| Booklet: What You
Need to Know about Skin Cancer |
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Detection and Diagnosis
Detection
The cure rate for skin cancer could be 100 percent if all skin
cancers were brought to a doctor's attention before they had a
chance to spread. Therefore, people should check themselves
regularly for new growths or other changes in the skin. Any new,
colored growths or any changes in growths that are already present
should be reported to the doctor without delay. (See the How To Do a
Skin Self-Exam section for a simple guide on how to do a skin
self-exam.)
Doctors should also look at the skin during routine physical
exams. People who have already had skin cancer should be sure to
have regular exams so that the doctor can check the skin--both the
treated areas and other places where cancer may develop.
Diagnosis
Basal cell carcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma are generally
diagnosed and treated in the same way. When an area of skin does not
look normal, the doctor may remove all or part of the growth. This
is called a biopsy.
To check for cancer cells, the tissue is examined under a microscope
by a pathologist
or a dermatologist.
A biopsy is the only sure way to tell if the problem is cancer.
Doctors generally divide skin cancer into two stages: local
(affecting only the skin) or metastatic (spreading beyond the skin).
Because skin cancer rarely spreads, a biopsy often is the only test
needed to determine the stage. In cases where the growth is very
large or has been present for a long time, the doctor will carefully
check the lymph
nodes in the area. In addition, the patient may need to have
additional tests, such as special x-rays, to find out whether the
cancer has spread to other parts of the body. Knowing the stage of a
skin cancer helps the doctor plan the best treatment.
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