HEALTH INSIGHTS

Melanoma: Treatment Introduction

March 21, 2017

Melanoma: Treatment Introduction

Melanoma can be treated in various ways. Which treatment may work best for you? It depends on a number of things. These include the size, place, and stage of your melanoma. Factors also include your age, overall health, and what side effects you’ll find acceptable.                                                                                                                       

Learning about your treatment options

You may have questions and concerns about your treatment choices. You may also want to know how you’ll feel and function after treatment, and if you’ll have to change your normal activities.

Your healthcare provider is the best person to answer your questions. He or she can tell you what your treatment choices are, how successful they are expected to be, and what the risks and side effects are. Your provider may advise a specific treatment. Or he or she may offer more than one, and ask you to decide which one you’d like to use. It can be hard to make this decision. It is important to take the time you need to make the best decision.

Deciding on the best plan may take some time. Talk with your healthcare provider about how much time you can take to explore your options. You may want to get another opinion before deciding on your treatment plan. In addition, you may want to involve your family and friends in this process.

Types of treatment

Treatments for melanoma are local or systemic:

  • Local treatments. These remove, destroy, or control the cancer cells in one area. Surgery and radiation therapy are local treatments.

  • Systemic treatments. These are used to destroy or control cancer cells in the entire body. Chemotherapy, targeted therapy, and biological therapy are systemic treatments.

You may have just one treatment, or a combination of treatments.

Goals of different treatments

Each type of treatment has its own goal. Below is a list of treatments and their goals:

  • Surgery. The goal of surgery is to remove the melanoma but leave as much of the nearby skin as intact as possible. Surgery can also be used to help treat melanoma that has reached the lymph nodes.

  • Radiation therapy. The goal of radiation is to destroy cancer cells. It may be used after surgery to try to kill any cancer cells that are left. It may also be used to help treat melanoma that has come back after a first treatment or has spread to other parts of the body. Radiation therapy uses high energy X-rays or other types of radiation.

  • Chemotherapy. The goal of chemotherapy is to destroy cancer cells directly to shrink tumors that can’t be removed by surgery. Or it may be used to kill cells that have spread to other areas of the body (metastatic melanoma). Chemotherapy is done with medicines.

  • Immunotherapy. The goal of immunotherapy is to boost your body's immune system to shrink advanced melanoma tumors. This therapy is also called biologic therapy. It might also be used after surgery for some earlier stage melanomas. This is to lower the risk that the cancer will come back. This type of therapy is done with medicines that help your body’s immune defense attack the cancer cells.   

  • Targeted therapy. The goal of targeted therapy is to shrink advanced melanoma tumors. This type of therapy is done with medicines. The medicines target specific parts of melanoma cells. For example, medicines called BRAF inhibitors target cells with a change in the BRAF gene. This gene is found in about half of all melanomas.  

Clinical trials for new treatments

Researchers are always finding new ways to treat cancer. These new methods are tested in clinical trials. Talk with your healthcare provider to find out if there are any clinical trials you should consider.

Talking with your healthcare provider

At first, thinking about treatment options may seem overwhelming. Talk with your healthcare providers, nurses, and loved ones. Make a list of questions. Consider the benefits and possible side effects of each option. Discuss your concerns with your provider before making a decision.

Updated:  

March 21, 2017

Reviewed By:  

Alteri, Rick, MD,Cunningham, Louise, RN