A melanoma diagnosis is assigned to one of five main stage groups, Stages 0 to IV. Each stage encodes a description of the severity of a patient's melanoma disease process and how far it has spread from the primary site. It defines the potential of the melanoma to cause harm, predicts the outlook (prognosis) for the patient and guides treatment options. When a skin lesion appears to be a melanoma, early diagnosis and precise staging improves the chances of successful treatment.
Melanoma Staging Overview
The melanoma stages are based on the 2010 standardized TNM cancer staging system. This was jointly decided on by the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) and the Union for International Cancer Control (UICC).
TNM Classification
To assign a melanoma disease stage this cancer classification system considers:
- The microscopic thickness (T), in millimeters, of the melanoma measured from the skin surface (Breslow's depth), (Stages I and II)
- The presence or absence of microscopic ulceration (breakdown) of the tumor surface, (Stages I-III)
- The degree of spread of melanoma to lymph nodes (N) and if they are joined (matted) together (Stage III)
- Where and how the melanoma has spread (metastasized (M) from the primary tumor site to invade distant skin, distant lymph nodes, or to other organs (Stage IV)
Relevance of TNM Criteria
- Thick (greater than 4 mm) or ulcerated (even if only microscopic) melanomas and actively dividing or disordered melanomas have a greater potential to invade and spread.
- Thin tumors (less than 1 mm) and non-ulcerated tumors are less likely to spread and have better cure and recurrence rates.
- Intermediate tumors (1-4 mm) lie in between. Once the melanoma has spread to nodes and metastasized to distant sites, it is harder to treat.
The Staging Process
The melanoma staging process collects all relevant information about the patient and the melanoma to complete the TNM requirements to assign a disease stage. This includes:
- An initial evaluation of the patient's history and full physical exam to assess for signs of cancer spread
- Inspection of the skin lesion(s) for certain features in color and shape that are common to melanomas
- Blood tests, including checking the level of the enzyme lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), a marker for more advanced cancer
- Biopsy and pathology exam of the skin lesion(s) to confirm the melanoma diagnosis and collect microscopic staging information, which also includes grading of the melanoma's potential to grow and spread by:
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How many melanoma cancer cells are actively dividing (mitotic figures)
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How abnormal the cancer cells are and how disordered they are arranged in the tissue, compared to the normal cells in the specimen
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- Other tests to search for cancer spread to nearby skin and lymph nodes and to distant skin, nodes and organs (after the pathologist completes the microscopic diagnosis), which may include:
- Biopsy or removal of enlarged nodes for pathology exam
- Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy (first node(s) where the melanoma may spread) to look for microscopic spread of cancer in unenlarged nodes
- Imaging studies to look for cancer in lymph nodes and other organs such as a chest x-ray, CAT scan, MRI scan and a PET scan
- Fine needle aspiration (FNA) to get cells for pathology from enlarged nodes or to confirm suspected metastases to other sites
Information gathered in the staging process are grouped together by severity under a melanoma stage.
Stage 0 Melanoma
Melanoma begins in the melanocytes cells near the lower or basal layer of the epidermis, the upper layer of skin, and then spreads to other layers of skin and then to other sites. Stage 0 melanoma, melanoma-in-situ, or pre-cancer is confined to melanocytes within the epidermis. Because this stage is not invasive into other skin layers or elsewhere, there is 100% cure.
Signs and Symptoms
This melanoma may be just a flat area of darkened or discolored skin or start in a mole or freckle. There may or may not be itching of the affected skin and it is unlikely to be ulcerated (breakdown of the surface) or bleed. On physical exam the lymph nodes are not enlarged.
Pathology and Staging
A Stage 0 melanoma biopsy shows more features of cancer than melanoma-in-situ. The melanocytes have abnormal growth features in individual cells and in the arrangement of the cells in the epidermis. There may be occasional mitotic figures but no features of advanced disease on a cell or tissue level. Stage 0 has no subdivisions.
Treatment
Because Stage 0 melanoma does not spread, excising the lesion is the only treatment needed. The melanoma is removed with 1-2 centimeters of normal surrounding skin (wide local excision).
