Skip to main content
An official website of the United States government

Lymph Node Excision for Patients with Stage III Melanoma with One Clinically Positive Node, EXCILYNT Trial

Trial Status: active

This phase II clinical trial evaluates lymph node excision (LNEx) for patients with stage III melanoma with one clinically positive node. Lymph nodes are structures in the body that house the immune system – the system in the body that helps to fight off disease and infection. For patients with newly diagnosed melanoma that have cancer in one of the lymph nodes, it is standard practice to remove the melanoma as well as to perform a lymph node dissection. This means that the lymph node with cancer in it is removed along with multiple lymph nodes surrounding the cancerous lymph node. Removing multiple lymph nodes can cause side effects such as swelling, pain, and decreased mobility. The purpose of this clinical trial is to find out if removing only the cancerous lymph node (known as a lymph node excision) is effective at preventing cancer from coming back in the same area of the lymph node excision in patients with stage III melanoma.