[HTML][HTML] Tumor-infiltrating macrophages (CD68+ cells) and prognosis in malignant uveal melanoma

T Mäkitie, P Summanen… - … & visual science, 2001 - iovs.arvojournals.org
T Mäkitie, P Summanen, A Tarkkanen, T Kivelä
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science, 2001iovs.arvojournals.org
purpose. To investigate the hypothesis that tumor-infiltrating macrophages contribute to
prognosis of uveal melanoma and to study their association with tumor characteristics,
especially microvessels. methods. This was a retrospective, population-based cohort study
of 167 consecutive patients who had had an eye with choroidal and ciliary body melanoma
removed between 1972 and 1981. Macrophages were identified with mAb PG-M1 to the
CD68 epitope, and their number and morphologic type were recorded. Kaplan-Meier and …
Abstract
purpose. To investigate the hypothesis that tumor-infiltrating macrophages contribute to prognosis of uveal melanoma and to study their association with tumor characteristics, especially microvessels.
methods. This was a retrospective, population-based cohort study of 167 consecutive patients who had had an eye with choroidal and ciliary body melanoma removed between 1972 and 1981. Macrophages were identified with mAb PG-M1 to the CD68 epitope, and their number and morphologic type were recorded. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses of melanoma-specific survival were performed.
results. CD68-positive macrophages could be assessed in 139 (83%) of the 167 melanomas. Their number was moderate to high in 115 (83%) of the 139 tumors, and their morphology ranged from dendritic to round. A high number of macrophages was associated with presence of epithelioid cells (P= 0.025), heavy pigmentation (P= 0.001), and high microvascular density (P= 0.001). The 10-year melanoma-specific mortality rate increased with higher numbers of macrophages (0.10 for low versus 0.57 for high numbers, P= 0.0012). The morphologic type of infiltrating macrophages was not associated with mortality. The number of macrophages was modeled by stratification, which significantly improved a Cox regression model (P< 0.001). Adjusting for the other independent indicators of metastatic death 10-year melanoma-specific mortality was 0.17 for low versus 0.45 for high numbers of macrophages.
conclusions. The number of tumor-infiltrating CD68-positive macrophages contributes to prognosis and associates with cell type and microvascular density, which merits a further analysis of the biological role of these cells in uveal melanoma.
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