Stage I Melanoma
Stage I melanomas have spread down through the lower boundary (basement membrane) of the epidermis that separates it from the dermis (microscopic invasion). Melanoma cells are only in the skin at the primary site and, though now invasive, the risk of spreading (metastasizing) is low. There is no spread to other areas of skin and to lymph nodes or to distant organs on the initial evaluation of the patient. The five-year survival rate of Stage I melanoma is 92-97%
Signs and Symptoms
At this stage, the lesion may look like a flat hyperpigmented area only a few millimeters in diameter or it may look like an abnormal, discolored mole or freckle with irregular edges. It may or may not be itchy or ulcerated and may bleed if ulcerated. There are no symptoms of disease elsewhere and the lymph nodes are not enlarged on exam.
Pathology and Staging
Biopsy findings: In a Stage I biopsy, the microscopic thickness of the lesion is less than 2 millimeters (mm). Melanocytes in the tumor have more abnormal growth features, typical to cancer cells, than Stage 0 melanoma. Only a few cells have mitotic figures because the cells are dividing slowly.
Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB): Though the likelihood of Stage I melanoma spreading is low, after the initial biopsy diagnosis some doctors may recommend lymphatic mapping and SLNB (removal of the sentinel node) to look for microscopic cancer for more precise pathologic staging and treatment plan, especially for lesions greater than 1 mm and ulcerated lesions (Stage IB).
Stage I Subdivisions
A Stage I melanoma is subdivided by the thickness of the lesion and the presence or absence of ulceration of the surface:
Stage IA: The melanoma is 1 mm or less thick with no ulceration on the its surface
Stage IB: The tumor is 1 mm or less thick and has ulceration, or is between 1.01 and 2 mm but without ulceration
Treatment
Surgical excision of melanoma: The primary treatment of Stage I melanoma is a wide local excision of the tumor along with 1-2 cm of normal skin around it depending on the size and location. This is usually done with a local anesthetic.
Sentinel lymph node biopsy: If the doctor recommends lymphatic mapping and SLNB as part of the staging it is usually done at the time of, and before, the wide local excision. If the sentinel node is positive for cancer cells on mapping, it is removed as part of the treatment plan.
Note that the value of lymph node mapping and SLNB for Stage I melanoma is controversial but some studies show that removing the sentinel node in patients with Stage I or Stage II melanomas identifies patients who may need additional therapy, decreases the risk of recurrent melanoma and may improve survival.
Lymph node dissection: If the sentinel node biopsy shows melanoma, a complete regional lymphadenectomy may be done another day. If the mapping is negative, those patients avoid the complications of removal of all the nodes in that grouping. Lymphadenectomy for Stage I melanoma is also controversial but may improve the outcome for some patients with thicker melanomas.
Additional (adjuvant) therapy: Some doctors may choose to give adjuvant therapy using an immunotherapy drug such as interferon to boost the immune system to help fight the disease if there is evidence of microscopic disease in the nodes or for thicker or ulcerated Stage I melanomas.
Stage II Melanoma
A stage II melanoma is invasive and extends further down into the dermis, the skin layer below the epidermis (local invasion). Stage II melanoma has a higher risk of spreading than Stage I but there is no evidence of spread to lymph nodes or other tissues on the initial evaluation of the patient. The five-year survival rate of Stage II melanoma is 53-81%
Signs and Symptoms
Stage II melanomas are usually more than 2 centimeters in diameter on the skin. The tumor may have multiple, irregular colors (variegated) and a more irregular border than Stage 1 lesions. It can be itchy, may or may not be ulcerated, and may also bleed. There are no symptoms of spread to other organs and the nodes are not enlarged.
Pathology and Staging
Biopsy findings: A stage II melanoma is thicker than 1 millimeter and may be more than 4 mm on microscopic exam of the biopsy specimen. The melanocyte cancer cells are more abnormal and their arrangement in the tissue is more disordered. There are more mitotic figures than Stage 1 because the cells are dividing faster.
