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Diagnosing melanoma

Te whakatau i te mate pukupuku kiri manauri

Man checks skinMelanoma is usually found when you check your own skin for new or changing moles, freckles or spots. Use the ABCDEs of melanoma as a guideline for the changes to look for.

If you are at a higher risk of melanoma, you could consider getting a photographic skin check. You could also try a app to help you monitor your spots and any changes.

If you find any concerning spots or lumps (lesions), you will need your general practice team or a dermatologist (skin doctor) to look at them. They may use a magnifying instrument called a dermatoscope.

If your health professional is concerned about the lesion, they will remove it. This is called excision. The health professional will then send it to a laboratory to be looked at under a microscope. This is to find out what type it is, how deep in the skin it has gone and if it has all been removed.

If your health professional is worried that it might have spread elsewhere, you may need further tests, called staging.

Staging melanoma

The tests used to stage melanoma include blood tests and looking at the nearby lymph nodes (this is called sentinel node biopsy). They also include scans such as ultrasound and CT scans. You can read more about the tests that can be used to help with staging on the Melanoma Foundation of New Zealand website.

After looking at the melanoma and doing extra tests if needed, melanoma is put into 1 of 5 stages:

The treatment you need will depend on the stage.

On the next page: Treating melanoma

Written by HealthInfo clinical advisers. Last reviewed September 2024.

Sources

See also:

Finding and preventing skin cancers

Page reference: 37529

Review key: HIMEL-15455