› Forums › General Melanoma Community › Excision of 17 Atypical Nevi I have history of Melanoma
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grahamtosh.
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- January 24, 2016 at 9:50 am
Hi
hope there's a qualified person that can very kindly advise
I had 2 melanomas removed last year. So now am wary and listen to the doc but not too sure . I have a back covered in what look like atypical Nevi. Dermo has done mole mapping and says she wants to excise 17 atypical moles with margins , from my back . ( they will of course then go for biopsy ). Mainly due to diameter but some smaller ones also due to my age 46 .
Do I need all 17 excised ? Is this a worthwhile precaution ?
thanks for your advice .
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- January 24, 2016 at 12:40 pm
I think you need to follow your gut feeling and get a second opinion from another doc. 17 seems over the top, but you need a doctor to confer with, and I'm no doctor. I like that she wants to do proper excisions with margins, but 17? I've never heard of anything like that. If it were me I'd seek a second opinion. Is she using some kind of electronic algorithm (eg computer generated risk thing)? If so, they are notoriously unreliable. Diameter alone is not enough, I think they should only excise things that show chaos under the dermatoscope ('normal' moles are fairly uniform in many ways, melanomas exhibit various degrees of chaos), or things that you confirm are new or changing. If you have 17 weird moles, my guess is that you are a person whose moles just look weird, not a person with 17 melanomas. Time for a second opinion.
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- January 24, 2016 at 12:40 pm
I think you need to follow your gut feeling and get a second opinion from another doc. 17 seems over the top, but you need a doctor to confer with, and I'm no doctor. I like that she wants to do proper excisions with margins, but 17? I've never heard of anything like that. If it were me I'd seek a second opinion. Is she using some kind of electronic algorithm (eg computer generated risk thing)? If so, they are notoriously unreliable. Diameter alone is not enough, I think they should only excise things that show chaos under the dermatoscope ('normal' moles are fairly uniform in many ways, melanomas exhibit various degrees of chaos), or things that you confirm are new or changing. If you have 17 weird moles, my guess is that you are a person whose moles just look weird, not a person with 17 melanomas. Time for a second opinion.
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:05 am
Hi thanks for your reply . My understanding is that she is removing so many due to my recent history of melanoma removed a year ago . She said to remove all I didn't request this . I do feel that as she found 2 melanoma last time , and as that DN can become Melanoma I don't mind them excising all . On the other hand is it true that Pathologists often can't tell the difference between Melanoma and other moles . What I find strange is that my Dermo only asked me to come to her annually , that after removing 2 melanoma ? I have the pathology report which indicates Melanoma ? Melanoma scares me , but I of course don't know what normal procedure is with multiple large DN as am not a doctor?
she did what she called mole mapping . All that entailed was using a type of camera / program called molemate which showed on a screen the size , color ec . She does not seem to use a comparative system of photos then comparing them a year later ? ( which was my understanding of what mole mapping is ?
Thanks
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:05 am
Hi thanks for your reply . My understanding is that she is removing so many due to my recent history of melanoma removed a year ago . She said to remove all I didn't request this . I do feel that as she found 2 melanoma last time , and as that DN can become Melanoma I don't mind them excising all . On the other hand is it true that Pathologists often can't tell the difference between Melanoma and other moles . What I find strange is that my Dermo only asked me to come to her annually , that after removing 2 melanoma ? I have the pathology report which indicates Melanoma ? Melanoma scares me , but I of course don't know what normal procedure is with multiple large DN as am not a doctor?
she did what she called mole mapping . All that entailed was using a type of camera / program called molemate which showed on a screen the size , color ec . She does not seem to use a comparative system of photos then comparing them a year later ? ( which was my understanding of what mole mapping is ?
Thanks
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- January 25, 2016 at 6:46 pm
My experiene with mole mapping was NOT a single time. It was baseline mole mapping and then at each followup appointment, the same moles were photographed. The software did a comparison and both the derm and I did a visual on-screen comparison. We removed moles that changed, not moles that the software deemed were a risk. We didn't even use that aspect of the software that I recall. I don't have tons of moles but all my biopsies have been atypical to some degree. Mole mapping was designed for people like you with lots of atypical moles, but just relying on the mole mapping software on what to remove isn't the best solution. It should be a collaborative effort with the derm and you using the software as a tool, not as an authority. Now, I just use baseline photographs because I don't have tons of moles. We only remove moles that change.
Dematopathologists can certainly tell the difference between melanoma and other moles. However, it's an art as much as a science. For atypical moles, there is essentially a scale. You look at the lesion and start adding up atypical features. The more you have, the more atypical. There is a point when some of the factors point to melanoma instead of atypical. It isn't an exact science and you will get different diagnoses from different docs – that's why you want your slides to go to a dermatopathologist who sees melanoma all the time.
