Objective: To study clinical and histological features associated with metastasizing thin melanomas (MTMs).
Design: Case-control study of clinicopathological features of patients with MTMs by a panel of 10 dermatopathologists.
Setting: Members of the North American Melanoma Pathology Study Group selected the cases from the melanoma databases at 8 academic institutions.
Patients: Forty-three patients with MTMs (<1 mm thick) and 42 control subjects without metastasis matched for age, sex, tumor site, and Breslow thickness.
Intervention: None.
Main outcome measures: Clinical (age, sex, site of lesion, stage at diagnosis, metastasis site, disease-free survival, and outcome) and histological (Breslow thickness, Clark level, growth phase, regression, and inflammatory response) features of patients with MTMs vs controls.
Results: There was an overrepresentation of axial tumors among patients with MTMs. Extensive regression was present in 18 patients (42%) with MTM vs 2 matched control subjects (5%) (95% confidence interval, 21%-53%; P =.001). Other histological variables were not significantly different. Two patients had melanomas in situ with subsequent metastasis.
Conclusions: Thin melanomas with extensive regression represent a group at higher risk for the development of metastasis. Furthermore, the risk of metastasis cannot be dismissed in cases of melanoma in situ.