Lymphatic mapping and sentinel lymph node biopsy: Because a Stage II melanoma is capable of spreading, some doctors may recommend lymph node mapping and sentinel node biopsy (SLNB) to look for evidence of microscopic cancer in the lymph nodes near the melanoma. This determines whether these local nodes should be removed and if the patient should be given additional therapy after excision of the melanoma.
Stage II Subdivisions
A Stage II melanoma is subdivided by the thickness and ulceration of the melanoma:
Stage IIA: The melanoma is 1.01 to 2 mm thick with ulceration, or 2.01 to 4 mm thick with no surface ulceration
Stage IIB: The tumor is 2.01 to 4 mm with ulceration, or more than 4 mm with no ulceration
Stage IIC: The lesion is thicker than 4 mm and is ulcerated on the surface
Treatment
Surgical excision of melanoma: The primary treatment for Stage II melanoma is a wide local excision, removing the tumor with up to 2 cm of normal skin around it depending on the size and location
Sentinel lymph Node Biopsy: If the doctor recommends lymph node mapping and SLNB it can be done at the time of and before the wide local excision. If the lymphatic mapping shows evidence of cancer in the sentinel node(s) the node(s) are removed. There is evidence that the presence of microscopic cancer (micro-metastases) in regional lymph nodes worsens patient outcome, so SLNB is felt to be useful in Stage II melanoma.
Selective lymph node dissection: In addition to removing the sentinel node, some doctors may choose to remove all the other nodes in the same lymphatic chain (lymphadenectomy) at a follow-up surgery as part of the treatment plan to prevent the melanoma from spreading or recurring. If the SLNB shows no cancer this spares the patient a possible regional lymphadenectomy. Note that some doctors may choose to do an elective lymph node biopsy (ELND) on all patients instead the lymphatic mapping and node biopsy first,
Additional (adjuvant) therapy: If there was microscopic tumor in the nodes, some doctors may also choose to add immunotherapy such as interferon to boost the patient's immune system to attack the disease or radiation.
Stage III Melanoma
In Stage III, the melanoma has spread outside the primary lesion. The spread (regional invasion) is to skin (satellite lesions), or to lymph nodes in the skin close to a tumor, or cancer cells are present in nearby lymph vessels traveling towards (in transit to) lymph nodes.
The nodes may be enlarged (macroscopic node involvement) or there is evidence of cancer cells in them only under the microscope (micro-metastases) involvement. There is no spread to distant skin, distant nodes or other organs. The five-year survival rate is 40-78% for Stage III melanoma.
Signs and Symptoms
Stage III melanomas are generally greater in diameter and may or may not be ulcerated. However even melanomas that look small on the surface can still spread. The lesion has a greater variety of colors, is more irregular in the distribution of the colors and in the shape of the border. They may itch and bleed because of an ulcer or become painful. Enlarged lymph nodes may be felt on exam near the region of the melanoma and may or may not be painful. There may be pain at the site(s) of skin invasion.
Pathology and Staging
On microscopic exam of the biopsy, in Stage III melanomas the cells are more abnormal and disordered than earlier stages. There may be more mitotic figures as the cells are dividing more aggressively.
The tumor can be any thickness and the microscopic thickness is not taken into account in this stage because the cancer has already spread outside the primary lesion. Ulceration still matters because it increases the chance of the disease spreading at any Stage and worsens prognosis
Additional tests in staging of Stage III melanoma includes:
- Blood work depending on the history, symptoms and exam findings
- Removal of any enlarged nodes found on physical exam for pathology exam
- If nodes are not obviously enlarged the doctor might suggest lymph node mapping and SLNB to look for micro-metastases in lymph channels and nodes near the melanoma, as part of the staging. If the sentinel node(s) has micro-cancer it is removed. Some doctors also remove all the other nodes in that lymphatic chain (elective node dissection) as there is a greater chance of further metastases with Stage III melanoma.
- Other tests to rule out spread to distant lymph nodes and other organs may include: chest X-ray, CAT scan, MRI scan or PET scan.
