When is melanoma usually diagnosed?

The average age of diagnosis is 65. Before age 50, more women are diagnosed with melanoma than men. The development of melanoma is more common as people grow older. But it also develops in younger people, including those younger than 30 years old.
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What stage are most melanomas diagnosed?

The most melanoma cases (31 cases, or 36.47%) were diagnosed at stage II and the least at stage IV (9 cases, or 10.59%) (Fig. 3).
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At what age does melanoma start to show up?

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 can you have melanoma before knowing?

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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Is most melanoma caught early?

Melanoma can often be found early, when it is most likely to be cured. Some people have a higher risk of getting melanoma than others, but it's important to know that anyone can get melanoma.
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How is melanoma diagnosed?



What does Stage 1 melanoma look like?

Stage IA Melanoma: The melanoma tumor is less than 1.0 millimeter thick (less than the size of a sharpened pencil point) with or without ulceration (broken skin) when viewed under the microscope. Stage IB Melanoma: The melanoma tumor is more than 1.0 millimeter and less than 2.0 millimeters thick without ulceration.
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What are the early warning signs of melanoma?

The most important warning sign of melanoma is a new spot on the skin or a spot that is changing in size, shape, or color. Another important sign is a spot that looks different from all of the other spots on your skin (known as the ugly duckling sign).
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Does melanoma show up in blood work?

Blood tests. 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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Does melanoma always start mole?

Melanoma doesn't always begin as a mole. It can also occur on otherwise normal-appearing skin.
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How can you tell if a spot is melanoma?

The edges are irregular, ragged, notched, or blurred. The color is not the same all over and may include shades of brown or black, sometimes with patches of pink, red, white, or blue. The spot is larger than ¼ inch across – about the size of a pencil eraser – although melanomas can sometimes be smaller than this.
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How common is melanoma at 30?

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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Where does melanoma usually start?

Melanomas can develop anywhere on the skin, but they are more likely to start on the trunk (chest and back) in men and on the legs in women. The neck and face are other common sites.
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Can you live 20 years with melanoma?

Survival for all stages of melanoma

Generally for people with melanoma in England: almost all people (almost 100%) will survive their melanoma for 1 year or more after they are diagnosed. around 90 out of every 100 people (around 90%) will survive their melanoma for 5 years or more after diagnosis.
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What percentage of melanoma is caught early?

If melanoma has spread to other, distant parts of the body, the survival rate is lower, about 30%. Treatment advances have doubled this survival rate since 2004. Approximately 5% of cases are diagnosed at this stage.
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Is melanoma a death sentence?

Metastatic melanoma was once almost a death sentence, with a median survival of less than a year. Now, some patients are living for years, with a few out at more than 10 years.
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Does Stage 1 melanoma require chemo?

Treating stage I melanoma

Most often, no other treatment is needed. Some doctors may recommend a sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB) to look for cancer in nearby lymph nodes, especially if the melanoma is stage IB or has other characteristics that make it more likely to have spread.
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Does melanoma show up overnight?

Melanomas may appear suddenly and without warning. They are found most frequently on the face and neck, upper back and legs, but can occur anywhere on the body.
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Are melanoma moles raised or flat?

The most common type of melanoma usually appears as a flat or barely raised lesion with irregular edges and different colours. Fifty per cent of these melanomas occur in preexisting moles.
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When is melanoma too late?

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. Symptoms of late-stage skin cancer depend on where the cancer is in the body.
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How often do dermatologists miss melanoma?

It has been reported that up to 63% of patients diagnosed with melanoma had visited their general practitioner within the year prior to the diagnosis for another medical problem. Dermatologists do not do much better, with only 30% of them performing a total body skin examination on all their patients.
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How does your body feel when you have melanoma?

hard or swollen lymph nodes. hard lump on your skin. unexplained pain. feeling very tired or unwell.
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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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Does melanoma itch or hurt?

Early warning signs of melanoma

It may look like an age spot, a bruise, a sore, a cyst, a scar or a dark line beneath your nail. You may not feel a melanoma, but there are times that it may itch, hurt or bleed.
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Can melanoma be benign?

Melanoma, benign: A benign growth of the melanocytes that is not cancerous. A mole may be a melanocytic nevus.
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