CLINICAL TRIAL / NCT03860883
Melanoma Margins Trial-II: 1cm v 2cm Wide Surgical Excision Margins for AJCC Stage II Primary Cutaneous Melanoma
- Interventional
- Recruiting
- NCT03860883
Contact Information
Melanoma Margins Trial-II - A Phase III, Multi-centre Randomised Controlled Trial Investigating 1cm v 2cm Wide Surgical Excision Margins for AJCC Stage II Primary Cutaneous Melanoma (02.18 MelMarT-II)
Patients with a primary invasive melanoma are recommended to undergo excision of the primary lesion with a wide margin. There is evidence that less radical margins of excision may be just as safe. This is a randomised controlled trial of 1 cm versus 2 cm margin of excision of the primary lesion for adult patients with stage II primary invasive cutaneous melanomas (AJCC 8th edition) to determine differences in disease-free survival. A reduction in margins is expected to improve patient quality of life.
This study will determine whether there is a difference in disease-free survival rates
for patients with primary cutaneous melanoma with Breslow thickness > 2mm or 1-2mm with
ulceration (pT2b-pT4b, AJCC 8th edition), treated with either a 1cm excision margin or
2cm margin. The study is designed to be able to prove or disprove that there is no
difference in risk of the tumour recurring around the scar or anywhere else in the body
between the two groups of patients. If the study shows no risk of tumour recurrence then
we will also be able to determine how much of an impact the narrower excision has on
patients in terms of improved quality of life and reduced side effects from the surgery
and melanoma disease. This trial will also evaluate and determine the economic impact of
narrower excision margins on the health services and society in general.
Gender
All
Age Group
18 Years and up
Accepting Healthy Volunteers
No
Inclusion Criteria:
Patients may be included in the study if they meet ALL of the following criteria:
1.
1. Patients must have a Stage II primary invasive cutaneous melanoma (pT2b-pT4b,
AJCC 8th edition) with Breslow thickness >1.0mm to 2.0mm; >2.0mm to 4.0mm or
>4.0mm with ulceration, or >2.0mm to 4.0mm; or >4.0mm without ulceration (Table
1) as determined by diagnostic biopsy (narrow excision, incision, shave or
punch biopsy) and subsequent histopathological analysis.
2. Must have a primary melanoma that is cutaneous (including head, neck, trunk,
extremity, scalp, palm or sole).
3. An uninterrupted 2cm margin must be technically feasible around biopsy scar or
primary melanoma.
4.
4. Surgical intervention (which refers to the staging -SLNB and WLE as these are
both to be done on the same day) must be completed within 120 days of the
original diagnosis. Surgical intervention must also be performed within 28 days
of randomisation.
5. Patients must be 18 years or older at time of consent.
6. Patient must be able to give informed consent and comply with the treatment protocol
and follow up plan.
7. Life expectancy of at least 5 years from the time of diagnosis, not considering the
melanoma in question, as determined by the PI.
8. Patients must have an ECOG performance score between 0 and 1 at screening.
9. A survivor of prior cancer is eligible provided that ALL of the following criteria
are met and documented:
- The patient has undergone potentially curative therapy for all prior
malignancies,
- There has been no evidence of recurrence of any prior malignancies for at least
FIVE years (with the exception of successfully treated uterine/cervical or
non-melanoma skin cancers (SCCs/BCCs) with no evidence of recurrence), and
- The patient is deemed by their treating physician to be at low risk of
recurrence from previous malignancies.
Exclusion Criteria:
Patients will be excluded from the study for ANY of the following reasons:
1. Uncertain diagnosis of melanoma i.e., so-called 'melanocytic lesion of unknown
malignant potential'.
2. Patient has already undergone WLE at the site of the primary index lesion.
3. Patient unable or ineligible to undergo staging SLNB of the primary index lesion.
4. Perineural invasion or neurotropic melanoma: Neurotropism or perineural invasion in
any type of melanoma is an exclusion. Perineural invasion does not include
entrapment of nerves within the main primary tumour mass.
5. Desmoplastic melanoma: with any patient where pathology determines melanoma as PURE
desmoplastic (as per WHO definition of >90% desmoplasia), they are not eligible for
this study. However melanomas with less than 90% desmoplasia or mixed desmoplastic
subtypes are eligible unless there is neurotropism present (perineural invasion).
6. Microsatellitosis (a nest of metastatic tumour cells found to be growing away from
the primary tumour) as per AJCC 8th edition definition is an exclusion.
7. Subungual melanoma
8. Patient has already undergone a local flap reconstruction of the defect after
excision of the primary and determination of an accurate excision margin is
impossible.
9. History of previous or concurrent (i.e. >1 primary melanoma) invasive melanoma.
10. Melanoma located distal to the metacarpophalangeal joint; on the tip of the nose;
the eyelids or on the ear; genitalia, perineum or anus; mucous membranes or internal
viscera.
11. Physical, clinical, radiographic or pathologic evidence of satellite, in-transit,
regional, or distant metastatic melanoma.
12. Patient has undergone surgery on a separate occasion to clear the lymph nodes of the
probable draining lymphatic field, including -SLNB, of the index melanoma.
13. Any additional solid tumour or hematologic malignancy during the past 5 years (with
exception of non- melanoma skin cancers (T1 skin lesions of squamous cell carcinoma
(SCCs), basal cell carcinoma (BCCs)), or uterine/cervical cancer).
14. Melanoma-related operative procedures not corresponding to criteria described in the
protocol.
15. Planned adjuvant radiotherapy to the primary melanoma site after wide local excision
is not permitted as part of the protocol and any patients given this treatment would
be excluded from the study.
16. History of organ transplantation.
17. Oral or parenteral immunosuppressive agents (not topical or inhaled steroids) at
enrolment or within 6 months prior to enrolment.
Pregnancy is not a specific exclusion criterion for this trial, though it may not be
clinically appropriate to perform a wide excision and SLNB until the pregnancy has been
completed, which may exclude the patient due to violation of inclusion criterion 4. We
would advise careful counselling of the patient prior to enrolling the patient, which
would include a discussion at the treating centre's multidisciplinary team meeting or
tumour board. We would strongly advise contacting the central trial office to discuss the
case prior to enrolling on the study.