Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer Staging | What Patients Should Know
Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer Staging | What Patients Should Know from Patient Empowerment Network on Vimeo.
How is non-melanoma skin cancer staged? Dr. Soo Park explains the process of determining the cancer’s stage and reviews factors that impact staging.
Dr. Soo Park is a Medical Oncologist at Moores Cancer Center at UC San Diego Health. Learn more about Dr. Park.
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Transcript:
Katherine:
So, who typically diagnoses this stage of skin cancer? Is it a dermatologist, or somebody else?
Dr. Park:
So, that really depends on the stage of the skin cancer. So, when I say stage, I mean how advanced is it. For an early stage skin cancer, those are typically really small. And oftentimes, patients will have a few of these; and some patients have a lot of these, maybe on their face, their neck, their scalp, across their hands and arms. And typically, they notice a small lesion that won’t go away or is getting a little bit irritated.
And so, they see the dermatologist first. So, the dermatologist is often the first person that sees patients whenever the patient has noticed like a small skin abnormality that’s not getting better. But sometimes, they also see patients that do not see the dermatologist first.
They actually either see a medical oncologist like myself, or a head and neck surgeon who I work closely with, because some patients have a tumor or a cancer that’s really large, and it’s too large to the point where a dermatologist is not able to offer them anything. And so, if the tumor is really large, that’s a later stage cancer. So, it’s not as early stage.