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Skin Cancer
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| Treatments
for Skin Cancer Treatment for skin
cancer:
Specific treatment for skin cancer will be determined by your
physician based on:
- your age, overall health, and medical history
- extent of the disease
- your tolerance for specific medications, procedures, or therapies
- expectations for the course of the disease
- your opinion or preference
There are several kinds of treatments for skin
cancer, including the following:
- surgery
Surgery is a common treatment for skin
cancer -- used about 90 percent of the time, and often includes the following procedures:
- cryosurgery - freezing the tumor, which kills cancer cells.
- electrodesiccation and curettage - burning the lesion and removing it
with a sharp instrument.
- grafting - uses a skin graft to replace skin that is damaged when
cancer is removed.
- laser therapy - using a narrow beam of light to remove cancer cells.
- Mohs micrographic surgery - removing the cancer and as little normal
tissue as possible. During this surgery, the physician removes the cancer and then uses a
microscope to look at the cancerous area to make sure no cancer cells remain.
- simple excision - cutting the cancer from the skin along with some of
the healthy tissue around it.
- radiation therapy
Radiation therapy uses a radiation machine that emits x-rays
to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors.
- electrochemotherapy
Electrochemotherapy uses a combination of chemotherapy and electrical pulses to
treat cancer.
- Other types of treatment include:
- chemotherapy - treatment with drugs to destroy cancer
cells.
- topical chemotherapy - chemotherapy given as a cream or
lotion placed on the skin to kill cancer cells.
- systemic chemotherapy - chemotherapy taken by pill, or
needle injection into a vein or muscle.
- biological therapy (sometimes called
biological response modifier (BRM) therapy, or immunotherapy)
Biological therapy tries to get your own body
to fight cancer by using materials made by your own body, or made in a laboratory, to
boost, direct, or restore your body's natural defenses against disease.
- photodynamic therapy
Photodynamic therapy uses a certain type
of light and a special chemical to kill cancer cells.
- immunotherapy
Immunotherapy of melanoma involves injecting a medication (called interferon) to
boost the body's own immune system, helping it to slow the growth of the cancer.
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This content was last reviewed by a University of Maryland Medicine expert on May 16, 2003
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