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If an abnormal area of skin raises the possibility of skin
cancer, certain medical exams and tests may be used to find out if it
is melanoma, non-melanoma skin cancer, or some other skin condition. If
melanoma is found, other tests may be done to determine if it has
spread to other areas of the body.
Medical History and Physical
Exam
Usually the first step is for your doctor to take your
medical history. The doctor probably will ask your age, when the mark
on the skin first appeared, and whether it has changed in size or
appearance. You may also be asked about past exposures to known causes
of skin cancer and whether anyone in your family has had skin cancer.
During the physical exam, your doctor will note the size,
shape, color, and texture of the area(s) in question, and whether there
is bleeding or scaling. The rest of your body will be checked for spots
and moles that may be related to skin cancer.
The doctor may also check the lymph nodes in the groin,
underarm, or neck areas near the abnormal area of skin. Enlarged lymph
nodes might suggest that any melanoma present may have spread.
If you are being seen by your primary doctor and melanoma is
suspected, you may be referred to a dermatologist, who will look at the
area more closely.
Along with a standard physical exam, many dermatologists use a
technique called dermatoscopy
(also called epiluminescence microscopy [ELM] or surface microscopy) to
see spots on the skin more clearly. This involves the use of a
dermatoscope, which is a special magnifying lens and light source held
near the skin. Sometimes a thin layer of oil is used with this
instrument. A digital or photographic image of the spot may be taken.
The use of these tests by dermatologists who are experienced with them
can improve accuracy in finding melanomas early. It can also often
reassure you that a lesion is benign (non-cancerous) without the need
for a biopsy.
Skin Biopsy
If the doctor thinks a melanoma might be present, he or she
will take a sample of skin from the suspicious area for exam under a
microscope. This is called a skin biopsy. Different methods can be used
for a skin biopsy. The choice depends on the size of the affected area
and its location on your body. Any biopsy is likely to leave a scar.
Since different methods produce different types of scars, you should
ask the doctor about biopsies and scarring before the procedure is
done.
Skin biopsies are done using a local anesthetic (numbing
medicine), which is injected into the area with a very small needle.
You will likely feel a small prick and a little stinging as the
medicine is injected, but should not feel any pain during it or during
the biopsy.
Incisional and Excisional Biopsies
If the doctor has to examine a tumor that may have grown into
the deeper layers of the skin, he or she will perform an incisional or
excisional biopsy. An incisional biopsy removes only a portion of the
tumor. An excisional biopsy removes the entire tumor, and is usually
the preferred method of biopsy for suspected melanomas. After numbing
the area, a surgical knife is used to cut through the full thickness of
skin. A wedge or sliver of skin is removed for further examination, and
the edges of the wound are sewn together. Both of these types of
biopsies can be done using local anesthesia.
Shave Biopsy
For this type of biopsy, the doctor first numbs the area with
a local anesthetic. The doctor then "shaves" off the top layers of the
skin (the epidermis and the outer part of the dermis) with a surgical
blade. A shave biopsy is useful in diagnosing many types of skin
diseases and in sampling moles when the risk of melanoma is very low.
But it is not generally recommended if a melanoma is suspected because
a shave biopsy sample may not be thick enough to measure how deeply the
melanoma has invaded the skin.
Punch Biopsy
A punch biopsy removes a deeper sample of skin but is more
limited in the diameter of the sample that can be taken. The doctor
uses a tool that looks like a tiny round cookie cutter. Once the skin
is numbed with a local anesthetic, the doctor rotates the punch biopsy
tool on the surface of the skin until it cuts through all the layers of
the skin, including the dermis, epidermis, and the upper parts of the
subcutis.
Examining the Biopsy Samples
All skin biopsy samples are looked at under a microscope. The
skin sample is sent to a pathologist, a doctor who has been specially
trained in the microscopic examination and diagnosis of tissue samples.
Often, the sample is sent to a dermatopathologist, a doctor who has
special training in making diagnoses from skin samples.
Biopsies of Melanoma That Has Spread
In rare cases, some melanomas spread so quickly that a person
can have it spread to the lymph nodes, lungs, brain, or other areas
while the original skin melanoma is still small. Melanoma that has
spread (metastasized) to other parts of the body may not be found until
long after the original melanoma was removed from the skin.
When such spread has occurred, the metastatic melanoma in
certain organs might be confused with a cancer starting in that organ.
For example, melanoma that has spread to the lung might be confused
with a primary lung cancer (cancer that starts in the lung).
Biopsies may need to be done to figure out what type of cancer
it is. These types of biopsies may be more involved than those used to
sample the skin. There are special tests that can be done on the biopsy
samples that can tell whether it is a melanoma or some other kind of
cancer. This is important because different cancers are often given
different treatments.
Fine Needle Aspiration Biopsy
A fine needle aspiration (FNA) biopsy is not used for
diagnosis of a suspicious mole but may be used to biopsy large lymph
nodes near a melanoma to find out if the melanoma has spread to them.
This type of biopsy uses a syringe with a thin needle to remove very
small tissue fragments from a tumor. The needle is smaller than the
needle used for a blood test. A local anesthetic is sometimes used to
numb the area first. This test rarely causes much discomfort and does
not leave a scar.
Sometimes a computed tomography (CT) scan (a special type of
x-ray; see below) is used to guide a needle into a tumor in an internal
organ, such as the lung or liver. This test, called a CT-guided needle
biopsy, can be used if the doctor suspects the melanoma has spread to
these organs.
Surgical (Excisional) Lymph Node Biopsy
This procedure can be used to remove an enlarged lymph node
through a small skin incision. Local anesthetic is generally used. This
is often done if a lymph node's size suggests spread of melanoma but an
FNA biopsy of the node did not find any melanoma cells.
