanoma (MM), Seventy-three PB samples and 109 BM
aspirates from 123 assessable patients with stage II-IV MM were analy
zed for tyrosinase mRNA using nested RT-PCR, Twenty-five controls with
out MM were also evaluated. The RT-PCR results were correlated with ov
erall survival (OS) and clinical stage. Overall, 23 of the 123 patient
s with MM (19%) had tyrosinase mRNA in their blood and/or BM, RT-PCR p
ositivity was present in the PB of 9 of 73 patients (12%), whereas 18
of 109 (16.5%) had tyrosinase mRNA in their BM. All controls were tyro
sinase PCR negative, There was no correlation between RT-PCR results a
nd clinical stage, Within stage II, BM PCR-positive patients had a sho
rter median survival (24 months) than BM PCR-negative individuals (med
ian not reached), with a P approaching significance (P = 0.06), There
was a statistically significant correlation between blood PCR positivi
ty and decreased overall survival (P = 0.03) in all patients, Blood PC
R positivity was associated with a significantly decreased OS in stage
II and III (P = 0.01 and 0.02, respectively) and was not a predictor
of OS in stage IV, In multivariate analysis, blood RT-PCR for tyrosina
se mRNA was found to be an independent predictor of survival (P = 0.03
; risk ratio, 2.87), RT-PCR can specifically detect tyrosinase mRNA in
the PB and BM of patients with MM. Blood RT-PCR is an independent pre
dictor of overall survival in stage II-III MM. Additional studies are
needed to define the potential role of this assay in the management of
patients with advanced melanoma.