I've had three primaries and I am seen every 6 months. That schedule will not change. I don't have DNS but I do have a genetic defect that puts me at very high risk for more primaries.
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- January 25, 2016 at 6:46 pm
My experiene with mole mapping was NOT a single time. It was baseline mole mapping and then at each followup appointment, the same moles were photographed. The software did a comparison and both the derm and I did a visual on-screen comparison. We removed moles that changed, not moles that the software deemed were a risk. We didn't even use that aspect of the software that I recall. I don't have tons of moles but all my biopsies have been atypical to some degree. Mole mapping was designed for people like you with lots of atypical moles, but just relying on the mole mapping software on what to remove isn't the best solution. It should be a collaborative effort with the derm and you using the software as a tool, not as an authority. Now, I just use baseline photographs because I don't have tons of moles. We only remove moles that change.
Dematopathologists can certainly tell the difference between melanoma and other moles. However, it's an art as much as a science. For atypical moles, there is essentially a scale. You look at the lesion and start adding up atypical features. The more you have, the more atypical. There is a point when some of the factors point to melanoma instead of atypical. It isn't an exact science and you will get different diagnoses from different docs – that's why you want your slides to go to a dermatopathologist who sees melanoma all the time.
I've had three primaries and I am seen every 6 months. That schedule will not change. I don't have DNS but I do have a genetic defect that puts me at very high risk for more primaries.
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- January 25, 2016 at 6:46 pm
My experiene with mole mapping was NOT a single time. It was baseline mole mapping and then at each followup appointment, the same moles were photographed. The software did a comparison and both the derm and I did a visual on-screen comparison. We removed moles that changed, not moles that the software deemed were a risk. We didn't even use that aspect of the software that I recall. I don't have tons of moles but all my biopsies have been atypical to some degree. Mole mapping was designed for people like you with lots of atypical moles, but just relying on the mole mapping software on what to remove isn't the best solution. It should be a collaborative effort with the derm and you using the software as a tool, not as an authority. Now, I just use baseline photographs because I don't have tons of moles. We only remove moles that change.
Dematopathologists can certainly tell the difference between melanoma and other moles. However, it's an art as much as a science. For atypical moles, there is essentially a scale. You look at the lesion and start adding up atypical features. The more you have, the more atypical. There is a point when some of the factors point to melanoma instead of atypical. It isn't an exact science and you will get different diagnoses from different docs – that's why you want your slides to go to a dermatopathologist who sees melanoma all the time.
I've had three primaries and I am seen every 6 months. That schedule will not change. I don't have DNS but I do have a genetic defect that puts me at very high risk for more primaries.
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- January 25, 2016 at 7:31 pm
I went to a melanoma symposium a while back and here are some notes I took from the doctor that oversees the mole mapping program at my institution. This data is quite a few years old and I'm sure they have updates but this is what I have now.
50% of melanoma arise from existing moles.
In the mole mapping clinic, the doctor's have mapped 5945 moles. Over a 4 year period, 96 moles showed changes and were biopsied. 98% of the atypical moles were stable. The mole mapping is done on high risk patients who either have dysplastic nevus syndrome, or multiple primaries.
Notes: A changing mole is ok as long as it is changing SYMMETRICALLY. Moles can be irritated or just grow. But if a mole changes ASYMMETICALLY, then it should be biopsied. New moles are also ok unless they are different from all the other moles.
6% of melanoma diagnosed is from an unknown primary.
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- January 25, 2016 at 7:31 pm
I went to a melanoma symposium a while back and here are some notes I took from the doctor that oversees the mole mapping program at my institution. This data is quite a few years old and I'm sure they have updates but this is what I have now.
50% of melanoma arise from existing moles.
In the mole mapping clinic, the doctor's have mapped 5945 moles. Over a 4 year period, 96 moles showed changes and were biopsied. 98% of the atypical moles were stable. The mole mapping is done on high risk patients who either have dysplastic nevus syndrome, or multiple primaries.
Notes: A changing mole is ok as long as it is changing SYMMETRICALLY. Moles can be irritated or just grow. But if a mole changes ASYMMETICALLY, then it should be biopsied. New moles are also ok unless they are different from all the other moles.
6% of melanoma diagnosed is from an unknown primary.
-
- January 25, 2016 at 7:31 pm
I went to a melanoma symposium a while back and here are some notes I took from the doctor that oversees the mole mapping program at my institution. This data is quite a few years old and I'm sure they have updates but this is what I have now.