Sentinel Lymph Node Mapping and Biopsy
This has become a common procedure for diagnosing melanoma
that has spread to the lymph nodes. This procedure can find the lymph
nodes that drain lymph fluid from the area of the skin where the
melanoma started. If the melanoma has spread, these lymph nodes are
usually the first place it will go. That is why these lymph nodes are
called sentinel nodes (it stands sentinel, or watch, over the tumor, so
to speak).
To map the sentinel lymph node (or nodes), some time before
surgery the doctor injects a small amount of radioactive material into
the area of the melanoma. By checking various lymph node areas with a
radioactivity detector like a Geiger counter, the doctor can see what
group of lymph nodes the melanoma is most likely to travel to. Then the
doctor injects a small amount of a harmless blue dye into the site of
the melanoma. After about an hour, a surgeon makes a small incision in
the identified lymph node area. The lymph nodes are then checked to
find which one(s) turned blue or became radioactive. When the sentinel
node has been found, it is removed and looked at under a microscope. If
the sentinel node does not contain melanoma cells, no more lymph node
surgery is needed because it is very unlikely the melanoma would have
spread beyond this point. If melanoma cells are found in the sentinel
node, the remaining lymph nodes in this area are surgically removed and
looked at as well. This is known as a lymph node dissection.
If a lymph node near a melanoma is abnormally large, the
sentinel node procedure may not be needed. The enlarged node is simply
biopsied.
Imaging Tests
Imaging tests produce pictures of the inside of the body. They
are used mainly to look for the possible spread of melanoma to lymph
nodes or other organs in the body. They are not needed in people with
very early-stage melanoma, which is very unlikely to have spread.
Chest X-ray
This test may be done to help determine whether melanoma has
spread to the lungs.
Computed Tomography (CT)
The CT scan is a type of x-ray test that produces detailed,
cross-sectional images of your body. Unlike a regular x-ray, CT scans
can show the detail in soft tissues (such as internal organs). This
test can help tell if any lymph nodes or organs such as the liver are
enlarged, which might be due to the spread of melanoma. It can also
better identify spread to the lung than the standard chest x-ray.
Instead of taking one picture, as does a regular x-ray, a CT
scanner takes many pictures as it rotates around you. A computer then
combines these pictures into detailed images of the part of your body
that is being studied.
Often after the first set of pictures is taken, you will
receive an intravenous (IV) injection of a dye, or radiocontrast agent,
which helps better outline structures in your body. You may also be
asked to drink 1 to 2 pints of a solution of contrast material. This
helps outline the intestine so that it is not mistaken for tumors if
your doctor is looking for abnormal areas in your abdomen. A second set
of pictures is then taken.
The IV injection of contrast dye can cause some flushing (a
feeling of warmth, especially in the face). Some people are allergic
and get hives or, rarely, more serious reactions like trouble breathing
and low blood pressure. Be sure to tell the doctor if you have ever had
a reaction to any contrast material used for x-rays.
CT scans take longer than regular x-rays. You need to lie
still on a table while they are being done. During the test, the table
moves in and out of the scanner, a ring-shaped machine that completely
surrounds the table. You might feel a bit confined by the ring you have
to lay in when the pictures are being taken.
CT scans can also be used to guide a biopsy needle precisely
into a suspected metastasis. For this procedure, called a CT-guided
needle biopsy, the patient remains on the CT scanning table while a
radiologist moves a biopsy needle through the skin and toward the
location of the mass. CT scans are repeated until the needle is within
the mass. A fine needle biopsy sample (tiny fragment of tissue) or a
core needle biopsy sample (a thin cylinder of tissue about ½-inch long
and less than 1/8-inch in diameter) is then removed to be looked at
under a microscope.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
MRI scans use radio waves and strong magnets instead of
x-rays. The energy from the radio waves is absorbed by the body and
then released in a pattern formed by the type of body tissue and by
certain diseases. A computer translates the pattern into a very
detailed image of parts of the body. Not only does this create images
of cross-sectional slices of the body like a CT scanner, it can also
produce images of slices that are parallel with the length of your
body. A contrast material might be injected, just as with CT scans, but
is used less often.
MRI scans are very helpful in looking at the brain and spinal
cord.
MRI scans take longer than CT scans -- often up to an hour.
You may have to lie inside a narrow tube, which is confining and can
upset people with a fear of enclosed spaces. Newer, "open" MRI machines
can help with this if needed. The MRI machine makes loud buzzing noises
that you may find disturbing. Some places provide headphones to block
this out.
Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
PET scans involve injecting glucose (a form of sugar) that
contains a radioactive atom into the blood. Because cancer cells in the
body are growing rapidly, they absorb large amounts of the radioactive
sugar. A special camera can then create a picture of areas of
radioactivity in the body.
The picture is not finely detailed like a CT or MRI scan, but
it provides helpful information. This test can be useful to see if the
cancer has spread to lymph nodes. PET scans are also useful when your
doctor thinks the cancer has spread but doesn't know to where. Doctors
find it most useful in people with advanced stages of melanoma. It is
not very helpful in people with early stage melanoma.
Nuclear Bone Scan
A bone scan is used to look for spread of cancer to the bones,
but it is rarely used in melanoma. For this test, the radiologist
injects a slightly radioactive chemical into the bloodstream, which
collects in the bones at sites of cancer or other areas where there is
metabolic activity. These areas can then be viewed with a special type
of camera. The images from these scans are seen as "hot spots" in the
body, but they don't provide much detail. If an area lights up on the
scan, x-rays of the affected area can be done to get a more detailed
look. If melanoma is a possibility, a biopsy of the area may be needed
to confirm this.
Revised: 05/30/2007
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