 |
|
|
Surgery
Surgery is the usual
treatment for melanoma. The surgeon
removes the tumor and some normal tissue around it. This procedure reduces the chance that cancer cells will be left
in the area. The width and depth of
surrounding skin that needs to be removed depends on the thickness of the
melanoma and how deeply it has invaded the skin:
The doctor may be able to completely remove a very thin
melanoma during the biopsy. Further
surgery may not be necessary.
If the melanoma was not completely removed during the
biopsy, the doctor takes out the remaining tumor. In most cases, additional surgery is performed to remove
normal-looking tissue around the tumor (called the
margin) to make sure
all melanoma cells are removed. This is often necessary, even
for thin melanomas. If the melanoma is
thick, the doctor may need to remove a larger margin of tissue.
If a large
area of tissue is removed, the surgeon may do a skin graft. For this procedure, the doctor uses skin
from another part of the body to replace the skin that was removed.
Lymph nodes
near the tumor may be removed because cancer can spread through the lymphatic
system. If the pathologist finds cancer
cells in the lymph nodes, it may mean that the disease has also spread to other
parts of the body. Two procedures are
used to remove the lymph nodes:
Sentinel
lymph node biopsy—The sentinel lymph node biopsy is done after the
biopsy of the melanoma but before the wider excision
of the tumor. A radioactive substance
is injected near the melanoma. The
surgeon follows the movement of the substance on a computer screen. The first lymph node(s) to take up the
substance is called the sentinel
lymph node(s). (The imaging
study is called lymphoscintigraphy. The procedure to identify the sentinel
node(s) is called sentinel
lymph node mapping.) The
surgeon removes the sentinel node(s) to check for cancer cells.
If a
sentinel node contains cancer cells, the surgeon removes the rest of the lymph
nodes in the area. However, if a
sentinel node does not contain cancer cells, no additional lymph nodes are
removed.
Lymph node dissection—The
surgeon removes all the lymph nodes in the area of the melanoma.
Therapy may be given after surgery to kill cancer cells that remain in
the body. This treatment is called
adjuvant therapy. The
patient may receive biological therapy.
Surgery is
generally not effective in controlling melanoma that has spread to other parts
of the body. In such cases, doctors may
use other methods of treatment, such as chemotherapy, biological therapy,
radiation therapy, or a combination of these methods. |
Glossary Terms
adjuvant therapy (A-joo-vant THAYR-uh-pee)
Additional
cancer treatment given after the primary treatment to lower the
risk that the cancer will come back. Adjuvant therapy may
include chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hormone therapy,
targeted therapy, or biological therapy.
excision (ek-SIH-zhun)
Removal by surgery.
lymph node dissection (limf node dis-EK-shun)
A surgical procedure in which the lymph nodes are removed and examined to see whether they contain cancer. For a regional lymph node dissection, some of the lymph nodes in the tumor area are removed; for a radical lymph node dissection, most or all of the lymph nodes in the tumor area are removed. Also called lymphadenectomy.
lymphoscintigraphy (LIM-foh-sin-TIH-gruh-fee)
A method used to check the lymph system for disease. A radioactive substance that flows through the lymph ducts and can be taken up by lymph nodes is injected into the body. A scanner or probe is used to follow the movement of this substance on a computer screen. Lymphoscintigraphy is used to find the sentinel lymph node (the first node to receive lymph from a tumor), which may be removed and checked for tumor cells. Lymphoscintigraphy is also used to diagnose certain diseases or conditions, such as lymphoma or lymphedema.
margin
The edge or border of the tissue removed in cancer surgery. The margin is described as negative or clean when the pathologist finds no cancer cells at the edge of the tissue, suggesting that all of the cancer has been removed. The margin is described as positive or involved when the pathologist finds cancer cells at the edge of the tissue, suggesting that all of the cancer has not been removed.
sentinel lymph node
The first lymph node to which cancer is likely to spread from the primary tumor. When cancer spreads, the cancer cells may appear first in the sentinel node before spreading to other lymph nodes.
sentinel lymph node biopsy
Removal and examination of the sentinel node(s) (the first lymph node(s) to which cancer cells are likely to spread from a primary tumor). To identify the sentinel lymph node(s), the surgeon injects a radioactive substance, blue dye, or both near the tumor. The surgeon then uses a scanner to find the sentinel lymph node(s) containing the radioactive substance or looks for the lymph node(s) stained with dye. The surgeon then removes the sentinel node(s) to check for the presence of cancer cells.
sentinel lymph node mapping
The use of dyes and radioactive substances to identify the first lymph node to which cancer is likely to spread from the primary tumor. Cancer cells may appear first in the sentinel node before spreading to other lymph nodes and other places in the body.
|
|
 |