50% of melanoma arise from existing moles.
In the mole mapping clinic, the doctor's have mapped 5945 moles. Over a 4 year period, 96 moles showed changes and were biopsied. 98% of the atypical moles were stable. The mole mapping is done on high risk patients who either have dysplastic nevus syndrome, or multiple primaries.
Notes: A changing mole is ok as long as it is changing SYMMETRICALLY. Moles can be irritated or just grow. But if a mole changes ASYMMETICALLY, then it should be biopsied. New moles are also ok unless they are different from all the other moles.
6% of melanoma diagnosed is from an unknown primary.
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:05 am
Hi thanks for your reply . My understanding is that she is removing so many due to my recent history of melanoma removed a year ago . She said to remove all I didn't request this . I do feel that as she found 2 melanoma last time , and as that DN can become Melanoma I don't mind them excising all . On the other hand is it true that Pathologists often can't tell the difference between Melanoma and other moles . What I find strange is that my Dermo only asked me to come to her annually , that after removing 2 melanoma ? I have the pathology report which indicates Melanoma ? Melanoma scares me , but I of course don't know what normal procedure is with multiple large DN as am not a doctor?
she did what she called mole mapping . All that entailed was using a type of camera / program called molemate which showed on a screen the size , color ec . She does not seem to use a comparative system of photos then comparing them a year later ? ( which was my understanding of what mole mapping is ?
Thanks
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- January 31, 2016 at 5:50 am
Hi thank you for reply . I got second opinion ,they said remove only 5 out of the 17. He said he only excises what looks worrying to the naked eye , he said suspected melanoma are very obvious and you see them with the naked eye / dermis cope very easily ! I then went back to original Dermo who wants to remove the 17 and asked her to explain.
she said all 17 showed ABCD but not E. With smudgy outlines . She said she finds my skin very difficult to read as there is a ' film ' which hinders masks seeing the melanoma , so she suspects them all ??? Is that possible . Does anyone have any medical terminology reference of this ? ?
She has scared me sufficiently so I then went ahead and she removed all 17 yesterday wide excision and I am now awaiting biopsy results .
thabks very much
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- January 31, 2016 at 5:50 am
Hi thank you for reply . I got second opinion ,they said remove only 5 out of the 17. He said he only excises what looks worrying to the naked eye , he said suspected melanoma are very obvious and you see them with the naked eye / dermis cope very easily ! I then went back to original Dermo who wants to remove the 17 and asked her to explain.
she said all 17 showed ABCD but not E. With smudgy outlines . She said she finds my skin very difficult to read as there is a ' film ' which hinders masks seeing the melanoma , so she suspects them all ??? Is that possible . Does anyone have any medical terminology reference of this ? ?
She has scared me sufficiently so I then went ahead and she removed all 17 yesterday wide excision and I am now awaiting biopsy results .
thabks very much
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- January 31, 2016 at 5:50 am
Hi thank you for reply . I got second opinion ,they said remove only 5 out of the 17. He said he only excises what looks worrying to the naked eye , he said suspected melanoma are very obvious and you see them with the naked eye / dermis cope very easily ! I then went back to original Dermo who wants to remove the 17 and asked her to explain.
she said all 17 showed ABCD but not E. With smudgy outlines . She said she finds my skin very difficult to read as there is a ' film ' which hinders masks seeing the melanoma , so she suspects them all ??? Is that possible . Does anyone have any medical terminology reference of this ? ?
She has scared me sufficiently so I then went ahead and she removed all 17 yesterday wide excision and I am now awaiting biopsy results .
thabks very much
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- January 24, 2016 at 12:40 pm
I think you need to follow your gut feeling and get a second opinion from another doc. 17 seems over the top, but you need a doctor to confer with, and I'm no doctor. I like that she wants to do proper excisions with margins, but 17? I've never heard of anything like that. If it were me I'd seek a second opinion. Is she using some kind of electronic algorithm (eg computer generated risk thing)? If so, they are notoriously unreliable. Diameter alone is not enough, I think they should only excise things that show chaos under the dermatoscope ('normal' moles are fairly uniform in many ways, melanomas exhibit various degrees of chaos), or things that you confirm are new or changing. If you have 17 weird moles, my guess is that you are a person whose moles just look weird, not a person with 17 melanomas. Time for a second opinion.
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- January 24, 2016 at 3:10 pm
I have to agree with getting a second opinion. Sounds like you have a derm who is overly cautious (or maybe they've never had experience with melanoma, or maybe they've had a lawsuit or their own family history…who knows!) But sounds like they want to make you Swiss cheese. The chances of having more than one primary is slim, and with each additional primary the chances go down. At 17 that's overkill.
