Stage-Specific Prognosis, Evaluation And Treatment

Staging is a process that tells a doctor if the cancer has spread, and if it has, how far. Melanoma has five stages of disease, 0, I, II, III, IV. The three early stages of disease (0-II) are collectively referred to as localized disease. This means that as best as your doctor can tell the melanoma cells are confined to the site on the skin, referred to as the primary tumor. These stages are further defined by whether or not the melanoma cells have invaded beyond the outer layer of the skin into the underlying second layer (the dermis) and how deeply they have invaded based on the pathologist's measurements in millimeters under the microscope (referred to as thickness). Other pathology information that is used to stage these tumors are whether or not the skin on top of the primary tumor is broken (referred to as ulceration) and how many of the invasive cells in the dermis are dividing (referred to as mitotic rate). The stage definitions for localized disease are as follows: