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About
RATIONALE: Vaccines may make the body build an immune response to kill tumor cells. It is not yet known whether vaccine therapy is more effective than observation alone for melanoma.
PURPOSE: This randomized phase III trial is studying vaccine therapy to see how well it works compared to observation alone in treating patients with primary stage II melanoma.
Full description
OBJECTIVES:
OUTLINE: This is a randomized, open-label, parallel, multicenter study. Patients are stratified according to participating center, tumor thickness (greater than 1.5 to 3.0 mm vs greater than 3.0 to 4.0 mm vs greater than 4.0 mm), gender, ulceration (yes vs no), and presence of additional staging procedures of regional lymph nodes (yes vs no). Patients are randomized to one of two arms.
PROJECTED ACCRUAL: A total of 1300 patients (650 per arm) will be accrued for this study within 36 months.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS:
Histologically confirmed primary stage II melanoma greater than 1.5 mm without evidence of lymph node metastases
Wide excision with a minimum of 1-2 cm margin surrounding primary lesion or biopsy scar
No clinical, radiological, or pathological evidence of incompletely resected disease, lymph node metastases, in-transit metastasis, or any distant metastatic disease
PATIENT CHARACTERISTICS:
Age:
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Hematopoietic:
Hepatic:
Renal:
Other:
PRIOR CONCURRENT THERAPY:
Biologic therapy:
Chemotherapy:
Endocrine therapy:
Radiotherapy:
Surgery:
Other:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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