The MELFO Study: A Multicenter, Prospective, Randomized Clinical Trial on the Effects of a Reduced Stage-Adjusted Follow-Up Schedule on Cutaneous Melanoma IB–IIC Patients—Results After 3 Years
Background This study compares well-being, recurrences, and deaths of early-stage cutaneous melanoma patients in follow-up, as recommended in the Dutch guideline, with that of patients in a stage-adjusted reduced follow-up schedule, 3 years after diagnosis, as well as costs. Methods Overall, 180 eli...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annals of surgical oncology 2020-05, Vol.27 (5), p.1407-1417 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
This study compares well-being, recurrences, and deaths of early-stage cutaneous melanoma patients in follow-up, as recommended in the Dutch guideline, with that of patients in a stage-adjusted reduced follow-up schedule, 3 years after diagnosis, as well as costs.
Methods
Overall, 180 eligible pathological American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) stage IB–IIC, sentinel node staged, melanoma patients (response rate = 87%, 48% male, median age 57 years), randomized into a conventional (CSG,
n
= 93) or experimental (ESG,
n
= 87) follow-up schedule group, completed patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) at diagnosis (T1): State-Trait Anxiety Inventory–State version (STAI-S), Cancer Worry Scale (CWS), Impact of Event Scale (IES), and RAND-36 (Mental and Physical Component scales [PCS/MCS]). Three years later (T3), 110 patients (CSG,
n
= 56; ESG,
n
= 54) completed PROMs, while 42 declined (23%).
Results
Repeated measures analyses of variance (ANOVAs) showed a significant group effect on the IES (
p
= 0.001) in favor of the ESG, and on the RAND-36 PCS (
p
= 0.02) favoring the CSG. Mean IES and CWS scores decreased significantly over time, while those on the RAND-36 MCS and PCS increased. Effect sizes were small. Twenty-five patients developed a recurrence or second primary melanoma, of whom 13 patients died within 3 years. Cox proportional hazards models showed no differences between groups in recurrence-free survival (hazard ratio [HR] 0.71 [0.32–1.58];
p
= 0.400) and disease-free survival (HR 1.24 [0.42–3.71];
p
= 0.690). Costs per patient after 3 years (computed for 77.3% of patients) were 39% lower in the ESG.
Conclusion
These results seemingly support the notion that a stage-adjusted reduced follow-up schedule forms an appropriate, safe, and cost-effective alternative for pathological AJCC stage IB–IIC melanoma patients to the follow-up regimen as advised in the current melanoma guideline. |
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ISSN: | 1068-9265 1534-4681 |
DOI: | 10.1245/s10434-019-07825-7 |