What is the earliest stage melanoma?

The earliest stage of melanoma, stage 0, is limited to the outermost skin layer called the epidermis. This is a noninvasive stage, which is also called melanoma “in situ,” meaning “in its original place.” With stage I melanoma, the tumor's thickness is 1mm or less.
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Can melanoma stage 1 be cured?

Prognosis for Stage 1 Melanoma: With appropriate treatment, Stage I melanoma is highly curable. There is low risk for recurrence or metastasis. The 5-year survival rate as of 2018 for local melanoma, including Stage I, is 98.4%. Learn more about melanoma survival rates.
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Can you have stage 1 melanoma for years?

Stage 1 is considered a 'thin melanoma'. If your melanoma is caught before it is too thick the prognosis is very good. Nearly 19 in 20 people who have a stage 1 melanoma are alive at least five years after being diagnosed. Stage 1 is the least serious type of melanoma.
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How fast does Stage 1 melanoma spread?

Melanoma can grow very quickly. It can become life-threatening in as little as 6 weeks and, if untreated, it can spread to other parts of the body. Melanoma can appear on skin not normally exposed to the sun.
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How long can you have melanoma before noticing?

How long can you have melanoma and not know it? It depends on the type of melanoma. For example, nodular melanoma grows rapidly over a matter of weeks, while a radial melanoma can slowly spread over the span of a decade. Like a cavity, a melanoma may grow for years before producing any significant symptoms.
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Melanoma Treatment: A Patient Video Guide - Early Stage Melanoma (Part 1 of 4)



Can you have melanoma for 2 years and not know?

“You could have melanoma for a long time before you realize it, because some types are not so obvious. Some aggressive forms, like nodular melanoma, grow fast, are visible and can hurt or bleed.” While certain groups may be at a higher risk for melanoma, anyone can get the disease.
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What does the start of melanoma look like?

Often the first sign of melanoma is a change in the shape, color, size, or feel of an existing mole. However, melanoma may also appear as a new mole. People should tell their doctor if they notice any changes on the skin. The only way to diagnose melanoma is to remove tissue and check it for cancer cells.
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Does melanoma show up in blood work?

Blood tests aren't used to diagnose melanoma, but some tests may be done before or during treatment, especially for more advanced melanomas. Doctors often test blood for levels of a substance called lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) before treatment.
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How do you know if you caught melanoma early?

Any change in size, shape, color or elevation of a spot on your skin, or any new symptom in it, such as bleeding, itching or crusting, may be a warning sign of melanoma.
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Does Stage 1 melanoma require chemo?

Stage I melanoma is typically treated by wide excision (surgery to remove the melanoma as well as a margin of normal skin around it). The width of the margin depends on the thickness and location of the melanoma. Most often, no other treatment is needed.
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What age should you worry about melanoma?

The risk of melanoma increases as people age. The average age of people when it is diagnosed is 65. But melanoma is not uncommon even among those younger than 30. In fact, it's one of the most common cancers in young adults (especially young women).
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How long does it take for melanoma to spread to organs?

The lesion can grow slowly for 5 to 15 years in the in situ form before becoming invasive. The exact percentage of lentigo maligna lesions that progress to invasive lentigo maligna melanoma is unknown but is estimated to be less than 30% to 50%.
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How can you tell if a spot is melanoma?

What are the signs and symptoms of melanoma?
  1. Changing mole.
  2. Spot that looks like a new mole, freckle, or age spot, but it looks different from the others on your skin.
  3. Spot that has a jagged border, more than one color, and is growing.
  4. Dome-shaped growth that feels firm and may look like a sore, which may bleed.
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What can be mistaken for melanoma?

Nevus (mole)

Moles, also known as nevi, are one of the most common growths that people find on their skin. Growing mostly in early adulthood these are some of the growths most commonly mistaken for melanomas.
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How big is stage 2 melanoma?

With stage II melanoma, the tumor has penetrated the skin deeper than 1 mm. It may have ulcerated, but not in all cases. Although a tumor at this stage may not have advanced, it has a high risk of spreading. A thicker melanoma, such as a tumor more than 4 mm, has a very high risk of spreading.
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What organs does melanoma spread to first?

Doctors have known for decades that melanoma and many other cancer types tend to spread first into nearby lymph nodes before entering the blood and traveling to distant parts of the body.
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Do you feel unwell with melanoma?

General symptoms

hard or swollen lymph nodes. hard lump on your skin. unexplained pain. feeling very tired or unwell.
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What are four warning signs of melanoma?

The "ABCDE" rule is helpful in remembering the warning signs of melanoma:
  • Asymmetry. The shape of one-half of the mole does not match the other.
  • Border. The edges are ragged, notched, uneven, or blurred.
  • Color. Shades of black, brown, and tan may be present. ...
  • Diameter. ...
  • Evolving.
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Can you tell what stage a melanoma is from looking at it?

To determine the stage of a melanoma, the lesion and some surrounding healthy tissue need to be surgically removed and analyzed using a microscope. Doctors use the melanoma's thickness, measured in millimeters (mm), and the other characteristics described in Diagnosis to help determine the disease's stage.
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Can a doctor tell if a mole is cancerous just by looking at it?

A visual check of your skin only finds moles that may be cancer. It can't tell you for sure that you have it. The only way to diagnose the condition is with a test called a biopsy. If your doctor thinks a mole is a problem, they will give you a shot of numbing medicine, then scrape off as much of the mole as possible.
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Can a dermatologist tell if you have melanoma?

A dermatologist has been trained to see certain findings using their dermatoscope. The dermatoscope improves how accurately we can find cancer. It also helps us tell the difference between normal lesions of the skin from melanoma. This exam helps lower your chances of having a biopsy you don't need.
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How common is melanoma by age?

On age related cancers, melanoma is the #1 most diagnosed cancer among 25 to 29 year olds in the United States. For 15 to 29 year olds, it is the 3rd most common for men and 4th most common for women. The average age of people diagnosed with melanoma is 63. But melanoma is not uncommon even among those younger than 30.
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Is melanoma no big deal?

Melanoma is usually curable when detected and treated early. Once it has spread deeper into the skin or other parts of the body, it becomes more difficult to treat and can be deadly. The estimated five-year survival rate for U.S. patients whose melanoma is detected early is about 99 percent.
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How often do dermatologists miss melanoma?

Reading these data inversely, a clinician would realize that with every 50 patients he/she examines without a total body check, 1 skin cancer is missed, and with every 400 patients 1 melanoma is overlooked.
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When is melanoma too late?

What are the signs of late-stage skin cancer? Melanoma is considered stage 4 when it has metastasized to lymph nodes in a part of the body far from the original tumor or if it has metastasized to internal organs like the lungs, liver, brain, bone or gastrointestinal tract.
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