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DIAGNOSIS
You or your doctor may decide a mole or change on your
skin looks like cancer based on the
ABCDs of melanoma. However, a positive diagnosis of skin
cancer can only be made based on
laboratory analysis. Your doctor will remove the
suspicious growth and send it to a pathologist, who will
examine it under a microscope. Even with a biopsy, melanoma
can sometimes be hard to diagnose. For this reason, it is
generally recommended that the pathology test be confirmed
by a dermatopathologist.
Diagnostic Procedures
Skin Biopsy
If your doctor sees a mole or suspicious
growth on your skin, they may decide to biopsy it. A
skin biopsy is a simple procedure that involves taking
all or part of the lesion and examining it under a
microscope to see if there are cancer cells present. Your
doctor performs the procedure, and a specialist known as a
pathologist looks at the specimen. Biopsies are important in
determining whether you have skin cancer and, if you do,
they provide information that is helpful to your doctor in
determining your risk and selecting the best course of
treatment.
Different techniques are used to perform skin biopsies
including punch, shave/scoop, and excisional. Your
health-care provider decides which kind to perform based on
such factors as the size and location of the lesion. If you
have more than one lesion biopsied, you may have more than
one kind of biopsy. No matter what kind of biopsy you have,
you will be given a local anesthetic so the procedure is
nearly painless.
Sentinel Lymph Node Biopsy
Sentinel lymph node biopsy, also known as
intraoperative lymphatic mapping, can identify a single
lymph node that indicates that cancer has spread. Lymph
nodes are small, bean-shaped structures that are found
throughout the body. They act as biological filters and
produce and store infection-fighting cells. If melanoma has
invaded the body (penetrated below the outer surface of the
skin), then it can spread (metastasize) to the lymph nodes.
Melanoma can spread quickly to other parts of the body
through the lymph system or through the blood.
Treatment and prognosis, or long-term outlook for
survival, are both based on whether or not the melanoma has
spread to the lymph nodes. Up until a few years ago,
patients with invasive melanoma had all of the lymph nodes
near the tumor removed to protect them against potential
spread of the disease. Sentinal lymph node mapping is used
to find the first lymph node that drains lymph fluid from
the area where the melanoma developed. If there is no
melanoma present in the first, or sentinel, lymph node, then
the chance of the disease being present in any of the lymph
nodes in the area is almost zero.
This new technique means that many melanoma patients can
now avoid unnecessary surgery (a matter of concern because
lymph node dissection is a major surgical procedure
associated with a number of potential complications). It may
also allow better detection of small amounts of potentially
lethal melanoma cells because pathologists will be able to
focus their exams on one or two lymph nodes rather than a
large number of nodes.
The procedure involves injecting a small amount of blue
dye and a radioactive chemical into the site of the
melanoma. After an hour, the lymph nodes are checked to see
which one is draining lymph fluid from the skin near the
melanoma. The blue dye helps this process to be visible. The
radioactive tracer chemical is traced by a Geiger counter
which helps direct the physician to the appropriate node
(the sentinel node). The sentinel node is then removed for
examination under a microscope. If melanoma cells are
present, the remaining lymph nodes in this area are
surgically removed. If the sentinel node does not contain
melanoma cells, further lymph node surgery can be avoided.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy spares 70 percent of patients
with melanoma from major surgeries and dramatically
increases the accuracy of determining whether the cancer has
spread. Currently, sentinel node biopsy is recommended for
melanomas greater than 1.5 millimetres in diameter.
Nuclear scans
In this procedure, a radioactive chemical
is injected into a vein. A special camera is used to see if
the melanoma has spread to bones or liver. |