Prognostic significance of a polypoid configuration in malignant melanoma

Abstract
In a review of 2296 patients with malignant melanoma, the overall incidence of a polypoid configuration was 21.5%. A markedly higher proportion of patients with polypoid melanoma than with dome-shaped melanoma first presented for melanoma treatment already with metastases (i.e., clinical stage II or III). In patients with localized disease, more men than women tended to present with polypoid lesions. The majority of theses lesions were of the nodular histogenetic type, > 3.0 mm thick and ulcerated. When patients with polypoid and dome lesions wee matched according to 3 known important prognostic determinants: sex of patient, the thickness of their primary lesion and whether their lesion showed microscopic evidence of ulceration, no consistent differences in prognosis were detected between patients with polypoid and dome lesions. Thus it appeared that the poor prognosis for patients with polypoid lesions was not attributable to the configuration of their lesion per se but primarily due to the fact that they were typically thick, ulcerated lesions.