Melanoma staging

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]

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Overview

Staging

Further context on cancer staging is available at TNM.

Also of importance are the "Clark level" and "Breslow depth" which refer to the microscopic depth of tumor invasion.[1]

Melanoma stages:

Stage 0: Melanoma in Situ (Clark Level I), 100% Survival

Stage I/II: Invasive Melanoma, 85-95% Survival

  • T1a: Less than 1.00 mm primary, w/o Ulceration, Clark Level II-III
  • T1b: Less than 1.00 mm primary, w/Ulceration or Clark Level IV-V
  • T2a: 1.00-2.00 mm primary, w/o Ulceration

Stage II: High Risk Melanoma, 40-85% Survival

  • T2b: 1.00-2.00 mm primary, w/ Ulceration
  • T3a: 2.00-4.00 mm primary, w/o Ulceration
  • T3b: 2.00-4.00 mm primary, w/ Ulceration
  • T4a: 4.00 mm or greater primary w/o Ulceration
  • T4b: 4.00 mm or greater primary w/ Ulceration

Stage III: Regional Metastasis, 25-60% Survival

  • N1: Single Positive Lymph Node
  • N2: 2-3 Positive Lymph Nodes OR Regional Skin/In-Transit Metastasis
  • N3: 4 Positive Lymph Nodes OR Lymph Node and Regional Skin/In Transit Metastases

Stage IV: Distant Metastasis, 9-15% Survival

  • M1a: Distant Skin Metastasis, Normal LDH
  • M1b: Lung Metastasis, Normal LDH
  • M1c: Other Distant Metastasis OR Any Distant Metastasis with Elevated LDH

Based Upon AJCC 5-Year Survival With Proper Treatment

References

  1. Malignant melanoma: staging at Collaborative Hypertext of Radiology