Litcius/Paper detail

A Review of Contemporary Guidelines and Evidence for Wide Local Excision in Primary Cutaneous Melanoma Management

Sophie E Orme, Marc Moncrieff

2024Cancers13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Surgical wide local excision (WLE) remains the current standard of care for primary cutaneous melanoma. WLE is an elective procedure that aims to achieve locoregional disease control with minimal functional and cosmetic impairment. Despite several prospective randomised trials, the optimal extent of excision margin remains controversial, and this is reflected in the persistent lack of consensus in guidelines globally. Furthermore, there is now the added difficulty of interpreting existing trial data in the context of the evolving role of surgery in the management of melanoma, with our increased understanding of clinicopathologic and genomic prognostic markers leading to the often routine use of sentinel node biopsy (SNB) as a staging procedure, in addition to the development of adjuvant systemic therapies for high-risk disease. An ongoing trial, MelMarT-II, has been designed with the aim of achieving a definitive answer to guide this fundamental surgical decision.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineWide local excisionContext (archaeology)MelanomaSentinel nodeSurgeryBiopsyDiseaseRandomized controlled trialSurgical excisionDermatologyIntensive care medicineGeneral surgeryCancerPathologyInternal medicineBreast cancerCancer researchPaleontologyBiologyCutaneous Melanoma Detection and ManagementCell Image Analysis TechniquesCAR-T cell therapy research