IF by chance a second opinion also says all 17, then consider having a plastic surgeon do the biopsies. You'll heal faster, have less pain, and look much better afterwards. Insurance would likely cover the cost. It's worth looking into.
Good luck!
WithinMySkin
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- January 24, 2016 at 3:10 pm
I have to agree with getting a second opinion. Sounds like you have a derm who is overly cautious (or maybe they've never had experience with melanoma, or maybe they've had a lawsuit or their own family history…who knows!) But sounds like they want to make you Swiss cheese. The chances of having more than one primary is slim, and with each additional primary the chances go down. At 17 that's overkill.
IF by chance a second opinion also says all 17, then consider having a plastic surgeon do the biopsies. You'll heal faster, have less pain, and look much better afterwards. Insurance would likely cover the cost. It's worth looking into.
Good luck!
WithinMySkin
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:11 am
Hi thanks , she is 69 year old Dermo with lifetime experience of Melanoma , it is really puzzling .
General question is it safer to remove multiple large Dysplstic Nevi than to leave them ? Based on my history of 2 melanoma ?
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:11 am
Hi thanks , she is 69 year old Dermo with lifetime experience of Melanoma , it is really puzzling .
General question is it safer to remove multiple large Dysplstic Nevi than to leave them ? Based on my history of 2 melanoma ?
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:11 am
Hi thanks , she is 69 year old Dermo with lifetime experience of Melanoma , it is really puzzling .
General question is it safer to remove multiple large Dysplstic Nevi than to leave them ? Based on my history of 2 melanoma ?
-
- January 24, 2016 at 3:10 pm
I have to agree with getting a second opinion. Sounds like you have a derm who is overly cautious (or maybe they've never had experience with melanoma, or maybe they've had a lawsuit or their own family history…who knows!) But sounds like they want to make you Swiss cheese. The chances of having more than one primary is slim, and with each additional primary the chances go down. At 17 that's overkill.
IF by chance a second opinion also says all 17, then consider having a plastic surgeon do the biopsies. You'll heal faster, have less pain, and look much better afterwards. Insurance would likely cover the cost. It's worth looking into.
Good luck!
WithinMySkin
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- January 24, 2016 at 3:23 pm
Have they changed? I only biopsy moles that have changed (3 primaries here). People with dysplastic Nevus syndrome can have a difficult time and more biopsies than most. I suggest working to get good photos and then you have a baseline. Something changes – good candidate for biopsy. Stable – leave alone. I do not have DNS but I have found my 3 primaries, not my Derm. What I don't understand is if those 17 moles have all changed or if she wants to biopsy only because they are large?
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- January 24, 2016 at 3:23 pm
Have they changed? I only biopsy moles that have changed (3 primaries here). People with dysplastic Nevus syndrome can have a difficult time and more biopsies than most. I suggest working to get good photos and then you have a baseline. Something changes – good candidate for biopsy. Stable – leave alone. I do not have DNS but I have found my 3 primaries, not my Derm. What I don't understand is if those 17 moles have all changed or if she wants to biopsy only because they are large?
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:17 am
Hi thanks , no she doesn't monitor change . ( compare photos ) . They are all on my back so I can't monitor them and am single currently so can't get someone to monitor .
she says excision of all , due to the diameter and as well as my age of 46 , based in mole mate . I really don't know what to do , does this mean I can't trust her and her mole mapping system ?
thanks
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- January 25, 2016 at 8:17 am
Hi thanks , no she doesn't monitor change . ( compare photos ) . They are all on my back so I can't monitor them and am single currently so can't get someone to monitor .
she says excision of all , due to the diameter and as well as my age of 46 , based in mole mate . I really don't know what to do , does this mean I can't trust her and her mole mapping system ?
thanks
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- January 25, 2016 at 9:14 am
Ah. I thought so. Molemate, as I understand it, uses a fairly notoriously unreliable algorithm. Melanoma detection is not broadbrush, it's a calculated clinical decision based on a combination of ABCDE criteria, and the ugly duckling criteria (you can google them). What I've heard is that the molemate system is kind of an inferior way to detect melanoma. For example:
http://www.bmj.com/content/345/bmj.e4110
Conclusion: We found no evidence that the MoleMate system improved appropriateness of referral. The systematic application of best practice guidelines alone was more accurate than the MoleMate system, and both performed better than reports of current practice. Therefore the systematic application of best practice guidelines (including the seven point checklist) should be the paradigm for management of suspicious skin lesions in primary care.
