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Treatment for Skin Cancer

What are the treatments for skin cancer?
Specific treatment for skin cancer will be determined by your child's physician based on:
  • Your child's overall health and medical history.
  • Extent and type 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:
  • Surgery is a common treatment for skin cancer, which is used in about 90 percent of treated cases. Some types of skin cancer growths can be removed very easily and require only very minor surgery, while others may require a more extensive surgical procedure. Surgery may include the following procedures:
  • cryosurgery
    Using liquid nitrogen, cryosurgery uses an instrument that sprays the liquid onto the skin, freezing and destroying the tissue.
  • curettage and electrodesiccation
    This common type of surgery involves scraping away skin tissue with a curette (a sharp surgical instrument), followed by cauterizing the wound with an electrosurgical unit.
  • excision
    A scalpel (sharp surgical instrument) may be used to excise and remove the growth. The wound is usually stitched or held closed with skin clips.
  • Mohs' microscopically controlled surgery
    This type of surgery involves excising a lesion, layer by layer. Each piece of excised tissue is examined under a microscope. Tissue is progressively excised until no tumor cells are seen. The goal of this type of surgery is to remove all of the malignant cells and as little normal tissue as possible. It is often used with recurring tumors.
  • laser therapy
    Laser surgery uses a narrow beam of light to remove cancer cells, and is often used with tumors located on the outer layer of skin.
  • Radiation therapy  
    X-rays are used to kill cancer cells and shrink tumors.
  • Other types of treatment include:

    • Chemotherapy uses drugs to kill cancer cells.
  • topical chemotherapy - chemotherapy given as a cream or lotion placed on the skin to kill cancer cells.
  • systemic chemotherapy - chemotherapy administered orally or intravenously (IV).
  • Immunotherapy of melanoma is a complex type of treatment involving various approaches to boost the body's own immune system, helping it to slow the growth of the cancer.
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