Stage III Subdivisions
Stage III melanoma is subdivided into worsening stages depending on the ulceration of the melanoma and the degree of local invasion in skin and the number lymph nodes involved.
Stage IIIA: The melanoma is not ulcerated; the nodes are not enlarged and there is only microscopic cancer in one to three nearby lymph nodes (microscopic node involvement)
Stage IIIB: This subdivision includes the following melanomas:
- The melanoma is ulcerated; the nodes are not enlarged and there is only microscopic cancer in one to three nearby lymph nodes, or
- The lesion is not ulcerated; one to three nearby lymph nodes are obviously enlarged on exam, or
- The lesion is not ulcerated; evidence of spread only seen in small areas of skin or in small areas of lymphatic channels around the primary tumor but not in the nodes
Stage IIIC: This subdivision includes these findings:
- The melanoma is ulcerated; one to three nearby nodes are obviously enlarged on exam, or
- The lesion is ulcerated; it has spread to a small area of lymphatic vessel channels and skin around the primary lesion but there is no cancer in the nodes, or
- The melanoma may or may not be ulcerated; four or more lymph nodes are enlarged; or any number of nearby nodes are joined (matted) together; or there is evidence of cancer in nearby lymph channels and in nearby nodes (which are enlarged)
- There are small secondary skin tumors in or under nearby skin two centimeters or less from the primary site. The nodes may or may not be enlarged.
Treatment
There are several options for treatment of Stage III (and Stage IV) melanoma. Surgery is the primary treatment for Stage III with additional (adjuvant) therapy based on the amount of local spread, tumor ulceration and extent of node involvement.
- Surgery: Wide local excision of the primary melanoma, lymph node dissection (lymphadenectomy) of affected nodes and removal of secondary lesions
- Biotherapy or Immunotherapy: After surgery, if there is a high risk of the melanoma recurring a patient may be treated with interferon, which induces the patient's immune system to fight the melanoma. Other drugs or immune factors include ipilimubab and interleukin-2 (IL-2)
For local and regional melanoma invasion that can't be removed, or to prevent recurrences, treatment choices include:
- Systemic chemotherapy: Chemotherapy drugs such as Dacarbazine are toxic to cancer cells and kills them (they will also kill some normal cells)
- Radiation: Radiation is applied to the area of lymph node dissection or other local sites to kill any remaining cancer
- Biotherapy/Immunotherapy: Immunotherapy uses biologic factors to induce or direct the patient's immune system to fight the melanoma. Melanoma therapies in this class include ipilimubab, interferon, interleukin-2 (IL-2) and the Bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine (a tuberculosis vaccine).
- Targeted therapy: Targeted therapies include drugs or other factors that interfere with the division and growth of cancer cells and not normal cells. These can be given through the blood circulation or injected into the tumor. Options include using vemurafenib and dabrafenib against melanomas with the BRAF V600E gene mutation, or injecting the BCG vaccine, interferon or interluekin-2 or using imiquimod cream or other approved melanoma drugs.
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Regional chemotherapy (hyperthermic isolated limb perfusion): This isolates a single body part such as a leg that has the tumor and circulates a chemotherapy drug just through that leg
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Clinical trial drugs: A doctor may suggest enrollment in a clinical trial that is investigating new drugs to treat melanoma, especially if a patient is not responding to standard melanoma drugs. Treatments that are being studied include:
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Other systemic chemotherapy: Other drugs that kill cancer cells
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Other tumor injection factors: These include using an oncolytic virus to target the cancer on a molecular level
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Stage IV Melanoma
With Stage IV melanoma, the tumor has spread through the lymphatic system or the blood vessels to other parts of the body (distant metastases), including skin away from the primary melanoma, distant lymph nodes and other organs (distant invasion). The most common organs for melanoma metastases are lung, liver, brain, bone and bowels in descending frequency. In Stage IV, there is less chance of a cure and a greater chance the disease will recur. By the time a melanoma reaches Stage IV, the survival rate is only 15-20%.