I stand by my earlier advice to get a 2nd opinion. Your age does not come into it, really – kids get melanoma, young adults, middle age, older… Diameter is just one variable and really needs to be assessed alongside other characteristics (in particular: new or changing moles). You can be overly cautious and go ahead and do this, but I find it clinically dubious and personally would get a 2nd opinion.
One thing I've learned, like Janner says, is that you are your own best detection – I found all of mine, because they changed OR set off alarm bells in some vague way that I can't really pinpoint (perhaps chagned so imperceptibly that it triggered my interest but I couldn't really put my finger on it). I think you need a 2nd opinion and six monthly checks. If this means changing doctor then so be it, because I find 17 excisions and 1 yearly checks to be odd clinical practice. Better than nothing, but odd.
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- January 25, 2016 at 9:14 am
Ah. I thought so. Molemate, as I understand it, uses a fairly notoriously unreliable algorithm. Melanoma detection is not broadbrush, it's a calculated clinical decision based on a combination of ABCDE criteria, and the ugly duckling criteria (you can google them). What I've heard is that the molemate system is kind of an inferior way to detect melanoma. For example:
http://www.bmj.com/content/345/bmj.e4110
Conclusion: We found no evidence that the MoleMate system improved appropriateness of referral. The systematic application of best practice guidelines alone was more accurate than the MoleMate system, and both performed better than reports of current practice. Therefore the systematic application of best practice guidelines (including the seven point checklist) should be the paradigm for management of suspicious skin lesions in primary care.
I stand by my earlier advice to get a 2nd opinion. Your age does not come into it, really – kids get melanoma, young adults, middle age, older… Diameter is just one variable and really needs to be assessed alongside other characteristics (in particular: new or changing moles). You can be overly cautious and go ahead and do this, but I find it clinically dubious and personally would get a 2nd opinion.
One thing I've learned, like Janner says, is that you are your own best detection – I found all of mine, because they changed OR set off alarm bells in some vague way that I can't really pinpoint (perhaps chagned so imperceptibly that it triggered my interest but I couldn't really put my finger on it). I think you need a 2nd opinion and six monthly checks. If this means changing doctor then so be it, because I find 17 excisions and 1 yearly checks to be odd clinical practice. Better than nothing, but odd.
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- January 25, 2016 at 9:14 am
Ah. I thought so. Molemate, as I understand it, uses a fairly notoriously unreliable algorithm. Melanoma detection is not broadbrush, it's a calculated clinical decision based on a combination of ABCDE criteria, and the ugly duckling criteria (you can google them). What I've heard is that the molemate system is kind of an inferior way to detect melanoma. For example:
http://www.bmj.com/content/345/bmj.e4110
Conclusion: We found no evidence that the MoleMate system improved appropriateness of referral. The systematic application of best practice guidelines alone was more accurate than the MoleMate system, and both performed better than reports of current practice. Therefore the systematic application of best practice guidelines (including the seven point checklist) should be the paradigm for management of suspicious skin lesions in primary care.
I stand by my earlier advice to get a 2nd opinion. Your age does not come into it, really – kids get melanoma, young adults, middle age, older… Diameter is just one variable and really needs to be assessed alongside other characteristics (in particular: new or changing moles). You can be overly cautious and go ahead and do this, but I find it clinically dubious and personally would get a 2nd opinion.
One thing I've learned, like Janner says, is that you are your own best detection – I found all of mine, because they changed OR set off alarm bells in some vague way that I can't really pinpoint (perhaps chagned so imperceptibly that it triggered my interest but I couldn't really put my finger on it). I think you need a 2nd opinion and six monthly checks. If this means changing doctor then so be it, because I find 17 excisions and 1 yearly checks to be odd clinical practice. Better than nothing, but odd.
-
- January 25, 2016 at 8:17 am
Hi thanks , no she doesn't monitor change . ( compare photos ) . They are all on my back so I can't monitor them and am single currently so can't get someone to monitor .
she says excision of all , due to the diameter and as well as my age of 46 , based in mole mate . I really don't know what to do , does this mean I can't trust her and her mole mapping system ?
thanks
-
- January 24, 2016 at 3:23 pm
Have they changed? I only biopsy moles that have changed (3 primaries here). People with dysplastic Nevus syndrome can have a difficult time and more biopsies than most. I suggest working to get good photos and then you have a baseline. Something changes – good candidate for biopsy. Stable – leave alone. I do not have DNS but I have found my 3 primaries, not my Derm. What I don't understand is if those 17 moles have all changed or if she wants to biopsy only because they are large?
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Tagged: cutaneous melanoma
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