A Cross‐Sectional Study of Platelet‐to‐Lymphocyte Ratio in Relation to Pigment Cell Nevi and Atypical Mole Syndrome
Reetta Nevakivi, Hanna Siiskonen, Salla Haimakainen, Ilkka T. Harvima

TL;DR
This study finds that a higher platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio is linked to having many moles or atypical mole syndrome, which are risk factors for skin cancer.
Contribution
The study identifies a novel association between elevated platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio and increased melanocytic nevi or atypical mole syndrome.
Findings
High PLR is significantly associated with having more than 50 melanocytic nevi.
PLR is strongly linked to atypical mole syndrome.
NLR, ELR, and SII show no association with nevi or AMS.
Abstract
Melanocytic nevi (MN) and atypical melanocytic nevi (AMN) are established risk factors for cutaneous malignant melanoma (CMM), with patients exhibiting atypical mole syndrome (AMS) facing an even greater risk. Peripheral blood biomarkers—including neutrophil‐to‐lymphocyte ratio (NLR), eosinophil‐to‐lymphocyte ratio (ELR), platelet‐to‐lymphocyte ratio (PLR), and systemic immune‐inflammation index (SII)—have been linked to various cancers, including CMM. This cross‐sectional study aimed to investigate the relationship between these biomarkers and MN and AMS, which are common phenotypes among melanoma patients. A total of 505 subjects (aged 21–79, 254 males and 249 females, 96 with immunosuppression) at elevated risk of any type of skin cancer were examined for MN, AMN, level of cutaneous photodamage, and other potential confounding factors. A peripheral blood sample was analyzed for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCutaneous Melanoma Detection and Management · Lymphatic System and Diseases · Systemic Sclerosis and Related Diseases