Signs and Symptoms
A stage IV melanoma lesion may be larger and more variable in shape color and border than earlier stages. The lesion may be itchy and painful. It may bleed and may or may not be visibly ulcerated. Other symptoms of this stage depend on which organs the melanoma has spread to and include head, bone or bowel pain and respiratory symptoms.
Pathology and Staging
With Stage IV melanoma, the primary tumor can be any thickness on microscopic exam and may or may not be ulcerated. Typically at this stage the tumor is thick and has already spread to nodes near the tumor.
Neither thickness nor ulceration is taken into account in Stage IV. The cells in the tumor have even greater abnormal growth features and the tissue is more disordered than earlier stages. There are more cells with mitotic figures because cancer cells are dividing even more aggressively.
Additional tests for diagnosing and staging of Stage IV melanoma include:
- Blood work, especially to check the lactose dehydrogenase (LDH) level, which can be elevated in Stage IV melanoma
- Removal of any enlarged nodes found on physical exam for pathology exam
- Lymph node mapping of non-enlarged nodes near the melanoma and sentinel node biopsy to see if those nodes need to be removed
- Other testing to look for evidence of spread to other organs may include: chest X-ray, CAT scan, MRI scan or PET scan of the head, chest, abdomen and pelvis and fine needle aspiration(FNA) to sample suspected metastases for microscopic diagnosis
Stage IV Subdivisions
Stage IV is further subdivided based on where the metastases are and the result of the LDH blood test. The melanoma thickness or ulceration and the spread to nearby nodes are not considered in this stage. The higher the stage, the more critical it is.
- Stage IVA: Metastases in the skin, in the subcutaneous tissue (below the dermis) of skin, to distant lymph nodes; normal LDH
- Stage IVB: Melanoma metastases to lungs; normal LDH
- Stage IVC: Metastases to other organs or spread to any organ; elevated LDH
Treatment:
Stage IV melanoma is difficult to cure because of distant spread. Surgery is no longer the primary treatment option because of the spread of the disease. Treatment options depend on where the disease has spread and by how much and include:
- Targeted therapy: These therapies target cancer cells to prevent them from dividing or growing and don't interfere with normal cells. Drugs for melanoma treatment include vemurafenib and dabrafenib, which target melanomas with the BRAF V 600E gene mutation.
- Biologic/Immunotherapy: This treatment induces or directs an immune response to kill cancer cells. Options include ipilimumbab, interleukin-2 (IL-2), or newer forms of drugs. Immunotherapy does not appear to cure tumors, but can help shrink them.
- Systemic chemotherapy: Drugs such as dacarbazine treat metastases that can't be removed. Chemotherapy is not as effective as other therapies, as tumors tend to regrow within six months.
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Surgery: Surgery may be used to remove the primary tumor and metastases in other locations, including lymph nodes and internal organs such as lungs, brain, bowel and bone to relieve symptoms (palliative treatment).
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Radiation: Radiation may be used on skin metastases, lymph nodes, or organ metastases (such a brain or bone) that cause symptoms but are not accessible to surgery to relieve symptoms
- Clinical trial: As in Stage III, a doctor may suggest enrollment in a clinical trial. Treatments that are being investigated include:
- Tumor reduction surgery (debulking) to remove cancer from all known sites
- Other immunotherapy factors
- Other targeted therapy agents
- Direct tumor injections such as with oncolytic virus therapy to induce an immune response
- Tumor angiogenesis factors, which inhibit new blood vessels from forming to decrease the blood supply to tumors
- Combined therapy: such as immunochemotherapy, biochemotherapy (combined chemotherapy with interferon or interleukin) and other combinations for difficult to treat Stage IV disease
Early Diagnosis and Staging
The stages of melanoma are specific, well-defined, and standardized, taking into account the microscopic behavior and progression of the disease. An early disease stage at first diagnosis improves a person's chance of survival. Timely evaluation and accurate staging are vital to a patient's outcome.
Assess Your Risk
Melanoma can spread aggressively so early detection and treatment can save your life. See your doctor promptly for any new skin lesions or old ones that are evolving in color, size or shape. It is even more important to assess your risks for melanoma and take steps to reduce them, especially if you are at are at high risk.