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Skin Cancer

How Is Skin Cancer Diagnosed?

Last updated on:
29/06/2012

Doctors often can recognize skin cancer just by looking at it.

  • Encourage your doctor to look for growths by doing a complete examination of the entire skin surface during a physical examination at least once a year; more often if you already have a past history of skin cancer.
  • Many people detect skin cancer themselves while doing a regular skin self-examination. A biopsy, however, is the only certain way of identifying skin cancer, and determining the specific type of cancer. In a biopsy, the doctor removes cells or tissues for examination under a microscope. The examination usually is done by a dermatopathologist, a doctor who studies diseased tissue under a microscope.

Two types of biopsy are done for most skin cancers:

  • An excisional biopsy excises, or cuts away, the entire visible growth. For small nonmelanoma skin cancer, an excisional biopsy may also be the only treatment necessary, whereas other cancers like malignant melanoma generally require additional removal of a wider margin of normal tissue around the site.
  • An incisional biopsy, or core biopsy, removes only a sample of the growth. Further treatment is necessary if the microscopic examination reveals cancer cells. This is the most common type of biopsy.

Need To Know:

Early diagnosis is important because skin cancer is most curable when treated in an early stage. Skin cancer would be almost 100 percent curable if all skin cancers were found and treated early.

Edited by Guy Slowik MD FRCS.

 
 

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From Andrew Maynard - Chair of the University of Michigan Department of Environmental Health Sciences, with help from David Faulkner - 2013 Master of Public Health graduate.