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Melanoma evaluation and management: expanding the role of the general practitioner in skin examination Meghan A. Rauchenstein February 16, 2006.

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Presentation on theme: "Melanoma evaluation and management: expanding the role of the general practitioner in skin examination Meghan A. Rauchenstein February 16, 2006."— Presentation transcript:

1 Melanoma evaluation and management: expanding the role of the general practitioner in skin examination Meghan A. Rauchenstein February 16, 2006

2 Pathophysiology Cancer of melanocytes Uncontrolled proliferation Spreading horizontal = in situ Vertical spread through the basement membrane Infiltration to regional lymph nodes Spread into organs, bones and new skin sites

3 http://www.patient.co.uk/showdoc/27000650/

4 Pigmented Nevus

5 Dysplasia of MIS

6 http://catalog.nucleusinc.com/enlargeexhibit.php?ID=855

7 Epidemiology Risk factors: –fair, freckled, blue eyes, burns without tanning –elderly (age) –50+ nevi, > 2 mm in diameter –3+ blistering sunburns, 3+ summer jobs Statistics: –57,000 metastatic cases this year –9,000 deaths –46,170 in situ diagnoses

8 Epidemology #1 CA women 25-29, #2 CA women 30-34 behind BrCA 43% of white children under 12 had at least one sunburn last year Blacks present with more advanced disease than whites Uninsured/Medicaid present with late- stage disease

9 http://www.wff.nasa.gov/~healthline/skinlesions.jpg

10 Dermoscopy Allows magnification of lesion Oil makes epithelium transparent Algorithms increase sensitivity and specificity Training sessions allow any practitioner to learn the technique Only used by 17-23% of US dermatologists

11 Dermatoscopes

12 Why do I need one? Standard practice for European PCPs United States in top 5 with highest incidence rates Inexpensive Improves accuracy in diagnosing melanoma Fewer benign excisions sent to lab

13 ABCD rule of dermoscopy score weight AIn 0, 1, or 2 axes; assess contour, colors and structures 0-2 X 1.3 BAbrupt ending of pigment at periphery in 0-8 segments 0-8 X 0.1 CWhite, red, tan, brown, blue-gray, black 1-6 X 0.5 DNetwork, structureless areas, streaks, dots, and globules 1-5 X 0.5 ScoreInterpretation <4.75Benign melanocytic lesion 4.8-5.45Suspicious lesion; close follow-up or excision recommended >5.45Lesion highly suspicious for melanoma

14 Menzies scoring method Negative features (both must be absent) Symmetry in color and shape A single color is observed Positive features (2 out of 9) Blue-white veil Focal collections of multiple, dark brown dots Peripheral black dots and globules Radial streaming Pseudopods Scarlike depigmentation 5-6 colors: black, gray, blue, red, dark brown, and tan Multiple “pepperlike” small, blue or gray dots. Localized, thickened, and irregular pigmented network http://www.emedicine.com/derm/topic557.htm

15 Pigmented benign nevus

16 http://www.dermoscopy.org/atlas/base.htm

17

18 http://catalog.nucleusinc.com/enlargeexhibit.php?ID=10378 Lesion excision

19 Patient outcomes Benign Malignant –May need to re-excise to get wider margins –Follow up with periodic exams –Check local lymph nodes for metastases –Refer to specialist

20 Metastatic melanoma FDA approved –Interferon α 2b –Proleukin ® (aldesleukin) –recombinant IL-2 –BCG: Bacille Calmette-Guérin –Chemotherapy –Radiation therapy Clinical trials –Vaccine therapy –PI-88

21 http://db2.photoresearchers.com/search/C3039 Any questions? References available upon request


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