› Forums › General Melanoma Community › Newly diagnosed melanoma insitua2
- This topic has 27 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 5 months ago by
Janner.
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- September 15, 2013 at 5:58 am
Do you have a copy of your pathology report? Your statement of stage doesn’t make sense. In situ melanoma is stage 0 and is a totally different beast than stage 2. If you could post your pathology report, that could help us understand your situation better. Treatment for those tages is quite different. Did you have a sentinel node biopsy? We need more details to be able to comment. Sorry you had to join us here.Best wishes,
janner
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- September 15, 2013 at 5:58 am
Do you have a copy of your pathology report? Your statement of stage doesn’t make sense. In situ melanoma is stage 0 and is a totally different beast than stage 2. If you could post your pathology report, that could help us understand your situation better. Treatment for those tages is quite different. Did you have a sentinel node biopsy? We need more details to be able to comment. Sorry you had to join us here.Best wishes,
janner
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- September 15, 2013 at 5:58 am
Do you have a copy of your pathology report? Your statement of stage doesn’t make sense. In situ melanoma is stage 0 and is a totally different beast than stage 2. If you could post your pathology report, that could help us understand your situation better. Treatment for those tages is quite different. Did you have a sentinel node biopsy? We need more details to be able to comment. Sorry you had to join us here.Best wishes,
janner
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- September 15, 2013 at 9:21 am
Maybe the pathologist gave a differential diagnosis between in-situ and superficially invasive to level II (not stage II)? Is that possible?
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- September 15, 2013 at 7:29 pm
My microscopic description is 8x6x1mm in situ there is proliferation of atypical melanocytes arranged as solitary units and in nest at the dermal epidermal junction with scattered atypical melanocytes throughout the upper reaches of the epidermis. Where nests are present, they tend to confluence. The dermis contains a scattered inflammatory cell infiltrate with occasional bland appearing melanocytes and melanophages, though no no diagnostic invasive disease is seen. These findings are those of melanoma in situ arising in the background of a dysplastic Nevis. The lateral margin is involved. Re excision recommended in order to ensure complete removal then it say clinical diagnosis Nevius mm 8x6x1mmtoto3p1boa-
- September 15, 2013 at 10:20 pm
So, where did you get stage 2? This appears to be melanoma in situ. Stage 0. The only treatment for this is surgical removal with 5mm clear margins. There is no need for any other treatments. Melanoma in situ is typically considered cured after removed. It is always good to pay attention to your body and watch your skin for changes. Report anything unusual to yout docs. Otherwise live life! -
- September 15, 2013 at 10:20 pm
So, where did you get stage 2? This appears to be melanoma in situ. Stage 0. The only treatment for this is surgical removal with 5mm clear margins. There is no need for any other treatments. Melanoma in situ is typically considered cured after removed. It is always good to pay attention to your body and watch your skin for changes. Report anything unusual to yout docs. Otherwise live life! -
- September 15, 2013 at 10:20 pm
So, where did you get stage 2? This appears to be melanoma in situ. Stage 0. The only treatment for this is surgical removal with 5mm clear margins. There is no need for any other treatments. Melanoma in situ is typically considered cured after removed. It is always good to pay attention to your body and watch your skin for changes. Report anything unusual to yout docs. Otherwise live life! -
- September 15, 2013 at 10:20 pm
So, where did you get stage 2? This appears to be melanoma in situ. Stage 0. The only treatment for this is surgical removal with 5mm clear margins. There is no need for any other treatments. Melanoma in situ is typically considered cured after removed. It is always good to pay attention to your body and watch your skin for changes. Report anything unusual to yout docs. Otherwise live life! -
- September 16, 2013 at 12:27 am
I would definitely talk to your derm about this because there is nothing in the path report to support stage 2. If this were anything but in situ, you would see a number in millimeters, a depth. This would be how deep the lesion went into the skin. In situ has no depth and the path report supports this. So it may be you misunderstood stage two somehow. Stage two would also have required a sentinel node biopsy where they surgically remove a lymph node. I would talk to your doc again. -
- September 16, 2013 at 12:27 am
I would definitely talk to your derm about this because there is nothing in the path report to support stage 2. If this were anything but in situ, you would see a number in millimeters, a depth. This would be how deep the lesion went into the skin. In situ has no depth and the path report supports this. So it may be you misunderstood stage two somehow. Stage two would also have required a sentinel node biopsy where they surgically remove a lymph node. I would talk to your doc again. -
- September 16, 2013 at 12:27 am
I would definitely talk to your derm about this because there is nothing in the path report to support stage 2. If this were anything but in situ, you would see a number in millimeters, a depth. This would be how deep the lesion went into the skin. In situ has no depth and the path report supports this. So it may be you misunderstood stage two somehow. Stage two would also have required a sentinel node biopsy where they surgically remove a lymph node. I would talk to your doc again. -
- September 15, 2013 at 10:20 pm
So, where did you get stage 2? This appears to be melanoma in situ. Stage 0. The only treatment for this is surgical removal with 5mm clear margins. There is no need for any other treatments. Melanoma in situ is typically considered cured after removed. It is always good to pay attention to your body and watch your skin for changes. Report anything unusual to yout docs. Otherwise live life! -
- September 15, 2013 at 10:20 pm
So, where did you get stage 2? This appears to be melanoma in situ. Stage 0. The only treatment for this is surgical removal with 5mm clear margins. There is no need for any other treatments. Melanoma in situ is typically considered cured after removed. It is always good to pay attention to your body and watch your skin for changes. Report anything unusual to yout docs. Otherwise live life!
-
- September 15, 2013 at 7:29 pm
My microscopic description is 8x6x1mm in situ there is proliferation of atypical melanocytes arranged as solitary units and in nest at the dermal epidermal junction with scattered atypical melanocytes throughout the upper reaches of the epidermis. Where nests are present, they tend to confluence. The dermis contains a scattered inflammatory cell infiltrate with occasional bland appearing melanocytes and melanophages, though no no diagnostic invasive disease is seen. These findings are those of melanoma in situ arising in the background of a dysplastic Nevis. The lateral margin is involved. Re excision recommended in order to ensure complete removal then it say clinical diagnosis Nevius mm 8x6x1mmtoto3p1boa -
- September 15, 2013 at 7:29 pm
My microscopic description is 8x6x1mm in situ there is proliferation of atypical melanocytes arranged as solitary units and in nest at the dermal epidermal junction with scattered atypical melanocytes throughout the upper reaches of the epidermis. Where nests are present, they tend to confluence. The dermis contains a scattered inflammatory cell infiltrate with occasional bland appearing melanocytes and melanophages, though no no diagnostic invasive disease is seen. These findings are those of melanoma in situ arising in the background of a dysplastic Nevis. The lateral margin is involved. Re excision recommended in order to ensure complete removal then it say clinical diagnosis Nevius mm 8x6x1mmtoto3p1boa
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